I had a Jr. Flight streak with a Fox .15 on it. It flew great. The only reason I quit flying it was I wanted a .35 sized airplane with a real body. Those little details were important to a kid in the 60's and early 70's. I remember the Perfect had all kinds of stuff in those little bags with the cardboard top held on by a staple. They also had control line metal fuel tanks and rubber tires for our models.
This is some old-school modeling. These kits and the Fox 15 take me back to about 1968. You’re spending retirement just as it should be spent. Well done, Bill!
In the early days when Earl Stahl was publishing his plans he got no feedback and didn't realize how popular they were, now we have the internet there is no excuse to not
I wonder if there was an issue in linkage. The plane was awful heavy from the terrible wood and all the sheeting. It took a huge amount of weight in the tail to be just slightly sensitive. The engine is now in a Sig Akromastet which flies very well.