Ronald Godfrey Moulton (1924–2010) was an English author and editor, notable for his work in the field of scale models and aeromodelling.
Watching the Alan Cobham Flying Circus, at the age of 10, inspired his interest in aircraft, and especially in modelling.
In 1940, he trained at RAF Halton, initially working on aircraft, before being posted to Pietersberg, South Africa, in order to service Airspeed Oxford monoplanes.
[1] In the post-WW2 period, Moulton was credited with introducing control line models, initially to Great Britain, and then to Continental Europe.
[1] Moulton's interest and promotion of human-powered aircraft led to him acting as observer for the Royal Aeronautical Society for the 1979 Kremer prize-winning flight of the Gossamer Albatross across the English Channel.