Regarding the build project; I don't have a lot of info; save
this. From the information I got at the last Arrow formal dinner; they're in advance design stages.
As for the aircraft being the finest, well; I'm biased.

It was certainly the most advanced of its time; the Apollo of the day.
In 1980, my Dad, Richard Organ, along with Ron Page, Don Watson and Les Wilkinson set out to make a book on the plane. It was released by the Boston Mills Press in 1982, and is still going strong today. It's the best selling coffee-table book ever printed in Canada.
You can find it
here.
I helped with it as much as a 12-year-old can; proofreading, sorting photos, etc. I even did the pasteup and enlargement on one of the pages - pg. 94. (The one with the roundel.) OK; I didn't have a clue what I was doing; Dad was standing behind me saying 'turn this...push this...." etc.. I got in the way more than helped really; but it was a lot of fun.

Every year; Dad and I try to get out to the Canadian Museum of Aviation in Ottawa to take pictures; we take the annex tour; where visitors get to see all the extra bits; including some bits of the Arrows.
Heh heh - it's the same conversation every year; and Dad
loves it; it goes like this:
Tour guide: "And these are the wingtips from RL-201, the first Arrow to fly..."
Dad: "Nope - those are from RL-203."
Guide: "Uhhhh......."
Dad: "You can tell from the modifications to the wing notches right
there."
Guide: "If you're interested in the aircraft; we have a great book in the gift shop..."
Dad: "I know. I wrote it." (Dad is not, it must be noted, cursed with an excess of modesty.

)
Audience goes "Ooooo!"; the gift shop sells a whole whack more books; Dad has a ball signing and giving an imprompteu talk; while I sit back and laugh my head off.
