The towhook survived, it's a pretty nice one too :-)
Sam Girardi
Hey wasn't there someone looking for a tow hook for his model
Eddie
RCSE-List facilities provided by Model Airplane News. Send "subscribe" and
"unsubscribe" requests to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Y.K.,
I just learnt to DS 2 days ago, it is so exciting! it really push your plane to its
limit. I have totally lost interest to fly in
the front.
Raymond Wong
Hong Kong
"Y.K.Chan" wrote:
Why do some go DS?
related questions
Is it by choice or that is the only way soaring may be
Tom--Several of us in Birmingham are flying slope but we dont have a dam to
fly off of. Where is your dam and what is the landing problem? We are not
into catching them with our hands!! Our sites are for the most part const.
sites and will not be with us long. The best requires a NW wind and
The Profi 4000 has its own program (so old it is in German DOS). The 3000
series does not have a PC interface as of yet :)
Smooth Thermals,
Karlton Spindle
http://www.MultiplexRC.com
- Original Message -
From: Rick Wardrop [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: Karlton Spindle [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL
I will post this here to cover the majority of requests for the Passaj.
Thanks for all the interest on the Passaj wings.
The wings are made in hard female molds with a solid 2 lb foam core. You
need to cut and hinge the ailerons yourself. Fit 2 wing servos and linkage,
put your radio into the
It seems to me that decalage is greatly oversold. Changing decalage simply
biases the elevator position, and can be entirely compensated via the elevator
trim
on the TX as long as the elevator deflection remains modest. There should be
no effect on handling.
This is obvious on an all-flying
I use BOTH the Sirrus and Pico while the Sirrus is my work horse but it is
SLOW. I LOVE that puppy it looks like no other charger. I have made it able
to charge almost ANY battery any place! I use the MPX Pico to charge and
the Sirrus to top off and condition this way I get the best of both
RRQ: ยด
Kev,
It works, it is just that hydride.htm isn't copying or loading up when you
double click. It may have something to do with the length of the address. Try
eliminating everything after manual, or typing in the last few characters when
you get the error message. That's what I did,
Fellow pilots- Just got my new Sirius Pro Charger, and read the part about
"jumping" the diode. Their website shows nice pictures and instructions on
how to do it. So, I opened the back of my Airtronics RD 6000 to take a look.
Now I am
hesitant to stick a soldering iron in there to add the
Sam,
That is a sad story, F3B can be tough on equipment especially with howling
wind and Hi-test line. In all fairness to the Hera it is a great airplane but
is designed for F3J, that is why it weighs 10 ounces less than an F3B Cobra.
That weight has to come out from somewhere. By the way, You
In theory this is correct. In reality the theory leaves a little to be
desired - when working with very small static margins.
Decalage is the last thing I tweak up when I'm trimming out a new fixed
stab airplane. (Although sometimes if the decalage is way off it will need
initial tweaking
Hey folks.
I am coming in from Maryland for a weekend of fun flying at Los Banos
and was wondering if I could hook up with anyone heading down there. I
travel light, but will have a box or two and a boomerang. Just checking
before I rent a car.
thanks
Jason Werner
RCSE-List facilities
Mark Drela wrote:
If changing the decalage on the glider DOES produce a noticable change in
handling, then one can conclude that the elevator response is nonlinear,
which indicates something bad and draggy is happening.
Two instances of "bad and draggy behavior" were the same error in
Hmm... I didn't realize there were differences. Can you elaborate on
these? I'm really curious. Also, Tom lists the Hera at $679 and
Alberto lists the Tango at $849.
-Ben
[EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
Sam,
That is a sad story, F3B can be tough on equipment especially with howling
wind and
Yes it is necessary to jump the diode in the TX (providing there is one) if
you want to use any type of smart charger. If you did not do this, the
charger would not be able to read the voltage of the TX battery pack through
the TX charge jack. You can eliminate the need to do this need by
For about a dollar you can make a fusible link that will protect your wing
from folding on launch. It consists of a snap swivel, a welded ring and a
few inches of monofilament selected for the desired breaking strength. The
snap swivel connects to the ring on the end of the launch line and the
Hello all!
