This is why I went to KRBuilder.org way back when I started on the Black Bird.  
I found quickly that you usually get what you pay for.  However, IrfanView 
gives you muchy more than you pay for as it is a great tool and is free and has 
been around for many years.  I can give you a template that you can use on any 
website with IrfanView and all you will have to do is fill in the blanks ( 
narrative (optional)).

On Monday, April 21, 2014 8:38 AM, Mark Langford <ml at n56ml.com> wrote: 

=============
These free websites are fine to throw a few pictures out on to show your 
stuff, but will come to an end someday, and it may be quite unexpectedly 
(it's happened before).  If we want a "permanent" place to post photos with 
descriptions that you can count on for years down the road, making your own 
website is the way to go.  If you want to move them later, that's easy using 
ftp.  You can even get your own domain name and point to it, wherever it is. 
Most broadband user accounts come with some amount of disk space included in 
the price, where you can stand up your own website of reasonable size, and 
maintain it. Almost certainly, they also have instructions (if not free 
basic  HTML authoring software) on their website to help you be successful. 
That's why they're there! 

HTML is very simple stuff, but if you want to avoid the hour that it takes 
to learn it,  you can type it up in Word and save it as HTML, then FTP it 
(easier than it sounds) to your little space on the server, and you're done 
(although editing Word HTML is a mess....it's best to update the file on 
your PC and reupload it every time).  The Word method is certainly not 
recommend though. 

Below is the first page or so of my "stub wing" website at 
http://www.n56ml.com/swings.html .  It may look complicated, but there are 
only about five "constructions" that you need to know.  You can probably 
look at what's below and the get the hang of it.  You can copy one of my 
websites ("copy source"), edit it and put your stuff into it while tweaking 
the HREFs correspondingly, and have your own website in pretty short order. 
See below.  
------------------------------------ 
<html><head> 
</head><body> 
<TITLE>Wing Construction</title> 
<p> 
<HR><center><h3>Stub Wing Construction </H3> 
<p> 

revised Aug 13, 1998 
</center> 
<p> 

<IMG SRC="as5048.jpg"> 
<br> 
I'm using the "new airfoil", the AS5046, on my airplane.  If you don't know 
the story behind this family of low-drag airfoils developed especially for 
the KR2S, you really should read about the cooperative effort that created 
it at <A 
HREF="http://www.krnet.org/as504x/";>http://www.krnet.org/as504x/";</A>.  You 
can also find free downloadable full-size template drawings for them there, 
as well. 
<p> 

<HR> Stub Wing Skins</H3> 
<p> 

<IMG SRC="kmlws23.jpg"> 
<br> 

I cut my airfoil templates out all in one piece, leaving humps over the 
spars in order to ensure that the airfoil template/rib remained accurate.  
<p> 

<IMG SRC="kmlws24.jpg"> 
<br> 

After triangular gussets were glued to the template/spar junction, the humps 
were sanded away, leaving an accurate airfoil template. 
<p> 
etc. 
------------------------------------------- 

Mark Langford, Harvest, AL 
ML at N56ML.com 
www.N56ML.com  


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