The price of the TBM Fly Eagle jets includes all the factory installed options listed below in red & all other standard items as well!
COMBO SPECIAL: Purchase a Fly Eagle Jet which ships from Florida and any Turbine we sell and save $200!! Purchase a Fly Eagle Jet which ships from China and any Turbine we sell and save $100!!
| Diamond Back |
F-18F
Part# EJAF181 |
Coming Soon!
$3250
|
|
| Jolly Roger |
F-18F
Part# EJAF182 |
Coming Soon!
$3250 |
|
Shipping Pricing coming soon!
Daimond Back Scheme:
Jolly Roger Scheme:
Production pictures of the plugs for the molds:
If you missed seeing the Troy Built Models display at Florida Jets '08 then you missed seeing the exceptional quality of these planes. The landing gear is beautiful. The workmanship of the planes is second to none. The paint is flawless and even panel lines are on every plane. It's hard to tell from photos, but these planes are as good as it gets!
All Fly Eagle Jet Aircraft Include
- Installed retractable landing gear with struts
- Installed tires and wheels
- Installed brakes
- Installed gear doors with installed air cylinders
- Installed Fuel Tanks
- All hinges are pre-drilled and ready for glue.
- Brake valve
- Retract valve
- Geardoor valve
- Stainless steel tailpipe
- Air Tanks
Coming Soon!
WARNING - Gasoline and Turbine powered aircraft are not manufactured to withstand unlimited G's. Any aircraft can fail, be it a wing folding up or a fuselage breaking in half under too high of a load. Just as any full size aircraft, model aircraft have a maximum G rating. Because you are not in the plane flying it and experiencing the G's and reading the G-meter, it is more difficult to judge the G's on the aircraft, and it is very easy to exceed the limits of the aircraft. Understand that if you perform a snap roll, parachute, wall, blender, knife edge loop, or pull hard on the elevator at almost any speed, you can be putting in excess of 15 G's, even in excess of 30 G's, and most aircraft can only designed to take 10-12 G's. If you perform any violent maneuver, you can break your plane. When I perform hard maneuvers, especially for the first time on an airframe, I am prepared for a failure and am prepared for it as best I can be. This mainly includes performing the maneuver far enough away from spectators that in event of a failure that I am not endangering others. In addition, be prepared for the manufacturer to not pay for a new airframe which is broken during flight. It is common practice for any manufacturer to not replace an airframe which breaks in the air or upon landing. I have only seen manufacturers replace airframes when they have received many of the same failures and the manufacturer determines that there was a design or manufacturing error. If you break an airframe, and you are the only one to do so, then it is probably not the fault of the manufacturer. Please fly safely, and avoid full throttle operation other than at low airspeeds.