Snake45 wrote:
JohnB wrote:
It's one of those types that have had more plastic expended in the production of model kits of it than the weight of the materials used in its construction.

Really? Only "mainstream" kit I'm aware of is the ancient Aurora, which hasn't been made in well over 50 years and is now a "holy grail" kit in Model Airplane Collector World. (I found mine in a San Antonio hobby shop in 1972, and it was ultra-rare even then--I couldn't believe my good luck.) There MIGHT have been an obscure vacform of it somewhere along the line.
You are forgetting the old Hawk F-90, a kit that makes the Aurora kit look common.
But in its time, it was often seen.
My point was, the F-90 and X-3 (with
very long produced kits by Lindberg and Revell) are more famous for their accomplishments in the realm of plastic models than their exploits in real life.
Again, my humorous musings was simply, if you were to weigh the amount of plastic used in all the kits produced, that would likely outweigh the real aircraft.
With a Lindberg kit that that was still in production not all that long ago, the XF-88 could probably also be added to the list.
Then there is long list of aircraft types which may not meet my weight standard, but are overly represented as model kits compared to the numbers built, usefulness to their operators or service life. I would think the F4D Skyray would be on that list.