[photo] [photo]
El'Cheapo Diamond
Kite Plan - Responses



Responses from people


The following are responses I have recieved from the network about the El-Cheapo Diamond Kite Plan. This makes interesting reading and some of the results have been incorperated back into the main plan.

Many thanks to all who have replied.

gregcgoodwin <gregcgoodwin@chicago.avenew.com>, on 20 June 1997, wrote...
My kids really liked the plans that you have.The diamond kite flies real good. They were wondering if you could help them find a plan for an old fashioned box kite.

Anthony's Reply :- look in the "Link Farm". if I know of any that is where you can find links to them.

Daniel Bohn <danielb@teleport.com> on 12 Aug 1997, wrote...
Hello Anthony! I really liked your plan for the cheapo diamond kites. I used it this summer for a summer day camp I ran.

We made the kites pretty much as planned and they worked great. We also built some bigger but on the same scale. We used bamboo sticks for staking up tomato plants. They all flew great.

We did make one change; we used hot glue guns instead of phone wire to hold the cross piece to the back bone. A little slower but it seemed to work pretty good as we got used to it. We used hot glue to hold the sticks inside of the ballon stick as well. This also allowed the ballon stick to be bent very easily when it was still hot.

We all really appreciated that you took the time and energy to put out this information.

Daniel Bohn

Anthony's Reply :- Glad to see it works out so well. The wire (or glue) is basically just to hold the dihedral in place. The glue gun method will also prevent it slowly working its way up or down the spine or longeron. Not that it should do this anyway if the wire is tight!

Balloon sticks are ok for small diamonds like this. For larger diamonds however it will probably just fold double with a good gust of wind.

For larger diamonds, I would recomend you replace the balloon stick tubing above with a light and thin walled brass or aluminum tube of the appropriate size. To bend this center the metal tube over a gap in some wooden boards and tap a chisel with a hammer lightly in the middle. Don't bend it too much.

Jeff Jaeckels <jjaeck@itis.com> on 15 Aug 1997, wrote...
As others have said, your diamond kite plans are excellent. You obviously put a lot of work into documenting it in the html layout.

One thing I found is that a hot air blower, such as those used to strip paint, are great for softening the balloon stick so it bends without being stressed. You can bend it to the precise angle as well. Your form has never-ending lateral movement.

Another thing, large tyvek envelopes that people throw out at the office are just barely big enough when cut open to make a small diamond kite. The surface is nice for markers or crayons and there is an unlimited supply of these envelopes in any office trash. Tyvek is nice since it does not rip.

Jeff

Anthony's Reply :- Tyvek is a lot tougher than the white plastic but it is also heavier. I suggest making a larger diamond using the metal tube (see previous reply) when using tyvek as a sail. You can make some enormous diamond kites with just those two small modifications and doubling or even tripling dimensions.

Tyvek as you say does have other advantages such as: easy to draw on with permanent pens, plain crayons, and felt tip pens (not pencils); it also does not stretch, can be cut with sissors but will not tear; and is water proof. Unfortunatally it is not as easy to get a hold of, is heavier, and is more expensive. Them's the breaks.

Dave Young <Wabo Hawk@aol.com> on 19 Oct 1997, wrote...
Thank you for listing the plans and know how for constructing these great little kites. About a year ago I became infatuated with flying sport kites and have even taught my 5 year old son to fly two lines. But the real reason I wanted to write this to you was to explain that I've made probably 50 of the El Cheapos and have flown them in trains from 2 to 22 and have not had a problem. Every kid on the block has been seen with one of these little beauties.

