Fletch
I'll Lock Up
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- Iowa - The Land That Stuff Forgot
The great zeppelins of the 1920s and 30s were fragile giants, vulnerable to weather, explosions, and in the case of Jack Clemens' model of USS Macon, house pets. Its nearly complete balsawood frame was smashed when his cat jumped off a high shelf in the garage and landed on it.
2 attempts later, Clemens had a flying model with Mylar skin, 8 tiny R/C plane engines, and real helium-filled gas cells. The thing is incredible.
Macon model in Popular Science
Macon model visits Hangar 1 at Moffett Field, HQ of the real thing
Here they were met by a tv crew from the Discovery Channel - but not for US broadcast, of course! Only in Canada. Hmph! Oh, and on YouTube. Check it out.
[video=youtube;Kd_SxiVyI2s]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kd_SxiVyI2s[/video]
2 attempts later, Clemens had a flying model with Mylar skin, 8 tiny R/C plane engines, and real helium-filled gas cells. The thing is incredible.
Macon model in Popular Science
Macon model visits Hangar 1 at Moffett Field, HQ of the real thing
Here they were met by a tv crew from the Discovery Channel - but not for US broadcast, of course! Only in Canada. Hmph! Oh, and on YouTube. Check it out.
[video=youtube;Kd_SxiVyI2s]http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Kd_SxiVyI2s[/video]
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