Howdy, Progcraft.
The spines and crosspars are hand-split bamboo. Straight for the spine, curved for the cross-spar. You can see some tips on this at the link in my previous note.
They were all strung on one flying line, with very thin slices of small vinyl tubing for stoppers (it was the lightest thing I had on hand at the time). Sort of like beads, with knots that held the stoppers from moving up the line, and maintaining the desired distance from each kite. The kites themselves were only pierced once, to put them on the flying line. If they had to turn 360 degrees on the line while in flight, there is NO TWISTING!
The thing I kept thinking about while I was making this (besides "I hope this flys"), was that each kite only has to hold it's own weight and the weight of the line between it and the next kite.
If you're doing one that consists of kites that fly by themselves, you got it made!
I have a page up that tells more about this train, if you'd like to see it. The URL is
http://littlekites.com/kitetrain.html
There's also a short movie showing it in flight, if you're interested and have a couple minutes to wait for it to load on a dial-up connection.
Most importantly, let me know if there's anything else I can do to help get YOUR miniature train get off the ground!
Thanks for the enthusiasm. It keeps me doing what I do.
Tom