Less money. Less work. Less fear. More flying.
With the permission of Gordon Banks, Owner and Editor-in-Chief of R/C Report Magazine, here are scans of the original DPS article that appeared in the April 2003 issue, as well as the "Spad Report" columns, which had a year long run from August 2003 through July 2004. A big THANK YOU to R/C Report for it's support of Spad, and for allowing us to reproduce that work here for all to enjoy.
Cover Picture
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Month
(Click for scans) |
Description
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April 2003 | DasPlaStick construction article and flight report. |
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August 2003 | Introduction, SPAD History. |
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September 2003 | SPAD Originals, SPAD #1, SPADFEST 2003. |
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October 2003 | Cutting, Shipping, Scoring/Folding, Hinging, Gluing coroplast. Working with PVC gutter pipe. |
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November 2003 | Engine, Radio installation. Getting ready for first flight. SPAD Jet by Andrew Coholic. |
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December 2003 | SPAD Slope Soaring. |
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January 2004 | Aternative materials for fuselage, wings, tail feathers and spars. Typical yardstick measurements. |
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February 2004 | Landing gear. Kitchen cutting board engine mounts. |
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March 2004 | Speedy SPADS: Sickle, Ddust. Square coroplast fuselage. Chris Jumper |
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April 2004 | Club Combat. The GNAT. SPAD Bad? |
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May 2004 | The Ultra SpadStick. Large SPADs. |
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June 2004 | Electric SPADs. |
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July 2004 | The ESPA3D. Scale SPADs. The CoroCub. SPAD in the classroom. The SPAD Power Pack. |
Simple and durable, the alumnium rail fuselage is a great choice when PVC gutterpipe is hard to find, or even when it's not!
With the introduction of the Qhor, and eventually the Spa3D and it's variants, Spad took the 3D world by storm.
Finally, some of the more popular non-original Spads, now offered here for your convenience.
A few plans/diagrams of quick simple solutions to common Spad tasks. Some great tips are here.