Passion for Precision

Showing posts with label XSL-01. Show all posts
Showing posts with label XSL-01. Show all posts

Saturday, March 17, 2012

ROCKET ENGINEER WHO DESIGNED THE REVELL XSL-01 MOONSHIP MODEL



SMN Weekender from Mat Irvine:
The recent release of the 1:72 scale Fantastic Plastics XSL-01 in resin gives me the opportunity to look back at the kit that started it all - the 1:96 scale XSL-01 from Revell, and its designer, Ellwyn E. Angle.




Ellwyn Angle around 1959-60 with both his Revell creations. The sketch below was produced by him for the Lunar Probe Vehicle.



Interplanetary travel
Ellwyn E. Angle was a rocket engineer who, in the 1940s and 1950s, worked on various advanced projects in the US, including the Bell X-1 and X-5. In 1956, aged around 35, he moved to a new company in Sherman Oaks in California, north of Los Angeles. This outfit - Systems Laboratories Corporation (SLC) - was set up to explore what were termed: 'preliminary designs of basic studies for interplanetary travel'. However, the CEO and co-founder of SLC, John Barnes, also knew the head of Public Relations at Revell Inc, then based in Venice, California, only 26 km (16 miles) away. 


XSL-01 and Space Station collection at the Angle household. 

Three-stage design
Revell’s founder, Lew Glazer, was always exploring the educational aspects of model kits, and was looking to enter the 'space age', then an exciting new frontier. So the suggestion from SLC, that it could look at one of its current spacecraft designs to form the basis of a Revell model kit, was accepted eagerly. 



The included booklet was written by Ellwyn, explaining the design and operation of the XSL-01. Educational aspects were common for kits of the time.

The present-day Fantastic Plastics kit provides a launch pad, but it isn’t as comprehensive as the original Revell item shown below. 




Enter the designer
Which is where Ellwyn E. Angle comes into the story, for he was the SLC person given the Revell job, and he came up with a ‘Lunar Probe Vehicle’. It had cluster-type first and second stages, with an atomic-powered winged third stage - a classic ‘spaceship’ - sitting on top. Ironically, SLC, with all its futuristic ideas, only lasted 18 months before being taken over by one of the larger aerospace companies, but Ellwyn hadn’t yet finished the Revell design when that happened. So he completed the project at home in Santa Monica, though by now he had renamed it the ‘Experimental Space Laboratory Number One’ - or XSL-01.


Best-seller
The rest, as they say, is history. When issued in 1957, the XSL-01 became one of Revell’s best-selling kits, so much so, that a year later Revell asked Ellwyn for a second kit, this time for a space station. Working on his own this time, he came up with what was for the period an extremely advanced type of space station, a cylindrical design more akin to current trends with the modules on the International Space Station (ISS), than the archetypal wheel-shaped space stations popular in the 1950s. Loaded with even more detail than the XSL-01, including a full interior, it seemed a no-brainer as a hot-seller for Revell, but oddly this wasn’t the case. 


Contemporary packaging remained in the Angle household for several decades.


Hitting the price barrier
Possibly the price hike didn’t help. The XSL-01 was $1.98, itself quite expensive at a time when most kits were under a dollar. But the new Space Station was more than twice the price, $4.98 being a great deal of money at the time. Maybe the prosaic ‘Space Station’ name didn’t help either, as XSL-01 sounded much more technical and gee-whiz. It was also reported that Revell sales teams didn’t like the Station, dismissing it as a ‘coffee can.’ But whatever the reason, it didn’t sell at all well, so there were no more Ellwyn E. Angle designs from Revell. Even so, these two have become among the most revered construction kits ever made.


Ellwyn Angle in 1999, with one of his two Space Station models.


Meeting the designer
Fortunately, I was able to meet Ellwyn many years later, in 1999. He was great fun, and a delight to speak with and go over all these old memories. He was surprised and pleased to find that people still remembered the models he’d created, almost half a century before. Sadly, Ellwyn died in 2003, aged 82. For full details, go to my website, link below.

Thanks to Ron Miller for his initial help in locating Ellwyn, and to the Angle family for the hospitality they showed me over several visits, and supplying various pictures.

For more on Ellwyn E. Angle click here. Click ‘Enter’, then click on Ellwyn’s pic in the menu at left.

Visit the XSL-01 at Fantastic Plastic here.

More spacecraft available here.


Third-stage kit
The XSL-01 third stage was issued by itself as the Moonship. It was the only kit in the early Revell rockets, missiles and spacecraft that had a different issue for the American Revell Inc (lower box above) and Revell GB markets (upper). As well as the box art, the decals were different, the assembled Moonship (below) is finished with Revell GB markings.
 


Wednesday, January 4, 2012

MEGA MOON ROCKET FROM FANTASTIC PLASTIC



David Jefferis reports:
Great news for ‘what-if’ space fans from Fantastic Plastic, with this month’s release of a reworked and upsized 1:72 scale version of Revell’s 1950s-era XSL-01 Moon Rocket. The original kit, designed by US aerospace engineer Ellwyn E. Angle, was a 1:96 scale production, making the FP edition half as big again.


About the kit
The XSL-01 is presented in ‘stack’ formation, with winged Moonship rocket-glider sitting atop the finned multiple booster, though the parts count is surprisingly low, at just 50 components. No matter: the kit - patterned by Scott Lowther, cast by BLAP! Models, with scaled-up decals by JBOT - looks like a fine display piece, especially as it has a specially produced stand (above). Actually, this latter is the biggest departure from the Revell kit, as it is simpler than the original (below).

Rare item
According to Fantastic Plastic, the 1950s-era kit (above and below) is a ‘Holy Grail’ collector's item that commands top-dollar prices when one comes up for sale on an auction site such as ebay. So this kit is a chance to get your own, and with the bonus of being made in a far more widely used scale than that of the original.


About the original kit
The XSL-01 (Experimental Space Laboratory Number 1) was designed in the mid-1950s by Ellwyn E. Angle. Formerly associated with the Bell X-1 and X-5 aircraft, Angle was working for SLC (Systems Laboratory Corp) in California, when he was put in contact with Revell, based in nearby Venice Beach. Revell needed original concepts for its fast-expanding line of space-related models, then a hot subject area for the company.


Boost to orbit
The launch portion of Angle's XSL-01 concept consisted of four liquid-fuel boosters, to propel the winged and crewed Moonship to orbital altitude. Then the Moonship’s nuclear engine would fire up for the Earth-Moon flight. Angle envisaged a vertical landing on the lunar surface, followed by exploration, then blast-off back to Earth, with a glide landing - like the now-retired Space Shuttle fleet - after atmospheric entry. Revell released a separate kit of the Moonship (above) in 1957, though this has never been re-released by the company.

Summation
This Fantastic Plastic kit has been delayed, but should be available this month. It’s a fascinating kit for space enthusiasts, that now comes in a standard scale. You lose the interior detail that was a feature of the original Moonship which is a shame, but externally the FP kit can be made to look highly convincing.

Visit Fantastic Plastic here.

Read about Ellwyn E. Angle at Mat Irvine’s smallspace site here.

Other space kits here.