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General control line discussion => Open Forum => Topic started by: Steve Dwyer on June 15, 2018, 05:29:44 AM
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Not sure if this is the best location, I'm trying to find the plans for a control line Ford Tri Motor. As an early teen in the early sixties a friend was building a FTM, I believe it was from a kit. It had sheeted wings that came off at the outboard motors. The total span had to be around 70". He planned a throttled 40 size motor with two fixed 15's. We built and flew a number of planes together along with several other people. Around the late sixties I moved away and after 40 years later I have made contact with my old friend to find he completed the FTM but never flew it, he sold it to an estate buyer and thinks it's in some restaurant in NYC, we lived in upstate NY at the time.
I plan to go back to the area this summer to visit him, he's 93 and lives in an assisted living facility. I plan to take him out flying and I'd like to give him a copy of the plans if I can locate them.
Steve
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This one (https://outerzone.co.uk/download_this_plan.asp?ID=9426), from Outerzone? 78" span, for a 60 and two 049s, with detachable outer panels. It's for RC, but would be simple to change over to CL. For that matter, it'd be simple to change it over to a 40 and two 15's.
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At 78 inch span for Control Line I would think three 40's would be more like it. That and very strong arms and a weight belt and someone else to hold on to your belt.... HB~> HB~> HB~> LL~ LL~ LL~ LL~ LL~ LL~ LL~
Randy Cuberly
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This could be it but I don't recall it being an RC conversion. Couldn't have been very many CL Ford Tri Motor kits back then.
Thanks,
Steve
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That plan is from a 1974 construction article. Not a kit, not early 1960's. :-\
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Any suggestions where I could go and look?
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For what it's worth...regarding the corrugated aluminum skins, way back in the '70's or so, a crazy man named Fulton Hungerford designed and built a rubber powered indoor scale model Ford Tri-motor. I don't have reference material on it anymore, but know it actually had the corrugated skins, which were molded in sheets and sprayed aluminum dope before application. The skins were built up spray lacquer or something of the sort, IIRC. I'm pretty sure all three propellers were powered, with rubber motors in the main fuselage and maybe going down the inside of the wing, span-wise. It was well covered in the NFFS Digest, and somebody may be able to dig up the articles about it. Right now, I can't recall for sure how big they were, but thinking maybe 27" span, and shockingly light. Pretty sure he made more than one. :o Steve
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Take at look on http://www.hippocketaeronautics.com/, Do a search for trimotor. There is a plan for the 34" Ford Trimotor from Sterling which was for either FF, RC, or CL. Might be the one you are referring to. In any case, there are a few to choose from. Need to register as a member. Nice guys, nice site from the UK
George Albo
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For what it's worth...regarding the corrugated aluminum skins, way back in the '70's or so, a crazy man named Fulton Hungerford designed and built a rubber powered indoor scale model Ford Tri-motor. I don't have reference material on it anymore, but know it actually had the corrugated skins, which were molded in sheets and sprayed aluminum dope before application. The skins were built up spray lacquer or something of the sort, IIRC. I'm pretty sure all three propellers were powered, with rubber motors in the main fuselage and maybe going down the inside of the wing, span-wise. It was well covered in the NFFS Digest, and somebody may be able to dig up the articles about it. Right now, I can't recall for sure how big they were, but thinking maybe 27" span, and shockingly light. Pretty sure he made more than one. :o Steve
There was such a model on display at Dick Sherman's New Hampshire model museum. John Brodak bought the collection when Dick passed so it could be packed away in John's warehouse.
Ara
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Hi Steve, I believe Mechanic Illustrated Magazine offered a Ford Tri Motor Plan in a control line version. I hope this helps. Michael
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Not sure if this plan was done by Walter Musicano, he did other control line plans for this magazine. Michael
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This plan was done by, I'm assuming Bill Winter. It has a 50" wingspan and is listed in AMA plans. Michael
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Bill winter designed one for a single engine of 51 inch wingspan. It was published in MI and in Cal Smith on Model Building book. Here is a pic I hope it helps.
Juan
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One year at Oshkosh the had a display of all kinds of model aviation from static to flying. This beautiful Trimotor was displayed but I didn't get any info or specs. Just out of curiosity I checked the N number on the model and it belongs to a 1928 Ford 4-AT-B (currently under restoration) registered to Kermit Weeks.