The Zagi flying wing in flames livery — the EPP-foam slope-soaring icon dressed for hot-rod display flying.
The Zagi is the work of Trick R/C, an American RC manufacturer that introduced the EPP-foam Zagi flying wing in the mid-1990s. Built from EPP (expanded polypropylene) foam — the technical innovation that allowed the type to survive the kind of impacts a slope-soaring or combat flying-wing endures — the Zagi quickly became the dominant slope-soaring flying wing in the United States and a favorite for informal "slope combat" between identical airframes flown in close quarters.
This RC variant carries a "Flames" hot-rod-style livery — flame graphics rendered along the leading edge and outer wings. The flames livery has been part of the Zagi family's visual identity for decades, alongside the patriotic Flag livery and assorted other paint schemes that pilots and modelers have applied to the basic flying-wing airframe over the years.
The unmistakable swept-wing flying-wing silhouette of the Zagi — flat construction, swept leading edge, elevons on the trailing edge — is one of the most successful flying-wing designs in modern RC history. The type continues to be flown today, decades after its introduction, by slope-soaring pilots and combat-flying enthusiasts.
The same fast, sharp-handling flying-wing character as the Zagi-Flag in this same pack — quick response, narrow turn radius, high roll authority, and approach speeds that demand precision. Use it for fast sport flying with hot-rod visual signature.