1) 1938 HLG design by Joe Hervat called...The Hervat. 21" wingspan for OT HLG. Dad's got a newspaper article of me chucking one of these when I was 4.
2) My own design and "secret weapon" for next summer (Dan Berry if youre reading this, imma getcha!!) Took plans for the 1948 Jetco "Thermic 20" and blew them up 200% for a wingspan of 36". Modern airfoil and polyhedral wing construction. Resized the stab and rudder to accomidate the popular and easy to trim "arrow feather" tail. Fuselage is a popup boom-style fuse, which accomidates a Bauer Remote Dethermalizer servo, receiver and battery. Flies and thermals really well in spite of its weight, a rather heft 135g. Subsequent versons will have more span (1m, or 39" limit per AMA rules) less ply and more C-grain balsa in the nose to reduce the weight. With RDT the days of lawn-darts are pretty much over, so I dont need to build tanks with wings anymore.
Tom "Tommy T" Peadon is also working on a very interesting and promising DLG design that I might play with. Looking at the model head on, the right wing has DIHEADRAL and the left a POLYHEADRAL wing. The mean span, or straight line distance from the wingtip to the center, is equal. However the absolute span is not, and the polyhedral side is a bit longer and has more area. The idea is this asymetric lifting power helps prevent spin-ins when in high-lift, high-turbulant flight. I wish I had a picture of one. Looks super funky--first time I saw it fly I thought he had broke something on launch, but it flies great, the math is sound, and Tommy T forgot more about FF than I'll ever know so ill give it a try!
future plans
2x of each of these.
3x Don Deloach's "Elipsix" CAT Gliders
An E-pearl 280 for the new E-36 category (yes electrics are invading FF too!!)
And some Rubber Scale models. I've been bitten by the scale bug recently so im gonna copy a Gillows Super Cup kit a few time for some practice before starting on something more higher-end.