I thought it was Stu and Ken, and 1972. Here is a great article by
Jack Cox from Jan 1973 about it.

Ken Rand's Styrofoam Airplane, January 1973
http://aerofoilengineering.com/KR/sportaviation/Kr731.
HTM 1/4
Ken Rand's Styrofoam Airplane
By Jack Cox
One of the most talked about homebuilts at Oshkosh '72 was Ken Rand's tiny KR1.
If you stood at the fringes of the crowds around the plane and
listened to the chatter, it was usually a toss up as
to which was more discussed the
aircraft itself, or its method of construction.
The KR1
is so small that some EAAers seemed to be a little leery of it. They
would give it a sideways look and
break out with a "you're putting me on" grin.
It took some convincing to get a few folks out of the notion that this
was a large RC model or, at least, some
overindulgent
father's taxiing toy for his kid.
Others sauntered up, read the name on the "Walk Me" sign and grunted
something like, "So this is that
Styrofoam airplane I've heard so much about."
No doubt about it, the KR1
is small.
It has a span of 17 feet 2 inches, the length is 12 feet 6 inches, and
it only weighs 310 pounds...almost half of
which is the VW engine and prop!
The KR1
is the creation of Ken Rand, EAA 30184, Huntington Beach, California
and EAA Chapter 92. Back in
1968 Ken and Stuart Robinson, EAA 71345, started two homebuilts based
about equally on the Taylor
Monoplane and their control line model airplanes.
The fuselage is the familiar plywood and spruce box. Two laddertype
sides are built up of 5/8" X 5/8" spruce
stock and are covered with 3/32" plywood from the firewall to just aft
of the cockpit with 1/16" used from there
to the rudder post...just like most wooden airplanes from the early de
Havillands to the Volksplane, not to
mention the balsa "stick" models us over30
fogeys used to build in our misspent youth.
The "backbone" of the airplane is a 5 foot 5 inch center section actually
the main and secondary spar carry
throughs which
ties the fuselage sides together, serves as the support for the seat
bottom, the support for the
retractable landing gear and its retract/locking mechanism, attach
point for the side mounted stick and trim
control, and, of course, the mounting points for the outer wing panels.
Up to this point the KR1
is pretty conventional but
from here on out... wow!
Up front, the little 1200 cc VW engine has had just a light lick or
two at modification for aircraft use. The crank
has a 30 taper to match the tapered hub, the rear main bearing has an
oil groove added, the oil breather line is
relocated, thin wall exhaust stacks replace the auto equipment, a
Revmaster injector carburetor is fitted, and the
Wolfsburg ignition is replaced by a belt driven single magneto. Figure
2 shows the ultrasimple
extrusion/Lord
3/29/2017 Ken Rand's Styrofoam Airplane, January 1973
http://aerofoilengineering.com/KR/sportaviation/Kr731.
HTM 2/4
mount engine mount setup. Ken picked up his engine in a junkyard and
has a ridiculously small amount of outofthepocket
cash invested forward of the firewall.
The landing gear can be best understood by studying Figure 2. A single
handle pivots the whole assembly
through a fore and aft are of about 900 and a couple of spring loaded
latches with detents lock the gear in the
"up" or "down" position. To retract, the wheels move straight back and
up into wells in the center section
leaving about 1 1/4" of the 8inch
gocart
wheels exposed like
the early, conventional geared Bellancas. The
only shock absorption comes from the tires, whatever flexing the
horizontal gear assembly has from the pivot
points outward, and the seat cushion.
The brakes? ever
built a soap box racer? or
handled a twohorse
wagon? That's right, the KR1
brakes are
simply tire scrubbers that are intended for differential ground
steering and a little braking on the landing roll.
Hydraulic gocart
brakes can be used, if desired.
The landing gear legs, including the wheels, are only about 17 inches
long, which means the leading edge of the
wing is about that high off the ground and the trailing edge is
literally brushing the grass. The tail wheel is a
dolly caster bolted to a length of auto leaf spring. This extremely
lowtotheground
stance is one of the striking
aspects of the appearance of the KR1.
This tiny tiger should REALLY reap the benefits of ground effect on
both takeoff
and landing.