I live in the central United States in Oklahoma. My wife maintains a fan club for a rock and roll artist by the name of Sammy Hagar (Club Cabo is the name and they are on the internet). He used to be the lead singer for a group named Van Halen. Every October he throws a birthday party for himself, and any body who can get there gets to attend the concerts he performs for free. Well, my wife and I were trying to come up with an idea to make a birthday banner for Sammy, being this was his 50th and all, so I stayed up late for a couple of days building 22 El Cheapos out of red plastic bags and attatching paper letters that spelled happy birthday sammy on them. It did turn out pretty good. Since my wife and I know the manager of the club and my wife is in with the band, they allowed us to hang the kites from a cat walk railing in the club. I just ran a 50 pound test line below the dyhedral and strung the kites out like they were on a clothes line. It turned out pretty well. There was enough breeze through the club that the tails floated around and cought many people's attention. One note, the day before, out on the beach, a friend of mine and I launched those kites into the dry Mexican air and watched with child like abbandon. The whole experience was too cool. Pray for wind! -- Dave Young

Sounds like you reached AoxomoxoA -- Anthony

Steve <indeed@royal.net> on 5 Nov 1997, wrote...
I would like to thank you for your detailed instructions for the diamond kite! I was required to build a kite for a Physics class, and I had no idea where to begin. Your plans showed every step along the way. And best of all, the kite flew with no trouble!

Thanks again for the great help.

Frank & Monica <frank@bold.net.au> on 12 Feb 1998, wrote...
We were browsing the web one night to find something to make with the kids. We have 2 girls. We printed the plans for your "el cheapo" diamond kite and made one. Now our girls' school friends are making them as well.

Kevin Hughes <khughes@humboldt1.com> on 24 Feb 1998, wrote...
I would just like to drop you a line and thank you for putting up your kite web page. My 7 yr old son and I just finished flying our diamond kites. We had a great time, thanks for providing info on something we can both enjoy. We are already making plans for more elaborate kites. Thanks for getting us started on a great family activity.

Kevin D. Hughes, McKinleyville California (USA)

Mark Galloway <yawol@delaware.infi.net> on 16 March 1998, wrote...
I just wanted to thank you for the information on your pages about the kites. My children just had a blast playing with these el cheapo diamond kite.

Greg Kaminski <gregk@toolsoftware.com> on Monday 8th of June 1998, wrote...
I'm a parent Mulberry School in San Jose, CA. We had a Father's Day celebration one afternoon and all 16 4th graders and dads made El Cheapos.

It was awesome. Every kite flew (luckily a nice breeze). A few got up 200-250 feet.

Granted, the dads did a lot of the kite making but the El Cheapo is an extremely forgiving design and the kids by themselves could have had similar success after I gave them a lesson. WE didn't even get into the fancy knot tying. Very much appreciate the plans. 16 kids and 16 dads/grandpas had a blast. It was a huge success.

I was particularly happy because I never made a kite before and just followed the directions.

Thanks

Pierre Sarramoune <pierre.sarramoune@hol.fr> on 6 August 1998, wrote...
Thanks a lot !!

My little MAËLY, 3 years old, love her "El Cheapo".

As it always fly after weeks spend in a beach bag, under all the things my daughter needs on a beach, I'm glad. Happy... to have more than 5 minutes to fly mine. ;-))

Nice wind!

Lachlan Wetherall <lachlan@compsys.com.au> on 28 September 1998, wrote...
Wow! I printed out your instructions and from materials found almost entirely in my kitchen constructed a kite that flies like a dream. I'm impressed and grateful for your contribution.

Lachlan

Robert Miller <rjma@msn.com.au> on 18 November 1998
My name is Robert Miller, and I am involved in a training programme with Landmark Education, called the Self Expression and Leadership Programme. During the course, participants create community based projects.

I built your "El Cheapo Diamond Kite". Mine is about 1 metre by 1 metre using 1/4" dowel with soldered brass tubes for the three way corner connectors. The sail is gold lame (ugly material, but looks great in flight and it was free).

Once I worked out that I was trying to fly it upside down, and re-attached the bridle on the correct side, it flew really well.

My children thoroughly enjoyed the experience when I finally let them hold the string.

Thank you, Robert Miller

Peter Rodda <peter@rodda.pta.school.za> on 18 Janurary 1999, wrote...
I am a grade 8 student and live in South Africa. I am a very big kite lover and flyer.

I am so glad that you posted your plans for the small diamond kite. I saw the plan about 2-3 months ago and whated to build a train but never got round to it.

