The other areas carrying weight were made of wood, with linen fabric covering the fuselage and wings.
In late 1948 Cessna began sales of the 170, with metal fuselage and tail and fabric covered wings.
The design uses mixed construction with fabric covered wooden wings and a welded steel-tube fuselage.
It was of all-metal construction, with fabric covered outer wings and control surfaces.
The Fuselage is welded tube steel with plywood covered wings.
The great three-headed beast covered the prince's shield, red wings and gold fire.
With such exhaustive preparation, there must have been flanking gunmen in place, covering different wings of the house, different exposures.
The XF3J had elliptical fabric covered wings which gave it the appearance of a butterfly.
The biplane features a steel tube fuselage, and aluminum covered wings.
Construction was primarily of wood with fabric covered wings and tail but plywood covered fuselage.