Now comes the actual geewhiz
part. (For the younger generation, "geewhiz"
is an anachronistic exclamation
picked up by your fathers in their formative years from reading
decadent comic strips such as "Batman",
"Tailspin Tommy", etc., when they were supposed to be doing their
homework! It roughly translates as
"heavy"... I think.)
The engine cowl, fuel tank, fuselage turtle deck, vertical and
horizontal tail surfaces, and outer wing panels are
completely or largely constructed of polystyrene foam!
The actual process goes something like this: slabs of polystyrene are
glued in place, are trimmed and sanded to
the desired profile, and have a layer of Dynel cloth epoxied on to
form an amazingly tough and, when sanded,
smooth exterior.
The whole thing takes a little getting used to. The vertical fin, for
instance, is merely two upright wood spars
with a profile rib at the top and bottom. The rest is PS foam including
the leading edge! The rudder and
elevator are even simpler: there is a leading edge wood spar plus a
rib at each end and the rest is foam and Dynel
again,
including the trailing edges which are real knife edges.
The turtle deck will shake you up, also. It was built up by gluing on
the PS foam slabs and sanding to shape with
no bulkheads no
bracing of any type. Before the Dynel and epoxy application you could
have smashed
the whole thing to bits with one halfhearted
swipe of your hand; but after the Dynel covering had cured, Ken
proved its strength to a slightly incredulous FAA inspector by standing on it!
The KR1
is a convertible of sorts. When the foam blocks are glued on to form
the turtle back, one has the
option of an open cockpit, a full bubble canopy, or a "razorback"
configuration . As the accompanying
photographs show, a swingover
hatch is needed, even for the open cockpit version. A bubble canopy is bonded
in the hatch, if that is the preference. One could, of course, build
two hatches, one with the bubble and the other
with the open cockpit and change them with the seasons .. a
convertible, as we said.
In the area between the instrument panel (also of PS foam) and the
firewall, an integral 7 1/2 gallon fuel tank is
built in ... of PS foam/Dynel/epoxy, naturally.
The tight fitting cowling is formed around the VW engine by simply
gluing the blocks of foam to the engine,
shaping, etc....then the builder saws it off, splits it where
necessary, bonds in fasteners and snaps it back in place.
3/29/2017 Ken Rand's Styrofoam Airplane, January 1973
http://aerofoilengineering.com/KR/sportaviation/Kr731.
HTM 3/4
Would you believe even the spinner is made with foam/Dynel? Ken sawed
out a circular piece of wood, glued
foam blocks to it, put the whole thing in a lathe and turned it to the
shape he wanted then
laid on the Dynel.
Sanding, cutting out the prop blade holes and drilling a center
retaining screw hole completed the job.
It's kinds like the old joke about the meat packer who used every part
of the pig except the squeal!
The feature that should be understood is that the PS foam has little
to do with the strength of the finished
process. It is merely a filler and, most important, a builtin
mold or form for the final shape of the layer of Dynel
and epoxy. This outer shell is incredibly light and strong. This
writer personally observed Ken Rand walking up
and down the wing of the KR1,
and at the risk of a repair bill and/or a fat lip, I took the thin
trailing edge of the
elevator between two fingers and tried hard to deform it in any
direction. No soap ... it is really tough!
The wing of the KR1
is the mind boggler. It is composed of two 60inch
builtup
wooden spars with a rib at the
inboard and outboard ends. Two foam ribs are installed at the Y3 and
2/3 positions between the end ribs for
support and shape only. A thick plank is glued on to form the leading
edge and the remainder of the wing is
planked with one inch thick slabs of PS foam, sanded to shape and
covered with the Dynel and epoxy.
You noticed, didn't you, that there are no compression ribs, no drag
and antidrag wires, no interior structure,
whatever in
other words, the Dynel skin is a structural member. But, one more
time, don't think the wing is
flimsy. As previously mentioned, Ken walks around on it...would you
allow that on your spam can, termite nest,
or moth's paradise?
The ailerons are simply sawed out of the wing and are reinserted in
the same space, attached to piano hinges that
have been bonded in the wells. A spruce strip is installed in the
leading edge of the aileron for mounting the
hinge.
All in all, the KR1
is certainly one of the most highly innovative homebuilts to ever make
an appearance at an
EAA FlyIn.
