Comments

the other reason that the f-19 became popular was also when the F-117(at the time it was considered "Top Secret") made Headline of a crash in the National Forest at a night excersice. A civilian nearby claimed to have photographed something. The film was taken by the government and the area sealed until the area was cleared of debries. News media used the model as a possible make of the Government cover-up as real or fake. The maker of the F-19 model was questioned by the Federal Government on how he came up with the design. His reply was he took the Sr-71 drone and made some modification to the design and came up with the F-19. The F-19 came pretty close to the "Project Have-Blue" which is the early design of the F-117.

The article prompts me to ask: why is it that in all the years that I've read A&SM -- and my collection starts with issue #1 -- the magazine has never seen fit to do a serious article on scale plastic aircraft modeling? It's a multi-million dollar industry, the US branch of the International Plastic Modeler Society has thousands of members and chapters in every state, and the national convention typically sees 1,500+ museum-quality pieces on display. The next national IPMS-USA national convention is in Virginia Beach, VA in early August. Why not send a reporter/photog to get a visually interesting story about some of aviation's most fervent enthusiasts?

Remember - it wasn't just Testor's who got it wrong - Tom Clancy included a very similar "stealth fighter" concept in the chapter entitled "The Frisbees of Dreamland" in his novel "Red Storm Rising". Apparently he had some sort of sources he more-or-less trusted feeding him the same kind of bad info Testor's got.

There is another model maker who got it wrong. In 1952, Aurora Model Company made a model, which they called, a MIG-19. Looked nothing like a MIG-19. Looked like a cross between a German WW2 TA-183 (which was not built) with a nose of a North American F-86D. They may be collector item now.

the same faux paux happened with the stealth bomber... some model company (monogram?) designed this flying triangle that looked sort of like the b-2 and and marketed it as the "top secret stealth bomber" - this was around mid-1988 - anyone remember that?

I just happened to purchase and build this model in 1987 when I was 12 years old.To this day the model is in secracy!It flew away sometime in 1988 and I haven't seen it since!I am into R/C Flying these day's(21 years now)and would love to build and fly a scale mock-up of a turbine powered SR-71,for now I will keep looking up in search of my long lost F-19!

Post a Comment


Name: (required)

Email: (required)

Comment: