lifeandhealth.guardian.co.uk— Slip the surly bonds of earth with a folded sheet of A4. Jonathan Glancey, who spent his childhood manufacturing squadrons of paper aviation, offers some tips.
Jun 17, 2007View in Crawl 4
hah, i used to make so many planes when i was small. i can honestly say i made a few favorites and none of which are mentioned here..The best plane potential available is so far the world record plane. (although pretty hard to fold- and make it fly)another is the 2nd one on this list.the only thing thats important: tight precise equal folds. And don't let your fantasy about Millennium falcon or anything else similar shape your plane- they wont fly then ^^
dezmoJun 18, 2007
uhm.. what is the link?
shadow289Jun 18, 2007
hah, i used to make so many planes when i was small. i can honestly say i made a few favorites and none of which are mentioned here..The best plane potential available is so far the world record plane. (although pretty hard to fold- and make it fly)another is the 2nd one on this list.the only thing thats important: tight precise equal folds. And don't let your fantasy about Millennium falcon or anything else similar shape your plane- they wont fly then ^^
jjremyJun 18, 2007
curl (not fold) the back tips of the wings slightly. That's what we used to do when we were youngins.
jjremyJun 18, 2007
I wish I had a subscription to Best Paper Airplanes Monthly like you seem to.
electricgrandpaJun 19, 2007
It's also turning out to be the toughest to make... I swear the instructions are whack.