Many look at the simple, light, and inexpensive PS foam/Dynel/epoxy
sandwich construction as
the "breakthrough"
that has been needed in the homebuilt world. With it there is no
longer any need for our
birds to be boxy; the compound curve is no longer a bugaboo;
and glasslike
finishes previously seen only on
expensive European sailplanes is within the reach of every homebuilder.
The use of this material and technique has already spread to other
areas. Wil Neubert's excellent "Stardusters
International" newsletter recently had an article by Al Hooper which
went into detail on the use of PS foam and
Dynel to make fairings, fillets, and wingtips for the Starduster Too.
As always, the more minds and hands we
have at work, the more innovations like,
Al has already learned that the heated glue guns are great for sticking
the foam boards together and that the Stanley Surfoam plane does a
good job in shaping the material Neubert
uses an electric carving knife. And so it goes. We are sure to see
widespread use of this material and
construction technique in the years to come perhaps
more for styling and streamlining than for primary and
secondary structures, however.
Many of you probably want some more specific information on the
material Ken used on his KR1,
so:
FOAM Two
pound per cubic foot rigid polystyrene the
kind normally used for building insulation. It comes
in 7" x 9" x9' boards that cost around $8.00 each. See your local home
building supply house.
DYNEL "
Dynel" is a synthetic fiber made by Union Carbide. It is used on the KR1
in much the same way as
fiberglass cloth is used to make cowlings, etc. on other planes. Dynel
has the advantage of being four times as
strong as glass, but only half as heavy. The cloth is very soft and
can be stretched to fit almost any shape. 4
ounce per square yard Dynel is used on the KR1.
EPOXY epoxy
resin is used on the KR1.
Polyester resin can also be used with Dynel cloth in other
applications, but will dissolve polystyrene foam, so is a nono
in this instance. Of interest is the fact that the
Dynel cloth is fitted over the PS foam and the epoxy resin is
squeegeed into the fabric you
do not apply the
resin first as with fiberglass.
GLUE White
glue, Aerolite, etc. plus
the hot glue guns can be used to stick the planks of foam together
3/29/2017 Ken Rand's Styrofoam Airplane, January 1973
http://aerofoilengineering.com/KR/sportaviation/Kr731.
HTM 4/4
prior to shaping and applying the Dynel/epoxy. This is not critical just
enough strength to hold the foam in
place is all that matters. Be careful that whatever glue you use does
not have a solvent that dissolves the foam.
Now, back to the airplane. How does it fly? ...don't know, because like the PL4,
ED5
and a couple of others,
the KR1
did not have its restrictions flown off prior to coming to Oshkosh, so
was a static display for the week.
Ken said the little bird had about 17 hours on it prior to being
trailered to Wisconsin. He reports his creation is
easy to fly and has very good performance on such a tiny engine (36
hp). With a 50 x 38 prop the takeoff
run is
only about 150 feet and the climb rate is 650 fpm. Cruise speed is 130
mph and the thick RAF 48 airfoil stalls at
a low 42 mph.
Like a lot of the unusually small homebuilts, and, particularly, since
this one is of unconventional construction,
the KR1
is not without its critics. The Ucontrol
model airplane bell cranks used in the trim tab system jolted a
few people. Ken, a Douglas design engineer for many years, says the
loads on the tabs are so light that the
model parts are adequate. Others have looked askance at the aluminum
hinges for the rudder and elevator. While
strong enough, they undoubtedly will need frequent inspection for
signs of excess wear. There are those who
wonder about extensive use of PS foam but perhaps the best evidence of
the strength of the KR1
is the fact that
in an early test flight, Ken had a power failure and had to land in an
unimproved field. The little landing gear
collapsed, but the airframe, foam and all, came through like it was
made of cast iron. Finally, the size of the KR1
will necessarily limit it to persons of average size...but that can be
said of a lot of homebuilts.
In summary, we think Ken Rand's KR1
was one of the really significant homebuilts at Oshkosh '72. The
airplane itself is already being built in great numbers ... the $500
total cost of the prototype and the prospect of a
short construction period are highly motivating! Over the long haul,
however, we believe Ken's contribution to
the homebuilt movement will be greater for his PS foam/Dynel/epoxy
process than for his airplane. A great
number of new designs are sure the spring up utilizing the "Rand Method" and
that's bigger than any single
machine, no matter how good it is.

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