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General control line discussion => Open Forum => Topic started by: Joshua Harel on November 07, 2011, 05:47:12 AM

Title: Jetco Shark 45 NIB kit - advice wanted
Post by: Joshua Harel on November 07, 2011, 05:47:12 AM
I have an original Jetco Shark 45 kit, complete in the original box in very good shape. I am considering selling it but have no clue as to what it's value. Any advice will be most appreciated.
Thanks all
Joshua
Title: Re: Jetco Shark 45 NIB kit - advice wanted
Post by: Bob Reeves on November 07, 2011, 07:58:23 AM
It was worth quite a bit a couple years ago, but now that you can buy a better kit from RSM the value has dropped quite a bit. Best bet is to put it on eBay and see what happens.
Title: Re: Jetco Shark 45 NIB kit - advice wanted
Post by: Dan McEntee on November 07, 2011, 10:22:37 AM
   Of all the classic collector kits, the Jetco Shark 45 is the one that best epitomizes what kit manufacturers went through back then. Most would buy the rights to a model, then do a re-design so that it would fit in one of their standard boxes. The position of "Kit Engineer" was probably a very valued position back then. If some one is interested in buyinmg a Jetco Shark 45 kit and wonders if the kit is complete, all you have to do is shake the box a little bit, then carefully take the lid off and inspect it. The Jetco kit is kind of like a Chinese jig saw puzzle and there is very little room even for air in the box. If it rattles when you shake iot, something is missing. If you look inside and see any open space, something is missing! If it doesn't rattle and looks nice and orderly and full inside, DON"T BOTHER TO UNPACK IT!!!!  You'll never get it all back in the box they way it came out. At least I never could! I have several in my collection and used the parts from a couple of the kits as patterns to scratch build mine from the Jetco plans. Jetco would have you glue several die cut pieces together to form a block instead of using a bigger box to hold all the necessary block parts. That is why the Jetco kit tends to come out heavy, and why the model build from the kit or plans is a bit smaller than the magazine plan built kit or the RSM kit. But it does fly well, and it is a genuine marvel of "kit engineering."
   Type at you later,
    Dan McEntee
Title: Re: Jetco Shark 45 NIB kit - advice wanted
Post by: Steve Helmick on November 07, 2011, 07:19:03 PM
Haven't built a Jetco Shark, but did build another Jetco kit, and my best advise is "eBay"!!!  y1 Steve