Entomology for some reason seems an appropriate tool in
dealing with this plane.
The join-venture that gave birth to the Elytroplan took
place in France
in 1937, between Charles de Rouge, Jacques de Chabrillan and Victor Bouffort.
The curious may visit:
for further info.
So, what is an “elytron”? A pair of hardened front wings on
some insects. I guess the French designers were referring to a pair of small
vanes that in this case were located at the tip of a super-sized rudder. They
were used to further improve control. Or so the legend goes.
In any case the design trend originated a small number of
planes, unfortunately all of them destroyed later during war time. There is a
plane from another designer preserved at the Musee de L’Air but, although using
a similar concept, doesn’t bear a close resemblance to the first Elytroplan,
having a horizontal “elytron” instead of vertical ones.
The model:
A tiny strange thing at 1/72 scale, basically simple to
build if you are willing to deal with small details. For the record, I spent
more time looking for minuscule parts that jumped on the floor than with the
building process itself.
The only “foreign” part is a photo-etched propeller boss.
Most of the other elements were made of styrene sheet and rod, even the wheels.
The wing-tip skids and main mono-wheel undercarriage were made of bent staples.
A simple interior was guess-built, the whole thing airbrushed with acrylics, et
voila!
Daring job, being a test pilot, uh?
Thanks to modeler Michel Barriere for spurring the creation
of the model.