IS-4 Jastrzab,
Wingspan 3.95m
Length 2m
Weight 8-10kg
Root chord 470mm
Manufacturer - Oldgliders.com
Web Site - https://oldgliders.com/en/offer/is-4-jastrzab-kit/
Main Wings - Two Piece
Main Wing Materials - Balsa / Ply / Pine / CF Joiner
Airfoil SD3024/SD3021. Or at least something close to them.
Fuselage Single piece, high wing, single wheel of Balsa, Ply, Pine
Tail Removable stab, Balsa, Ply, Pine
Control Surfaces Ailerons(2), Spoilers (2) Rudder, Elevators(2), Tow Release. I am going to modify for dual ailerons on each wing.\
I am starting a other project for the building season. I have an IS-4 Jastrzab kit from OldGliders. I also purchases the balsa sheet pack from them. I cut my own pine strips and spruce strips for the spars and other parts of the model.
The wing planform is interesting. The wing sweeps forward a little at the root from the top. From the front, the center part hasa few degrees dihedral then the rest is flat when not in flight. So it is a bit of a gull wing shape.
I have the spoilers, wheel, and instrument panel they supply. All of it looks decent. The wood was good except for a few sheets. There were three 10mm thick sheets for LE's of the wing and ailerons and elevators. One was really light 6lb balsa, another normal 11lb balsa and the third was rock hard 17lb balsa. I'll swap that with some 3/8 sheet I have. It's nice to have a hard LE but that is a little extreme. I'll save that for laminating up nose blocks. The 2.5mm balsa for the fuselage sheeting ranged from 7 lbs to 12 lbs. Nice to distribute light wood at the back and the heavy stuff up front. The 2mm wood for the wing and tail sheeting includes 32 sheets.10 were in the 6-7 lb range. 15 were in the 8-9lb and the remainder 10-12lb balsa. Pretty good. I just can't figure out how he manages to sheet all of that airplane with that much sheeting. I have a few 5-6 lb 3/32 that I will use for the tail.
The instructions are the standard bunch of pictures on a DVD and a few sketches or notes on hinging, cg, and wood list. The pictures look like two different versions of the kit. It looks like some ribs were redesigned over the years. The wood strip list was useless and it did not match the plans. You have to measure the notches to make sure you have the correct sizes. The photos show what looks like 1mm ply for webs. But looking at the number of 2.5mm balsa sheets, I think there is enough sheet there to use that for webs after sheeting the fuselage.
If you ever get an oldgliders kit and wood pack, make sure you spend plenty of time studying the plans and figuring out where to use the sheeting. They just give you the number of sheets they think they use to build the model. There is no info on how to allocate or cut the sheets. If you cut them the wrong way you might end up with spare pieces that are not the right size to finish the job. Be careful how the tapered tip sheeting gets cut and how the center panel behind the LE is cut up.
I have some spruce that I stocked up from Aircraft Spruce last time I traveled through Georgia. I ripped that for the 15x7 spruce spar stock. I use an 80 tooth 3/32 blade and I always clean it before cutting strips. Strips come off the left side of the blade. not the fence.
Wingspan 3.95m
Length 2m
Weight 8-10kg
Root chord 470mm
Manufacturer - Oldgliders.com
Web Site - https://oldgliders.com/en/offer/is-4-jastrzab-kit/
Main Wings - Two Piece
Main Wing Materials - Balsa / Ply / Pine / CF Joiner
Airfoil SD3024/SD3021. Or at least something close to them.
Fuselage Single piece, high wing, single wheel of Balsa, Ply, Pine
Tail Removable stab, Balsa, Ply, Pine
Control Surfaces Ailerons(2), Spoilers (2) Rudder, Elevators(2), Tow Release. I am going to modify for dual ailerons on each wing.\
I am starting a other project for the building season. I have an IS-4 Jastrzab kit from OldGliders. I also purchases the balsa sheet pack from them. I cut my own pine strips and spruce strips for the spars and other parts of the model.
The wing planform is interesting. The wing sweeps forward a little at the root from the top. From the front, the center part hasa few degrees dihedral then the rest is flat when not in flight. So it is a bit of a gull wing shape.
I have the spoilers, wheel, and instrument panel they supply. All of it looks decent. The wood was good except for a few sheets. There were three 10mm thick sheets for LE's of the wing and ailerons and elevators. One was really light 6lb balsa, another normal 11lb balsa and the third was rock hard 17lb balsa. I'll swap that with some 3/8 sheet I have. It's nice to have a hard LE but that is a little extreme. I'll save that for laminating up nose blocks. The 2.5mm balsa for the fuselage sheeting ranged from 7 lbs to 12 lbs. Nice to distribute light wood at the back and the heavy stuff up front. The 2mm wood for the wing and tail sheeting includes 32 sheets.10 were in the 6-7 lb range. 15 were in the 8-9lb and the remainder 10-12lb balsa. Pretty good. I just can't figure out how he manages to sheet all of that airplane with that much sheeting. I have a few 5-6 lb 3/32 that I will use for the tail.
The instructions are the standard bunch of pictures on a DVD and a few sketches or notes on hinging, cg, and wood list. The pictures look like two different versions of the kit. It looks like some ribs were redesigned over the years. The wood strip list was useless and it did not match the plans. You have to measure the notches to make sure you have the correct sizes. The photos show what looks like 1mm ply for webs. But looking at the number of 2.5mm balsa sheets, I think there is enough sheet there to use that for webs after sheeting the fuselage.
If you ever get an oldgliders kit and wood pack, make sure you spend plenty of time studying the plans and figuring out where to use the sheeting. They just give you the number of sheets they think they use to build the model. There is no info on how to allocate or cut the sheets. If you cut them the wrong way you might end up with spare pieces that are not the right size to finish the job. Be careful how the tapered tip sheeting gets cut and how the center panel behind the LE is cut up.
I have some spruce that I stocked up from Aircraft Spruce last time I traveled through Georgia. I ripped that for the 15x7 spruce spar stock. I use an 80 tooth 3/32 blade and I always clean it before cutting strips. Strips come off the left side of the blade. not the fence.
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