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The Lasco Lascondor (also frequently known by the misspelling "Lasconder") [1] was a 1930s Australian 8-seat passenger and mail carrier aircraft built by the Larkin Aircraft Supply Company (Lasco) at Coode Island, Victoria. It is claimed to be the first multi-engined aircraft designed and built in the Southern Hemisphere.
The original company went into liquidation and Herbert Larkin then started the Larkin Aircraft Supply Company (known as Lasco) in 1921. In 1925 the company produced copies of the Avro 504K . The company also produced under-licence the de Havilland Gipsy Moth and one de Havilland DH.50 biplane.
An electronics repair kit including different resistors. Professionals who repair and maintain electronic equipment may have a kit containing a soldering iron, wire, and components such as transistors and resistors. In medicine, a repair kit consisting of a plug and plastic mesh may be used during inguinal hernia surgery. A particular trade may ...
The converted aircraft were known as the Lasco Lascowl. Both aircraft, still retaining their original names Diamond Bird and Love Bird, were chartered by an aerial survey expedition led by Australian explorer Donald Mackay. The expedition set off on 23 May 1930 to carry out a 67,000-square-mile (170,000 km 2) survey of central Australia. Both ...
The Lasco Lascoter was a 1920s Australian 6-seat passenger and mail carrier aircraft built by the Larkin Aircraft Supply Company (Lasco) at Coode Island, Victoria. It was the first Australian-designed and built airliner to be granted a Certificate of Airworthiness .
Lasco or LASCO may refer to: Lasco, California, United States; Lasco Jamaica, a food, financial, household and personal care and pharmaceutical company based in Kingston, Jamaica; Laboratory for the Analysis of Organisational Communication Systems, in Louvain-la-Neuve in Belgium
Lasco was a seasonal logging camp in Lassen County, California. [1] It was located on what was the Fernley and Lassen Railway branch of the Southern Pacific Railroad 8 miles (13 km) north of Westwood, [2] at an elevation of 5574 feet (1699 m). [1] Lasco was the site of a prominent logging camp constructed in 1922.
Tamiya entered the 1/72 market rather late by releasing its first kit in 1993 (see kit 60701). [9] However, this was a reboxed version of Italeri's F-16 and it would take until 2014 to design their own version of this jet (see kit 60786). Tamiya quickly got a large product line in this scale by reboxing more than 30 Italeri kits.