The Jetex 50 was the most popular of all the Jetex motors. In its various versions, it inspired designers to create a vast range of plans.

We present here a representative selection from this range. These downloadable plans are sourced from designers in the United Kingdom, the United States and France, and cover almost forty years of commercially published Jetex designs.

Midget 50 (Clive Hadland, 1949)

Rudolph (Aubrey Kochman, 1950)

 Pfupf (P. Maillard, 1951)

Supersonic Wing (Frank Ehling, 1951)

Hawker Hunter (Bill Dean, 1952)

 Arrow 50 (Ian Dowsett, 1953)

 Puk (Jean-Claude Aggéry, 1953)

 Ukkie (C R de Vries, 1953)

 Mosca (R. Parlatoré, 1953)

 F-4D Skyray (Bill Dean, 1954)

 Folland Midge (Bill Dean, 1955)

 Fizzle-bug (Ian Dowsett, 1955) 

 Super Mystère (Modèle Magazine, 1955)

 Fizzle Quick  (Ian Dowsett, 1955) 

 Vulture (Bill Dean, 1957) 

 VTO (American Modeler, 1957) 

 Fizzel Fazzel (Bob Walters, 1959)

 Fizzle XIII (D.J. Lindley, 1965) 

 Good Times (Bob Stalick, 1976) 

 Small Wonder (Wayne Brown, 1967)

 F-19 Stealth (John Emmett, 1987)

PAA-Load contest, Junior Jet division:

 Jr Jet Record Holder (Paul H. Osborne, 1961)

 Dummy Dip 50 (Charles Sotich, 1961)

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Midget 50

pic-midget 50-bw 6-4902-120wClick the button to view Detail page with building and flying hints from Clive Hadland and download plan.

 

 Detail Page

 

by Clive Hadland (1949)

Midget 50 earned its young designer, Clive Hadland, second placing in the inaugural ICI Jetex Contest in 1949. He was in the illustrious company of two designers who were to become famous in the aeromodelling scene – Dick Twomey, who gained first place, and Bill Henderson who came third. Unlike his two fellow place-getters, Clive chose to fly with the (then) smallest of the motors, the recently introduced Jetex 50. He wisely kept Midget 50 light and simple in construction with a claimed building time of one evening.



Rudolph

pic 1-rudolph-at-5006-356wClick the button to view Detail page with building and flying hints from Aubrey Kockmann and download plan.

 

 Detail Page

 

by Aubrey Kochmann (1950)

Rudolph is the first plan published in the United States for a Jetex 50-powered model. Air Trails, which had published the first US Jetex design ever, offered its readers this plan less than a year after Wilmot Mansour had introduced the Jetex 50, and just six months after American Telasco became the official US distributor for Jetex.

Aubrey Kochmann designed this simple all-balsa model to demonstrate the capabilities of the new, smaller motor. His article gives a detailed explanation of the principle of Jetex motive power, for the benefit of a readership still largely unfamiliar with it.



Pfupf

pic-pfupf-mra-51-356wClick the button to view Detail page with building and flying hints from Graham Knight and download plan.

 

 Detail Page

 

by P. Maillard (1951)

Taking the lead in promoting the Jetex cause in France was the premier French aeromodelling magazine, Le Modèle Réduit d'Avion. Typical of the Jetex plans it published was the little Pfufp, appearing in a 1951 issue. Our copy of the plan was republished in Vic Smeed's Flying Models – Favourites of the Fifties. More recently, Pfufp has been adapted for Rapier power by Grahan Knight, and we also have Graham's redrawing of the plan available for download.



Supersonic Wing

pic-supersonic wing-ehling-at-5106

Click the button to download a large plan.

 

 Detail Page

 

by Frank Ehling (1951)

“Despite its simplicity and ease of construction (the complete model is made from ¹/16" sheet balsa), the Supersonic Wing is a high-performance craft. And for those modelers who may consider the Jetex 50 a low-powered jet engine capable of little more than a polite hiss, I'd like to advise that a light model properly trimmed for flight will lead you a merry chase over hill and dale. With this model I found it prudent to team up with a good cross-country runner. We spelled each other on the retrieving job!”



Hawker Hunter

drwg-hunter-dean-eagle a3-52

Click the button to download a large plan.

 

 Detail Page

 

by Bill Dean (1952)

“Bill Dean tempted Eagle Annual readers with this “flying model of the famous Hawker Hunter [that] takes just a single evening to build.” As for flying, Bill advised his young readers to “choose a space clear of trees and buildings as the model is capable of long duration flights of up to a quarter of a mile.”