The Vance "Flying Wing", a brainchild of pilot Claire Vance that was built at the onset of the 30's- stands out proudly when compared to its clunky biplane contemporaries, making them look slow and cumbersome in comparison.
Scratchbuilding helps you exercise the modeling muscles, and the methods and materials employed can be queried in the step-by-step building post:
https://wingsofintent.blogspot.com/2022/04/scratchbuilt-vance-flying-wing-172nd.html
Like many (ad)Vance(d) designs that in spite of their inherent merit suffered bad luck, the Vance Flying Wing could never demonstrate its potential, although it repeatedly flew, in various hands, from one place to the next, but seemingly only to drop from races, record flights, publicity flights and so on. It changed appearance -and some times its name- as frequently as it changed hands, as Claire Vance died soon after building it, and then it went through several owners and ended up in the midst of a legal dispute between some of them. The bad luck of this plane perhaps slowed down aviation progress, but aviation history gave us the many configurations and schemes of this elegant plane. I have chosen for this model the appearance the original had while attempting to participate in the 1932 Bendix race with number 61. As mentioned in the building article, the plane can be seen throughout its life with a dual or single horizontal tail, long and short cowls, semi-open or totally enclosed cockpit, one or two seats in the cockpit, and various canopy shapes.
I have wanted to build this one for a long time, and the decal set from Arctic Decals in Finland made it now possible, thanks!
Streamlined, refined and good-looking, the Vance "flying wing" conveys a feeling of efficiency and speed, even if its potential could not be fully realized, but it surely makes for a very handsome model!