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Thunderbirds! Anonymous
Thunderbird 1:
http://homepage2.nifty.com/papermodel/pdfs/Sna006.pdf

Thunderbird 2:
http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/~ijoy/images/OPM/THUNDERBIRD2.pdf

Thunderbird 3:
http://homepage2.nifty.com/papermodel/pdfs/Sna007.pdf

Thunderbird 4:
http://win1999.web.fc2.com/Oshiire/EXTRA/004/05.htm

And a very very tiny Thunderbird 4 with hangar:
http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/~ijoy/images/OPM/TB4/THUNDERBIRD4.pdf

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>> Anonymous
It would be way more FAB if they had instructions and you know like, tabs.
>> Anonymous
>>26350
http://www.bekkoame.ne.jp/~ijoy/opm.html

Can't find instructions for #1 or #3, but this has the instructions for #2 and the instructions for #4 are on the same page as the ship itself.

Make your own damn tabs :P
>> Anonymous
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>>26350
TB 1 and 3 are composed of pretty easy individual parts and it doesn't take a rocket scientist (get it? lol) to figure out how those parts go together end where they go on the model. They're pretty much spread out on the template where they should go. Also, there's also loads of reference images found with Google. If it's to hard for you, maybe you should try an easier model (like TB 2 and 4, lol again...).
And the tabs? There are tabs on the model, but for the main fuselage, the guy's a method that's pretty standard on many paper models, especially on airplanes and zeppelins.
You see, you should be using some thicker cardstock for your paper models (yeah, normal paper "will work", but they might be a bit flimsy). So this cardstock is like half a millimeter thick or whatever (depending on what you use of course) so when you have a tab on one part an you glue another part on top of that, you'll be looking at the white "inside" of the cardstock where you cut it...
So what you do, is you take a third part (which is also provided), and use that as a seperate tab and glue both other parts on top of it, the white edges will hide each other.

If you take care in assembling the parts like this, the surface will be now be as smooth as possible, instead of having very noticable seams.