How To Fly a Piper Cub

Built by Piper Aircraft between 1937 and 1947, the J-3 Cub is one of history’s best-known civil aircraft. The Cub’s simplicity and affordability led to the plane being dubbed the “Model T of the Sky”, and ushered in a new era in aviation in which anyone could fly. Just over 20,000 Cubs were built, including an enormous number as trainer aircraft during WWII. Originally printed in 1945, when all Piper production was restricted for military use, this “How to Fly a Piper Cub” booklet looked ahead to the post-war era. Printed in color with rich illustrations, spec sheets and b&w photos, it’s a nostalgic piece of history that no Piper fan can resist.

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Logan Graphics 424-1: Team System Plus

This practical combo system includes a 24″ straight edge and a Logan Handheld Mat Cutter for accurate, high quality mat cutting plus a three depth position mat knife with a slip lock depth feature for downsizing standard thickness matboard and foamboard.

Product Features

  • Retractable blade for added safety
  • Unique start / stop indicator helps prevent over-cutting
  • Patented blade slot and Adapt-A-Rule straight edge help you make straighter, more accurate cuts
  • Mat knife with 3 depth positions lets you cut foamboard and matboard up to 3/16″ / 0.48 cm thick–included at no extra cost!
  • Ergonomically-designed to be user-friendly and provide added comfort

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Halo Light by Stephanie Ng

Australian-based designer Stephanie Ng has created a modular lighting system called Halo.

From the designer

Inspired by a halo type light source, the Halo Modular Light offers lighting without any hot spots or visible globes, appealing to both the domestic and commercial market. Simple, sleek lines for a minimalistic take, a lighting system that has cohesive synergy with the space in which its placed. It is a versatile design that is customisable from user to user to reflect their individuality through arrangement and color. As a modular lighting system, the Halo has the potential to grow as large as one’s space allow.

Spun out of steel, the magnet of one module attracts and sits flush to the next module with potential to rotate at any angle. It is just as easy to pull it apart and readjust when ‘refreshing’ the ambience and has unlimited opportunities to create a fresh look without adding to landfill. Modularity and interchangeable features will become the heritage of the future as mass consumerism continues. Without supporting the buy and throw away habits, users will be able to achieve a new look by reconfiguration and/ or adding modules or splitting them up. Limitless are the boundaries of its versatility, with clusters interlinking and cords suspended at staggered heights within the entirety of the space. Be it snaking above a long kitchen bench, over a staircase, in a circular formation or in clusters of clouds to be seen from a multi level foyer.

The Halo Modular Light runs on LED lights and consume very little energy. Furthermore, the components of the lighting design has been kept to its bare minimal with only an outer shell and diffuser with minimal waste on material.

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Design: Stephanie Ng Design

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Model Railroads & Trains for Beginners

No other mode of transportation has ever captured the imagination in quite the same way as trains. Maybe, it’s because they were the first form of mechanized transportation. Whatever the reason, they have been source of fascination and been at the center of war, intrigue and romance since they were invented in the early 1800’s in England. From there, railroads and trains spread to North America and then every continent on Earth (except Antarctica!). And in the process they’ve conquered every kind of terrain: rolling plains, lush grasslands, cathedral forests, dense jungles, jagged coastlines, soaring peaks, plunging canyons and the hearts of railroad fans who’ve wanted to capture just a bit of that majesty and beauty for themselves in their own homes.

It was then that the hobby of model railroading itself was born—well almost. In the beginning (no, not that beginning) there was Lionel—the toy train that started it all for a lot of folks. There was a time that when kids asked for a train for Christmas, a Lionel was what they got because it was virtually the only one available. Oh, there were others: American Flyer or Marklin over in Germany, but Lionel dominated the marketplace.

The trains and cars were of sturdy steel and easy for children to handle. The train track was durable and easy to assemble and to power up. Plus, there were plenty of really cool accessories with plenty of colored lights for everything—signal lights, lights on the controls, you name it. My dad had one of these sets and I looked forward with a combination of excitement and reverence to Christmas when the perfectly-preserved ancient boxes with their 1940s Lionel logos were opened one by one to reveal their ancient treasures inside. There were cars that dumped coal into coal elevators that scooped the coal one little lump at a time and carried it up to the storage area where it waited to be dumped with the press of a button into another waiting car that was hauled away as soon as it was full.
This captivated the kids, but the adults noticed the tracks did not look anything like real train tracks. For one thing, there were three rails—not two like a real train and there were not railroad ties—the wooden cross members holding the rails together. There were just three unrealistically large metal ones instead of several more evenly-spaced and smaller ones. Nobody would ever mistake a skillfully taken trackside photo for the real thing. Also, the size of the Lionel trains were just too big to keep the set up all the time for most people’s houses with wives, kids, and all the other stuff that comes with that.
Then along came a new kind of train that was half the size of Lionel, but with twice the realism. The tracks had just two rails and railroad ties that looked exactly like real deal. It was called HO, or “half-O,” which meant it was half the size of the O-Scale Lionel. We will go into more detail about scale in the first chapter. This is when “playing with trains” really became model railroading. HO trains were actually invented in 1935 in the United Kingdom, but they really gained their popularity in the 1950s in America. From there model railroading has branched out all across the world in dozens of sizes and accessories.

Model railroading is the greatest hobby because it’s so many hobbies in one and teaches you so many things: how to work with your hands, manual dexterity, the elements of design, carpentry, precisely realistic model making, principles of electric wiring, how to create realistic scenery, artistic principles by learning how to paint detailed scenery, how systems work, learn interesting bits of history, how to come up with solutions to different challenges, and, yes, even some computer programming if you choose.

This book takes you on the journey from first selecting a model train and it’s scale through to designing and building a railroad through to soldering and the electronics required.

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