stunthanger.com
General control line discussion => Open Forum => Topic started by: Jim Thomerson on August 24, 2014, 06:42:12 PM
-
With the passing of flying Models, several have expressed interest in Aeromodeller. In the USA one can get six issues for 45 pounds, or 12 issues for 90 pounds. A pound being worth about $1.655. It is not cheap, but I have thought every issue better than the previous one. One can subscribe online at www.aeromodeller.com and pay with secure credit card or PayPal. I think it is also available online.
-
I subscribe to Aeromodeller and I get it on my ipad. It's great. I can read it anywhere and I always have all the issues with me (saved on the iPad). If I am at the field or at a comp or whatever and we are talking about something I can easily refer to the mag as it's on my ipad. Whereas it would be unlikely that I have the magazines in my car.
The online version is cheaper too, and you can still get the freebie plans and other bits online as they give you an address to go to.
Cheers
-
It's been getting better with each issue - Andrew Boddington, the editor, seems to be finding his feet. Soon coming out monthly, I believe. Here's a shot (taken last Saturday evening at the BMFA Nationals) of Andrew flying a model scaled down from drawings in a 50s Aeromodeller Annual, powered by a .5cc Boddo special. It's nice to see the tradition of the editor being very much a practicing flier.
Don't worry, CL is well represented in the latest issue - with articles on electro conversion of a Cardinal (part 3), the Darley Moore Combat international, a long letter form a reader on vintage speed, and also a visit to the Enya factory.
-
Hello Jim,
You are quite correct, the Aeromodeller is getting better and better by the issue. The last issue was fascinating, wide subject matter and a peek into the Enya factory. OK it isn't cheap, but worth every penny ....... er , I mean cent!
Andrew.
-
A quick check of the current exchange rate shows 75GBP to be $124.29 and 90 GBP to be $149.14.
I really would not support any periodical on anything for that price. I buy the Wall street Journal and consider that a bargain.
It's all relevant I guess, but hobby magazines have lost their allure to me after 60 years of loyally supporting a lot of them that are no longer here.
Dennis
-
I think the price is a bit higher than we are used to, in England £30 for 6 issues. But I suspect for you guys outside Britain, you are paying mostly for post cost. Post has gone out of all proportion these days.
I agree so far each issue of Aeromod has been better than the previous one.
Sad to see FM go. :'(
-
I think the price is a bit higher than we are used to, in England £30 for 6 issues. But I suspect for you guys outside Britain, you are paying mostly for post cost. Post has gone out of all proportion these days.
I agree so far each issue of Aeromod has been better than the previous one.
Sad to see FM go. :'(
That's still $58.00 for 6 issues of a Magazine. Your British guys must be a lot richer than us poor American Cousins! LL~
You're right about the cost of postage. It's become quite a burden for businesses as well as private individuals.
Randy Cuberly
-
.....Your British guys must be a lot richer than us poor American Cousins! .....
I used to wait eagerly for the latest Aeromodeller to arrive in the library in Christchurch New Zealand back in the 50s and 60s. I carried on reading it when I got to England - heck, once I even wrote an article for it. There is tremendous loyalty for it over here - and Andrew Boddingotn has responded with something really worth reading - though tailored most of all to a British audience, I suppose.
-
Hi All
I am fairly sure that the last time I was in a Barnes and Noble I saw AM right there on the stand?
Cheers
Kevin
-
I was in the Army (American) in the 1960's and on a NATO Assignment in Malta GC, for 5 years. I flew Control Line with a group of guys from the RAF stationed at Luqua RAF station (I flew mostly combat in those days). They used to have regular flights from Malta to the UK and always managed to bring copies of Aero Modeler Magazine back to Malta each month. I was given a copy of Aero Modeler courtesy of the RAF each month and really enjoyed the magazine. When I came back to the states I was unable to get a subscription sent to me there...don't remember why, just that there was a problem...of course I went off the Viet Nam shortly after returning to the States and didn't have much opportunity to read or fly Model airplanes tramping through the jungle every day.
It would be nice to see the old magazine survive and thrive.
Randy Cuberly
-
Hi All
I am fairly sure that the last time I was in a Barnes and Noble I saw AM right there on the stand?
Cheers
Kevin
You´re absolutely correct. Go to the Aeromodeller site (link above), click on the "shop" tag on the tool bar and you will have access to a search engine that will find the nearest B&N stockist for you.