But since seening a "Kite Train artical in KiteLife", I am finally starting to build the train. I am doing it a little diferently though. I am not using balloon sticks because it is not easy to get hold of them here. I am instead using dowle I have bent to give a 15 degre bend. Should I glue the spine and cross spar together or conect them in another way ?

I also am confused about the ataching of the bridle ( for a train ) to the spars. The picture I have from the discription is that it would cut through the thin 3mm dowle. If you have a digital camera , could you please send me a close up photo of how it is conected ?

Thank you for you help, plan and time. I can't wait for your reply.

Anthony's Reply :-
Hot glue would work well as it will fill the gap between the round spine and cross spars. However I usally just use a bit of wire to twist (with pliers) the two parts together. As given in the plan.

As for the kite train section, I have updated the plan on this point adding a explaination on that part. (This plan just gets bigger and bigger!)

Basically in my plan I use a separate section of bridle lines for each kite. It is weaker than a single line, but it allows me to easilly attach the kite frame to the bridle, as now better described in the plan. Also as each kite is seprate I can add and remove single kites or sections of kites to fix them, or help de-tangle the train from another kite line.

The lead or uppermost kite does not need to be bigger but it should have at least twice as much tail. Same for the other top few kites.

The problem is the top of the train tends to be affected by turbulence and can twist around and spin. Which is why I also recomend some swivels inbetween the top few kites.

The lower ones are supported by the upper kites so is no problem.

[photo] NOTE: the angle the kite makes to the line must be a bit greater than 90 degrees or be becomes unstable.

Update on 26 January, 1999...
Thank you for your help for the diamond kite train plan. I have send a small pic of the beginning of my train. It only has 11 kites now but I am hoping to have at least 30 by Sunday.

[photo] Update on 2 Feburary, 1999...
I had some fun flying my 30 kite train at my clubs fun fly on sunday. here is a picture of them. Unfortunately some of the kites got wrecked because the kite were on the ground when big winds came up. I started to self launch and got the tails tangled and then dived into the ground a bit. You definitely need a helper to fly trains.

Brad Bowman <mbb@alaweb.com> on 18 Janurary 1999, wrote...
Hi, I really liked your website. You obviously put a lot of work into it. I had to build a kite for my geometry class recently, and I came upon your web page and decided to use the El Cheapo Diamond Kite plans.

I had never made a kite before, and I was a little intimidated, but your plans made it very easy! I made the kite, but I didn't have time to decorate it before the project was due.

When I got to school, my kite was one of the smallest and plainest there. I was a little upset at all the designs and creative structure of some of the kites in comparison to my own, but then we went outside to fly them. Mine was the first kite up and the last one to come down. In fact, none of the others flew for more than 5 minutes. I got an A+!

Thank you for the wonderful instructions!

Brad Bowman -- Alabama

John Cunningham <lagunasc@gte.net> on 22 March 1999, wrote...
I made up about 200 diamond dites from your pattern for the kids at the museum here and found that a little plastic gadget used in a drip watering system worked perfect instead of the baloon stick to form the diahedral....

Thanks for your ideas.

Anthony's Reply :- No thank you John for an alturnative source for cheap diahedrals.

Robert Glynn <r_felcher@hotmail.com> on 25 March 1999, wrote...
I built a scaled-up version of the El Cheapo yesterday and tested it today. After several bridle adjustments I got it to fly at an elevation of about 150 feet, in a gusty unstable wind! Here are the variations to the original (in feet, sorry the americans have yet to conform to the metric system).

span/height: 3ft. (close to 1m)
spars: 3/16in. wooden dowel (~6mm)
material: I dunno, blue tarp? (or drop sheet?)
dihedral: 1/4in. aluminum pipe
Tail: 3in wide warning tape (like police use)

I left 1in. flaps at the end of each corner of the skin and folded them over the spar tips then secured them with Gaffer's tape (cloth based) and a pair of staples.

I live in New York City and it's great to be able to go to the park and relax a little, in fact I decorated my new kite with the word kanwa (written in japanese) which means [relaxation from tension or stress]. Hey, great site, great plans, great fun. Keep it up!

