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A Treasury of Wooden Toys, Volume 3: Sailboats and Submarines
Paperback / softback
Main Details
Description
In this detailed "how-to" book of wooden toy projects, the home wood craftsman will find full-color illustrated chapters with instructions on building two different functional toy sailboats that will delight and impress in operation. The hull of one of these boats is turned on a wood lathe. Also included are plans and construction details and photos of two rubber band powered toy submarines based on historic boats. One of the toy submarines is a profile model of a World War II U.S. fleet submarine. It is built from a single 3/4 inch thick pine board with a long slot sawn out for the twisted strands of rubber bands. The boat has diving planes to permit various underwater and surface runs. It is designed for children old enough to safely and patiently wind the rubber band motor for each run. The propellers are built with a winding handle to make winding faster and less likely to slip out of one's grasp and waste the effort. None of these boats is suitable as a tub boat for a child's play or bath. Adult supervision is suggested to provide safety when children are playing near pools and lakes, and initially to explain operational details to the interested child. The Akula submarine is a functional toy replica of a Soviet Cold War nuclear attack boat. It is a 3-D project in which the hull is glued-up from five pine boards and turned to shape on a wood lathe. The boat is ballasted and balanced to float level with the deck at water level, requiring positive buoyancy. The hull is ventilated with drilled vent holes to preclude trapped air from restricting operation. This model represents the happy domain between intricate scale models and operational near-scale toys. Each of these functional toys will also appeal to adults who will be fascinated to see them in realistic operation. Every toy will make handsome display in a child's room.
Author Biography
Jim Humphries is a retired U.S. Air Force command pilot with 10,000 hours of flying time. In 1956, he earned his bachelor's degree in Mechanical Engineering from Clemson College, and continued his graduate engineering education at the University of Michigan while on active duty with the U.S. Air Force, eventually earning master's degrees in Aeronautical and Astronautical Engineering. Using his extensive engineering and aviation background, he designs and builds quality wooden toys, many of which have survived through generations. He has been married to his wife, Marsha, for over sixty years. they have two grown sons, nine grandchildren, and have begun having great grandchildren. As a military pilot, Jim served for 23 years on active duty, including a combat tour in Southeast Asia during the Vietnam war. He retired as a full colonel in 1979, and flew as an engineering test pilot with Fairchild Aircraft Corporation in San Antonio, Texas for fifteen years. As a writer, he has published articles in military and civilian magazines and newsletters. Writing for him is a special joy, and when he's not designing and building wooden toys, he can be found at the computer crafting a new volume or story. Jim is a long-time Bible teacher in United Methodist Church Sunday schools. He has been a featured speaker at military, professional and Christian events. Now, in his mid-eighties, he is about the business of getting years of toy projects out to the public through colorful how-to construction books, this being his third volume of wooden toys.
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