Regards
Luiz
-
It's not the old Aeromodeller, and it is expensive here.
But...
It's great to hear it is improving. I have almost 50 years of Aeromodeller, not all months, but quite a few. I even have several Ian Allen Model Aircraft. After the brief appearance of 'that other' recent Brit mag, I was leery.
Maybe, finally, I'll get back to AM.
BTW, Randy, I was able to connect for a sub sometime in the late 1970's, and stuck with it until the knees collapsed. In Germany, several news-stands carried AM, as well as two mags which published several of Claus Maikis' stunt designs. Despite the true, if stereotytped, preference of German model flyers for the latest obscure "scientific" stuff, there was space for Claus' features. (I can still read enough German to appreciate his fine writings. Check out his - English -website...)
I really miss the UK site recently laid down to rest. (Name will occur to me soon, but not soon enough. Tony featured CL model mag articles in one 'catalog' and engine tests, both from AM and IAMA in another.)
Another Anglophile site of possible interest is Zoe's. Scanned copies of the full monthly edition of one or more old AM and IAMA every month. Currently from early 1960's or sometime during the the '50s. I can provide the actual url, if I remember to...
History can be interesting, if sometimes embarassing....
-
OK, first up is Zoe's at http://www.fuelsoaked.me.uk/
From there you can click on the link to magazines at the top or go directly from http://www.fuelsoaked.me.uk/magazine/magazine.html
Each month Zoe has 3 new scans, new ones as html and last months as a zip file.
Next step is to go to Colin Usher's site where he collects all of Zoe's monthly zip files into one place.
http://www.colinusher.info/Model%20Aircraft/images.html
The defunct site would be iroquois online (or something similar) but I managed to find it with the Wayback machine and saved all the engine tests into my list of tests at http://sceptreflight.net/Model%20Engine%20Tests/Index.html
-
Folks:
Dave Day's 'Iroquois' website has been resurrected at: http://www.ooobopshibam.webspace.virginmedia.com/ and appears to be active. Certainly a valuable resource.
Regards
John
-
I have been buying the new Aeromodeler at a mall book store called Books-A-Million. They only get three or four copies, so I have to watch the calender close so I don't miss out. It's 12 bucks a copy on the news stand. If they don't revive Flying Models, I'll subscribe to Aeromodeler. Might just subscribe anyway just to take the guess work out of it.
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee
-
Dave Day's 'Iroquois' website has been resurrected....
Ah yes, that's the one with all the Merco information. The defunct site I was thinking about with old Aeromodeller engine tests was Annette Elmore's site.
-
Thanks for all the information about Aeromodeller! I enjoyed many copies when I was stationed there during my Air Force career and was happy to read that it's available at Barnes & Noble. I visited our local store and really liked what I saw, except for the price tag - $11.99! I gulped and pulled out a twenty and to the checkout I went. Very good magazine.
I just fired up our iPad and signed up for a subscription for a much more reasonable price, less than 5 bucks an issue. What a deal!
Bob in NEPA
-
Thanks for all the information about Aeromodeller! I enjoyed many copies when I was stationed there during my Air Force career and was happy to read that it's available at Barnes & Noble. I visited our local store and really liked what I saw, except for the price tag - $11.99! I gulped and pulled out a twenty and to the checkout I went. Very good magazine.
I just fired up our iPad and signed up for a subscription for a much more reasonable price, less than 5 bucks an issue. What a deal!
Bob in NEPA
You mean for less than 9 bucks an issue? A two year subscription is 60 pounds, and that works out to 5 pounds an issue. Using Jim's $1.65 valuation, that's $8.25 an issue. Still a savings, and I'll be subscribing also.
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee
-
A 12 month subscription of the digital version is $25.99 and with the magazine being bi-monthly, that's $4.33 a copy. Not bad. I just got my email receipt and there was $1.56 in Pa. sales tax, so it's $4.66 a copy. And yes, those are dollar signs, not Pound or Euro signs, if anyone is wondering.
Bob in NEPA
-
I did get the magazine years ago. Great magazine! Worth all the money.
Tossed dozens because no one would take them for free. Sold the remaining on ebay because because others were selling them.
Here's some of the magazine covers. If you're not farmiliar with the Mag, you won't regret a subscription.
-
Aeromodeller is now monthly. They think they are being successful, and that is good news.
-
I just downloaded the November issue on my iPad. One great article after another! I hope they can keep it up.
Bob in NEPA