Nakijima Rufe
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Revelations
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- Location: Long Island, N.Y.
Nakijima Rufe
So I just ordered three new planes
. A Cessna 170(24" span), the Focke Wulf and the Nakijima Rufe(17" span). I'm gonna start with the Nakijima. I was wondering if I should build the floats with it or not. Maybe make the floats so that they can be removed. Maybe not even make them at all. Hmmmm...Any other thoughts?? Anyone else build this plane?
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Madman Stephan
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- Location: Ottawa, Ontario, Canada
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Revelations
- Posts: 27
- Joined: Fri Sep 30, 2005 2:04 pm
- Location: Long Island, N.Y.
I think I may try it this way. http://www.smallflyingarts.com/Archives ... ble_LG.htm
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aviator17
- Posts: 1
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- Location: cenntenial colorado
Re: Nakijima Rufe
I built the rufe and I have to say it looks killer with the floats on.Revelations wrote:So I just ordered three new planes. A Cessna 170(24" span), the Focke Wulf and the Nakijima Rufe(17" span). I'm gonna start with the Nakijima. I was wondering if I should build the floats with it or not. Maybe make the floats so that they can be removed. Maybe not even make them at all. Hmmmm...Any other thoughts?? Anyone else build this plane?
I would say put the floats on. The more detail on the plane the better.
PILOT IN COMMAND
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nevetsw18
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- Location: Oregon
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kittyfritters
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- Joined: Tue Jan 03, 2006 6:58 pm
- Location: California
That all depends on if you intend to fly it.
The Rufe built out-of-the-box makes a great static model, but is a real challenge to fly. If you want to fly it you have to take great pains to make it light so that one, it will fly, and two, it will survive landings. Nevertheless, with a bit of re-engineering it can be made to fly surprisingly well. (Easier and better than the Stuka.)
This model is not quite a Rufe but a Zero on floats. Without the floats it makes a great Zero. If you are building it as a static model you might want to look up some accurate drawings of the Rufe on the web to get the tail right.
Have Fun!
The Rufe built out-of-the-box makes a great static model, but is a real challenge to fly. If you want to fly it you have to take great pains to make it light so that one, it will fly, and two, it will survive landings. Nevertheless, with a bit of re-engineering it can be made to fly surprisingly well. (Easier and better than the Stuka.)
This model is not quite a Rufe but a Zero on floats. Without the floats it makes a great Zero. If you are building it as a static model you might want to look up some accurate drawings of the Rufe on the web to get the tail right.
Have Fun!
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Xanadu
- Posts: 497
- Joined: Wed Sep 27, 2006 9:48 pm
- Location: Anola, MB, Canada
http://www.virtualaerodrome.com/image_b ... ser_id=201
is the link of the one I built last spring.
Was lots of fun, as I usually build the larger scales.
is the link of the one I built last spring.
Was lots of fun, as I usually build the larger scales.