| 
| Since after my last test I had several nearly-full pages left (minus two strips from one end), I figured I would see how well these papers made for a paper airplane.  I imagined that it would be nearly identical, but with different weights between the papers, I figured that might throw it off.  Also, the stability of the paper might have an effect on it.  Thus... I made two typical, identical paper airplanes.  I first tested them by tossing them across the apartment.  Both flew straight, and seemed to fly fairly well.  On the first throw, the all-weather made it further and straighter.  However, on the second throw, the regular paper finished in first.  After a few more throws, I've come to the conclusion that for the most part they will fly almost identically, however the sturdyness of the all-weather paper stopped the tip from getting as crumpled when hitting objects. |  |  | With those first few tosses out of the way (I didn't think it important enough to take a picture of the crumpled tips... make a plane out of any paper... smack it lightly into a wall, and that's what the all-weather looked like.  Smack it harder, that's what the regular looked like), I figured I would give them a final, fly-or-die test.  Let's see how luck decides this one!  From my second-story apartment window, out over the parking lot.  It was drizzling a bit out, but I figured that wouldn't do much, given they'd be in the air for maybe 8 seconds tops.  The regular paper plane flew straight and true, landing at the far end of the parking lot.  The all-weather caught a gust, or perhaps left my hand slightly differently.  One way or the other, it plunged at a 45-degree angle downwards, and slammed to its death upon the side of a parked car.  Looks like fate has decided that I shouldn't be wasting my all-weather paper on making paper airplanes. |  
 
 |  
 The strength test
 |