I know some don't like "wanted" request on this list but it is the only
channel I could think of.
I am looking for bashed up tipp panels for the Ellipse 2. Actually it is
the carbon spar and possibly the root rib that I am looking for. I have
some ideas that I want to try out by
Oliver Wilson wrote:
For about a dollar you can make a fusible link that will protect your wing
from folding on launch. It consists of a snap swivel, a welded ring and a
few inches of monofilament selected for the desired breaking strength.
Ahhh, there's the rub. How does one decide on
For about a dollar you can make a fusible link that will protect your wing
from folding on launch. It consists of a snap swivel, a welded ring and a
few inches of monofilament selected for the desired breaking strength. The
snap swivel connects to the ring on the end of the launch line and the
There is a Hera, Starlite, Tango, etc.. that is the same molded F3J
sailplane with at least three different names.
And then there are two completely different molded F3J sailplanes named the
Stork.
Who is kidding who? 8-)
Jim
Downers Grove, IL
ICQ 6997780
Visit my R/C Soaring Page at
Hi all,
I like Brian's method, it's normally called learning and knowing how to use
your equipment, it's limits and it's draw backs. Pedal to the metal is not
the most desirable way to launch any plane on a good, strong winch. Of
course some of the bigger, heavier planes will need all,
hehehe!
- Original Message -
From: James V. Bacus [EMAIL PROTECTED]
To: RCSE [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Friday, March 10, 2000 4:22 PM
Subject: Re: [RCSE] Re:Hera...BOOM ...oh my god! you killed Kenny!
There is a Hera, Starlite, Tango, etc.. that is the same molded F3J
sailplane with at
The wind was 20 or so... the mono was not puttin up a big fuss...at least I could
not hear it scream or creak from my vantage point(Base B turn around) . The wing
let go just as the plane was about to enter the bucket. The wing simply cut loose of
the fuse. My eyes were on the fuse
Although this is an often asked question, I am going to pose it one more
time. I would like to gather 'votes' on the ideal setup for a beginner.
If YOU were at your field flying, and an onlooker expressed interest, what
COMPLETE SYSTEM would you recommend? For example "FLASH5, Hitec 555
On Fri, Mar 10, 2000 at 04:56:52PM -0700, Phil wrote:
Did Sam Get the toy he deserved???
Depends. Did he install that part? If so, then yes. An expensive lesson
learned. If not, he got a raw deal.
--
Tracy Reed http://www.ultraviolet.org
RCSE-List facilities provided by Model Airplane
NONE OF THE ABOVE.. I would invite the onlooker to fly the club glider on
the buddy box and invite the onlooker to a club contest and club meeting.
Then if the onlooker is still around he may have some idea of what he wants.
By then he should know what a FLASH5, Hitec 555 even looks like.
joe
Yes, there is the rub. You have to know how strong the wing is by testing
one to destruction or asking the manufacturer. If the manufacturer doesn't
know or won't tell buy some other product. Then use the next smaller size of
monofilament. Not all full house 2-meter wings are the same strength.
"Not surprising. The 10% SD8020 is too thick for most glider tails. A slab
airfoil is just plain bad.
Both will surely have nonlinearities. A 5-6% thick airfoil with the max
thickness point
well forward at 20-25% chord is much better, since it is immune to most
hysteresis effects.
With such
I already got a number of answers! And it is clear that:
A mentor is more important than 'brand-x' servos.
There is no 'right' answer.
In spite of this I want to explain that I am only hoping to see if there is
what I would call 'statistical' consensus. With the incredible amount of
combined
This is part of the skill of flying: knowing where the edge of the envelope
is, and getting as much of it as possible. If you ain't blown up a ship, you
ain't flown.
Trust me--I speak from experience ;-) !
Dana
Sam... perhaps a dumb question to the group. Why hasn't any of the many
This is ultimately flying related, so I figure it meets the criteria of the alias,
at least in some tangental way (less than one standard deviation from the norm).
-Paul
--
The US standard railroad gauge (width between the two rails) is 4 feet, 8.5 inches.
An exceedingly odd number, is it
31 matches
Mail list logo