How to Make the Strike Eagle Paper Airplane

by OrigamiAirEnforcer in Living > Office Supply Hacks

7305 Views, 13 Favorites, 0 Comments

How to Make the Strike Eagle Paper Airplane

IMG_8397.JPG

Fast, long range and simple, the Strike Eagle is an improved variant of the Eagle paper airplane by YouTuber Rob's World featuring many refinements to enable it to fly faster and further.

I decided to develop the Strike Eagle after seeing the tutorial for the Eagle on YouTube. The design was very simplistic and similar to the Nakamura Lock. As a result, its performance was good but limited. To remedy this, I decided to introduce several improvements. To improve stability and decrease wear, I changed the wings' angle of incidence to zero degrees and added ventral winglets as outriggers. To strengthen the airframe, the wing structure was also made more substantial. Lastly, I implemented the same nose fold design that had been fitted to previous designs of mine (such as the Nakamura Eagle and UltraHavoc) to enable the aircraft to fly faster and require less tape. The improved aircraft performed well in testing, so I quickly decided it would be published.

TAA USAF Designation: A197-1

Materials

materials.jpg

Required:
1 Piece of 8.5 by 11 inch Paper

Tape

Ruler

Pencil

Optional:

Scissors (additional surfaces only)

Length, Corner and Nose Folding

2.jpg
3.jpg
4.jpg
IMG_8366.JPG
IMG_8367.JPG
IMG_8368.JPG
IMG_8370.JPG
IMG_8371.JPG
IMG_8372.JPG
IMG_8373.JPG

Fold the paper in half along its length, then fold the both corners of one side into the center as shown. Along the inner edge of the corner folds, crease again perpendcularly, then unfold. Fold the edges of the paper into the corner folds' creases and then pull the tip of the paper into to the perpendicular crease to make a midway crease. Unfold and restore the corner folds as shown.

Nose, Wing and Winglet Folding

IMG_8374.JPG
IMG_8375.JPG
IMG_8376.JPG
IMG_8377.JPG
IMG_8378.JPG
IMG_8379.JPG
IMG_8380.JPG
IMG_8381.JPG
IMG_8382.JPG
IMG_8383.JPG
IMG_8384.JPG
IMG_8385.JPG
IMG_8386.JPG
IMG_8387.JPG
IMG_8388.JPG
IMG_8389.JPG
IMG_8390.JPG
IMG_8391.JPG
IMG_8392.JPG
IMG_8393.JPG
IMG_8394.JPG
IMG_8395.JPG
IMG_8396.JPG
IMG_8397.JPG

Restore the perpendicular fold and pull the tips into the midway crease. Measure and mark 1 inch from the center crease and wingtip along the trailing edge. Fold along the marks and align the trailing edges with one another to maintain an angle of incidence of zero degrees. Fold the blunt tip of the nose up to the crease of the previous step. Reverse the folds as shown and tuck the paper into itself as pictured. Pull the paper backward as shown. Briefly unfold these flaps to tuck more paper as shown on each side; then restore the folds. Fold the wings down, then fold the winglets at the marks 1 inch in from each wingtip. Apply tape to the rear of the fuselage and above the wing roots just forward of the trailing edges. This will complete the aircraft.

Flight

IMG_8397.JPG

The Strike Eagle is quite simple to fly. At launch, give the airplane a moderately fast throw for optimal flight speed and range. Additional surfaces applicable include flaps, elevators, ailerons, elevons, rudders, air brakes and an electronic warfare tail. Enjoy!