Jane McDowel <jmcdow24hr@aol.com> on 20 April 1999, wrote...
I led a group of six Tiger Cub Scouts (6-7 year old boys) in the making of this kite and want you to know it was an incredible success! There were a few skeptical parents in the group who didn't think they would fly, but we sure showed them! Your plans were very concise and easy to follow. I especially liked the fact that this kite could be made for very little cost. Thanks so much for having this great site on the web!

Instead of using wooden skewers, we purchased small wooden dowels that were about 1/8" in diameter. They were very inexpensive, 3 feet of dowel for only 20 cents. I thought it was easier for this age group to not have to tape the two skewers together as in your plans. We simply cut the wooden dowels to size and sanded the edges smooth.

I still used the 'dihedral'. I made them out of the balloon sticks, just as you explained in your plans. I did use one of the 'tips' from the e-mail you received and used a heat gun to soften the balloon stick before bending it. It worked perfectly!

I also experimented with an alternative material for the kite sail. I cut a piece of white shower curtain liner (vinyl) and tried it out. It was great for decorating .... and seemed like it would make a very sturdy kite, but was too heavy for the size of kite. I think it would have worked for a kite with a larger surface area, but I wasn't willing to change all of the templates and plans at the last minute.

Debbie Kinchloe <kitelady@cell2000.net> on 31 May 1999, wrote... [photo]
The photo I sent you has 45 kites and is made from disposable plastic tablecloths and tape. I had to make the last kites on the stack with increasingly more tails to keep the stack from whipping in stronger wind. Flies best in light wind and is very easy to launch.

I stack them neatly in a 1' deep box for storage, have someone lift the first kite for me, give the line a tug and they float out of the box one at a time using the lift of the previous kite. One of my favorites! The launch is very impressive.

Giovanni Benigni <gbenigni@italymail.com> on 1 June 1999, wrote...
The El-Cheapo kite have been my first self made kite. The occasion have been a "kite festival" organized by my third son school: parents should build a kite, not buy it!

I built 6 kites planning to let them fly in stack with two teddy bear painted at the two end and the name of my son in the middle. Actually, I have never flown them in stack (but I had no time to try this technique!), but a single kite was the first to get the wind and rising up! I live in Rome, and here we haven't "hard" winds, and a little kite files better than a big one! All materials I used are what you suggested:, balloon sticks, bag plastic and tape.

Anyway, my childrens (four, the fifth is coming soon) have been very happy!

Thank you -- Giovanni

Erol Tunali <erol.tunali@bilten.metu.edu.tr> on 13 July 1999, wrote...
Thank you for this nice plan. I'm another person who has used that plan and be very happy. But I have made some modifications. Instead of making it at a larger scale, I built it at a smaller scale, at about 1/2 scale.

Naturally, I changed the material used. I used balsa wood instead of bamboo and glued the balsa with model plane glue. The plastic is the same kitchen tidy bag plastic. The line is an ordinary cotton sewing line, but it is difficult to keep it tidy, so i'm planning to replace it with a twisted nylon sewing line.

The length of the longeron is 34cm and the rest is arranged to be in scale.

It is a great flier, even a slight wind is sufficient for it to fly. Its first flight was indoors in the wind flowing from one window to another. It can even fly in the wind of an air condtion. When I take it by me and walk indoors, it flies over my shoulder. It is like a pet.

Thanks again.
Regards,
Erol TUNALI

Barry Radburn <bazzarad@onenet.net.au> on 18 December 1999, wrote...
Hi Anthony,
I made a kite for my grand kids from the "El Cheapo" plan with a slight modification.

We have a golf club close to us, and golfers use the big umbrellas that insist in turning inside out in strong wind. They usually toss them away while at the club house. The fabric from one of these umbrellas will make four kites. The ones I made were multi coloured, half red-half green & half blue-half yellow and 75cm high. The kids loved them. Hope this little tip will help other kite makers.

Cheers
Barry

[photo] Halit Cebeci <halitcebeci@superonline.com> on 5 June 2000, wrote...
Thank you very much for the great plans. I am kite lover from Turkey. I did not know there are so many different kind of kites before internet. I have made the diamonds by using exact materials( except the tail ) and informations that you suggested. They flied perfect. I had made 20 diamonds but after feeling the huge pull of the 10 i couldnot connect the other because my line was not strong enough.

