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The Air Camper is a two-place open cockpit monoplane with "parasol" wing built from material that was, in the 1930s, readily available from local sources. Powered by a Ford Model A engine, and first flown with one in May 1929, [ 2 ] Pietenpol's design was sturdy, simple and affordable.
Ron Hazelton's HouseCalls—Includes step-by-step video instructions and free blueprints for a custom doghouse. Building a Small Dog House Includes detailed images with the construction process, as well as a list with the materials and tools needed for the project.
The plans for the doghouse were completed by Wright in 1957, and the 4 sq ft (0.37 m 2) triangular house was built in 1963. In 1973 Eddie's House was removed and thrown away, but in 2010 Jim and Eric Berger, sons of Robert Berger, rebuilt Eddie's House from the original plans for a segment in Romanza , a documentary film by Michael Miner about ...
John W. Grega initially set out to create a modernised version of the Pietenpol Air Camper using structural components from a Piper Cub but incorporating them into a new fuselage design based on the Pietenpol original. [3] Two wings were designed, one based on the Cub wing, and another as a modernised version of the Pietenpol wing.
"Pinocho", an Air Camper made in Mexico by Miguel Carrillo Ayala in 1935 and now in the Museo Militar de Aviación. Powered by a 201 CID engine of a Ford Model A. The Pietenpol Air Camper is a simple parasol wing homebuilt aircraft designed by Bernard H. Pietenpol. The first prototype that became the Air Camper was built and flown by Pietenpol ...
The car camper is an estate car (UK) or a station wagon (USA) converted into a travel home. The rear cargo area is converted into a full double bed area usually with a fabricated aluminium framework. All equipment necessary to set up a well-appointed camp site is stored under the double bed with access through lidded areas under the bed.
The dogtrot, also known as a breezeway house, dog-run, or possum-trot, is a style of house that was common throughout the Southeastern United States during the 19th and early 20th centuries. [ 1 ] [ 2 ] Some theories place its origins in the southern Appalachian Mountains .
Thomas Hiram Holding Outside his tent. Thomas Hiram Holding (c. 1844 – 1930 [1]) was a British tailor and often considered the founder of modern camping.He wrote the first edition of The Camper's Handbook in 1908 and founded the Association of Cycle Campers, now the Camping and Caravanning Club.