Kit Identification
#4
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From: Dearborn, MI,
I'm trying to locate the "step by step" instructions. Forerunner of KYOsho. How about that. The kit has to be from the 70s or early 80s. Thanks.
peace
peace
#5
Senior Member
I'm trying to locate the "step by step" instructions.
Step 1. Build wings
Step 2. Build tail
Step 3. Build Fuselage
Step 4. Attach 1&2 to 3.
Step 5. Fly
Have a ball!
#7
My brother had a really old Fokker D7 kit (possibly Pilot or Sterling) and the instructions were a handful of notes on the plans. They added up to about what WCB posted.
#9

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ORIGINAL: harphunt
I'm trying to locate the ''step by step'' instructions. Forerunner of KYOsho. How about that. The kit has to be from the 70s or early 80s. Thanks.
peace
I'm trying to locate the ''step by step'' instructions. Forerunner of KYOsho. How about that. The kit has to be from the 70s or early 80s. Thanks.
peace
#11
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From: Dearborn, MI,
Thanks for the insights. Also got this from another site.
In the '50s, Dr. Ralph Brooke, a noted C/L builder/flier, brought a number of these kits to AHC ('America's Hobby Center') and there were 5 different names: U Control, KYO, Eureka, Kyosho, and another that escapes me. Dr. Brooke arranged import of these kits and they were available thru mail order and across the counter from some hobby shops. There is a list of what was available; a list of the arsenal of the U.S., Great Britain, and the Axis might be close to what was available!
Twins, bombers, fighters...C47, DC6, B36, amazing selection!
Some will say they were barely 'stand off scale', but they were as unique as 'Speede-Bilts'.
Hobby Hut on 14th St. in Oakland had a large stock, but feindish ex wife only let me buy one! (F8F Bearcat) It is a Class B, .09-.15, 32" wingspan, I think. The bulkheads and ribs are all cut out by hand, in a Japanese gumwood, great for patterns...
Any of them are still exciting to me.
peace
In the '50s, Dr. Ralph Brooke, a noted C/L builder/flier, brought a number of these kits to AHC ('America's Hobby Center') and there were 5 different names: U Control, KYO, Eureka, Kyosho, and another that escapes me. Dr. Brooke arranged import of these kits and they were available thru mail order and across the counter from some hobby shops. There is a list of what was available; a list of the arsenal of the U.S., Great Britain, and the Axis might be close to what was available!
Twins, bombers, fighters...C47, DC6, B36, amazing selection!
Some will say they were barely 'stand off scale', but they were as unique as 'Speede-Bilts'.
Hobby Hut on 14th St. in Oakland had a large stock, but feindish ex wife only let me buy one! (F8F Bearcat) It is a Class B, .09-.15, 32" wingspan, I think. The bulkheads and ribs are all cut out by hand, in a Japanese gumwood, great for patterns...
Any of them are still exciting to me.
peace