I tried to take some pictures of the train. You can see them at

http://albums.photopoint.com/j/AlbumIndex?u=295453&a=2195513
You will see some others I have made which are the most common kites of Turkey.

Thanks you very much again

Halit Cebeci
Ýstanbul / Turkey

Doug Crawford <doucra@s2f.com.au> on 9 Sep 2002, wrote...
Your el cheapo diamond kite is quite simply brilliant. My 2 year old son had a ball flying it, especially letting go of the string winder and watching his parents run after it! Much amusement, repeated often!

We only had to stop when the bamboo skewer snapped. Off to build Mark II

Thanks a heap!

[photo] [photo] Jo Baker <jo@kites4kids.com.au> on Wed, 8 Jun 2005, wrote...
Just a belated Thanks for your help on the Kite Train.

I have attached a couple of pics taken of the train we took to the Weifang International Kite Festival in China in April. We didnt manage to get all 320 kites up. Winds where very very light and basically we had used heaver string for the lower kites and it dragged the whole train down. Never mind cause the judges gave it special comments since all the kites where decorated by the kids at my sons local primary school, and we gave away every one of them so it was all a huge hit.

We did manage a first place in the Soft Kite Section, which came as a complete shock. Though we only go to have fun and meet people, it was nice to bring home a first place in the first "World Kite Championships".

Jo Baker, Kites 4 Kids, Melbourne.

Joseph Pasquinelli <jpasquinelli@archideas.com> on 19 Oct 2006, wrote...
I came across your El'Cheapo Diamond Kite design. I have to tell you, we had great success and fun with these little kites. We made a kite "train" and it was unbelievable, our kite out performed all of the other home made kites. It flew high and did well in light winds. The kids had such a great time. Thank you for the information.

Its very difficult today to find websites like the one you had, that was informational and instructional.

Thank you, JP

Jodie Pruden <jodiepruden@mscnet.ca> on 7 May 2008, wrote...
Hi Anthony, I loved your website on diamond kite making and had a pair whipped up in no time. I discovered a couple of inexpensive ideas along the way and wanted to share.

At the craft store, buying balloon sticks, I came upon plastic party tablecloths in brilliant colors. The plastic is just a touch heavier than the plastic bags, but not so much as to affect flight, and if anything I found them to be more durable. I also ran out of scotch tape one time and came across band-aid brand fabric first aid tape. Once again a little heavier, but so durable and effective and really clung onto the plastic sheets. I wasnt worried about the corners breaking through in a bit of a heavier wind.

Regardless, I had a ton of fun with the kids on this one, and my 7 yr old son who had came home with a new kite from the dollar store was pissed that our little home made jobs were sailing high in the sky while his looped and crashed. (A meter of survey tape on his kite fixed the problem).

Keep sailing and thanks for sharing your very informative site with us.

Jodie

Stewart Crane <cranest@hotmail.com> on 11 July 2008, wrote...
Very small construction note for Skewer ends. I cut small pieces of thin plastic tubing (from oxygen masks), about 1cm long. Poked a small hole in one side near the middle, then with the point of a blade made a small "X" over the hole. The skewer is then forced into this "X" and the sail plastic is folded over the tubing and taped in place.

Stew Response anthony: This is a great idea to prevent the skewers poking though the plastic of the sails. It may be a little difficult for a kite making class for children, and probably not nessary for the espected life span for such a kite. However for your own kites, and especially larger ones, this is a very good and important idea. I myself use this for making later ripstop kites, to prevent spars slowly wearing a hold though the sail or spar pocket.

An alturnative is to use the little plastic end caps such as used on the end of wire coat hangers, and unbrellias.

I have added this to the main plan.

Again many thanks to all who have built this kite and responded. Especially those which included any hints and tips they found while building this kite.

-- Anthony Thyssen.


Created: 15 August 1997
Updated: 7 May 2008
Author: Anthony Thyssen, <Anthony.Thyssen@gmail.com>
WWW URL: http://www.ict.griffith.edu.au/anthony/kites/diamond/responses.html