I tend to agree, 50 years ago we made most of our kites. I could never get a 
box to fly. The triditional I once had out 1,400 feet. The worst was trying 
to bring it back.
----- Original Message ----- 
From: "Betsy Whitney" <[email protected]>
To: <[email protected]>
Sent: Tuesday, February 17, 2009 4:13 PM
Subject: Re: [BlindHandyMan] How to Make a Box Kite


Aloha Ray,
Good to see your name on the list. Where were you when I was 8 and in
love with all things kite? This is great!
Betsy
At 11:07 AM 2/17/2009, you wrote:

>Make a Box shaped work of art and watch it soar in the sky.Building and
>flying kites is fun for kids of all ages.
>Download
><<http://media.rd.com/dynamic/19/91/34/Make%20a%20Box%20kite.pdf>http://media.rd.com/dynamic/19/91/34/Make%20a%20Box%20kite.pdf>
>Kite for Kids project PDF.
>
>These kites are constructed with 6mm timber dowels, called spares, with
>short lengths of plastic tube for flexible joints. The sails are made of
>Tyvek, a light, moisture-resistant, tough and inexpensive material. It's
>easily decorated with paint or felt-tipped pens and doesn't tear easily.
>Find Tyvek at hobby shops and speciality kite suppliers such as Kite Magic
>(www.kitesite.com.au), along with kite flying lines on plastic handles. The
>tails are made of lengths of nylon ribbon.
>This design flies well in moderate winds. Run into the wind to launch the
>kite and add a tail to the spar where the line connects if it needs extra
>stability.
>
>STEP 1
>
>Cut out and decorate
>Cut two 1200 x 320mm rectangles of Tyvec and divide into quarters with a
>pencil and decorate. Cut the spars with a handsaw.
>TIP: Make sun designs using marker pen outlines, with poster paint infill,
>decorating with glitter or streamers.
>
>STEP 2
>
>Make the connectors
>Cut 40mm lengths of 6mm PVC tube with a utility knife. Cut 75% through to
>make right-angles, bending the tube back, sliding one end of the split tube
>down so it exits via the slot. The remaining section is a coupling for
>another spar.
>
>STEP 3
>
>Position the long spars
>Lay the sails face down, position the PVC connecters 150mm from the ends of
>the spars, with the spars across each quarter. Fold the sails under and 
>tape
>the ends to form two boxes with the spars connecting them.
>
>STEP 4
>
>Attach the cross spars
>Feed the cross spars into the PCV tube, fitting one end into a connector,
>flexing the other into the diagonally opposing connector, and repeating 
>with
>each cross spar to fully stretch the kite open.
>
>STEP 5
>
>Finishing the kite
>Attach the kite flying line to any one of the spars where it enters the
>sail. For balance add a tail to the opposite end of the same spar. TIP Flex
>the second spar to make both spars fit.
>
>Do you have a favourite design that you made when you were a kid and 
>enjoyed
>making and flying your kite, then let us know how it all went together.
>
>Ray
>
>[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>
>




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