Author

Publication

1998 - Sterling, New York, New York (State)

Language

English

Word Count

32,000 words, Guess

Page Count

128 pages

Physical Format

Paperback

Identifiers

  • Internet Archivesupersimplepaper00robi
  • ISBN-100806937793
  • ISBN-139780806937793
  • LibraryThing2904009
  • Goodreads298802
and 4 more
  • Library of Congress Control Number98214522
  • OCLC Control Number39851313
  • Better World Books9780806937793
  • Open LibraryOL485516M

Classifications

  • DDC745.592
  • LCCTL778 .R63 1998
  • LCCTL778.R63 1998

Description

Contains illustrated instructions for constructing forty different types of paper airplanes without glue, scissors, or tape.

Description

Set your imagination flying —with 40 different types of paper airplanes that range from super simple to sophisticated. There's no need for glue, scissors, or tape, just follow the directions on choosing and folding the paper, and use the principles of flight to get to great results. Start with some classic designs: the dart, the basic glider, a gliding toy, and the sturdy hawk dart. Try something modern, like the carnard glider, which has stabilizers on the front to create extra lift. For something extra-acrobatic, make the stunt plane: it will loop the loop, and even return to you after you launch it! A bomber, which requires more complex folds, has elegant lines. The snub-nosed Delta is a variation on the hawk dart, with an easier-to-construct nose cone. And a sweptback wing airplane, a modification on an award-winning original, has a wide tail section. Other high-flying choices you can create: the boxoid, which riqueres accurate folding but then won't come apart; the birdlike Delta glider; and the kendal flier, which uses the energy of a stretched elastic band. When you're up to it, take a short at the Chasseur (or hunter). It's the most difficult project in the book, and resembles both the American and Russian fighter-bombers. Includes stunning color photographs of the finished planes, plus detailed diagrams and hints on really making them soar. Have a good flight...

First Sentence

Man's desire to fly dates back to the earliest times, from the legendary Icarus and the 18th-century efforts of the Montgolfier Brothers, right up to the fateful Thursday in 1903 when Wilbur and Orville Wright made the first heavier-than-air-flight.

Subjects

Links

Other Editions

  • Super Simple Paper AirplanesPaperbackSterling1998-01-01
Show 4 more editions

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