BATTLEAXE
Legendary member
Plus the fixed LG will tear the plane apart after repeated hits with terra firma. It's not very solid airframeThe Bushwhacker is an intermediate plane with 3d capabilities so I dont recommend it as a trainer
Plus the fixed LG will tear the plane apart after repeated hits with terra firma. It's not very solid airframeThe Bushwhacker is an intermediate plane with 3d capabilities so I dont recommend it as a trainer
It is a good possibility for sureSo go for the storch?
The flight time depends on what sized battery you will use and what sized prop you use, but assuming you use 3s 2200-3000 you will have a decent flight time. The storch is easy to build and easy to fly.My only goal is to have a decent flite time with my electronics on hand as well as an easy build experience. Is the storch a good choice?
Any of the simple series tend to be easy builds. The Storch is an exceptional large plane. Even though some will tell you it is a good trainer in flight, which it is because it does fly slow and stable. It is a little harder to transport and every crash will take a significant amount of repairs, the bigger the plane the harder they crash. And I guarantee you will crash it, many times. And because of its size you will be inclined to do ground take offs as opposed to hand launch. As a beginner ground take offs are tough to get and you will get frustrated with it, plus you will cartwheel it so many times that you will be fixing it more then flying it.My only goal is to have a decent flite time with my electronics on hand as well as an easy build experience. Is the storch a good choice?
Are you referring to the scout at the end? I would build that but my electronics might not agree.Many have gotten there pilot wings easier on the simple Scout then the Storch, with much more success and it is a plane that will grow with you. Set it up as a 4 channel or a 3 channel AET (aileron/elevator/throttle) and you have an awesome trainer plane that will be stable in the wind, easy to transport and store, easy to fix, and easy to build.
Ft explorer is a very good option also beside the storch. The L3010c-1300 kv is not a small motor. The ft scout weights about 600-700 gramms and by putting a 420 watt motor into it it will fly into the moon. It is very true that the bigger the airplane is the worse the crashes get but putting such an oversized motor in a tiny plane results in a very fast jet like plane which is hard to fly and even harder to land. The two best options you have are the explorer and the storch. The explorer might even be better for beginners but you can choose whichever you like more.I love that engine, I have one just like it and it was the one I used in my first plane (check the article here) .
I was a Cessna 182 from scratch, 1100mm wingspan... now i know it was not a trainer at all, but it flew, and i learned a lot from it.
But now, i will strongly recomend u the FT EXPLORER. Why? because it is in my opinion, a very good first plane because:
It will be a good first plane.
- No landing gear
- Pusher setup will protect your props
- Good wingspan for easy and calm flight performance
- Could accept a 2200mAh 3S battery (pretty common)
- Once you can handle it well, u can go for the sport wing to improve your skills.
Your electronics will agree. I put a Rimfire 0.15 3536 1200Kv motor in both the Scouts I have built and it is twice the motor you have. It will work. Ask @Marty72 how he liked his Scouts to train on, swears by them. And he confided in me to get him through start in the hobby and I haven't steered him wrong... yet I don't thinkAre you referring to the scout at the end? I would build that but my electronics might not agree.
That's right. this motor will be too heavy for the FT Scout, and i say that because i tried and it was hard to fly.Ft explorer is a very good option also beside the storch. The L3010c-1300 kv is not a small motor. The ft scout weights about 600-700 gramms and by putting a 420 watt motor into it it will fly into the moon. It is very true that the bigger the airplane is the worse the crashes get but putting such an oversized motor in a tiny plane results in a very fast jet like plane which is hard to fly and even harder to land. The two best options you have are the explorer and the storch. The explorer might even be better for beginners but you can choose whichever you like more.
Just because the power is there does not mean he has to use it. It's better to have it and not need it, then to need it and not have it. Plus the bell length is not to big, only 10mm, the weight will not be an issue, probably weighs less then the B pack motorFt explorer is a very good option also beside the storch. The L3010c-1300 kv is not a small motor. The ft scout weights about 600-700 gramms and by putting a 420 watt motor into it it will fly into the moon. It is very true that the bigger the airplane is the worse the crashes get but putting such an oversized motor in a tiny plane results in a very fast jet like plane which is hard to fly and even harder to land. The two best options you have are the explorer and the storch. The explorer might even be better for beginners but you can choose whichever you like more.
Was jus looking at the plans, if I printed the out on full-sized paper are they to scale? Could I just print the out and cut the outline out from the paper?I love that engine, I have one just like it and it was the one I used in my first plane (check the article here) .
I was a Cessna 182 from scratch, 1100mm wingspan... now i know it was not a trainer at all, but it flew, and i learned a lot from it.
But now, i will strongly recomend u the FT EXPLORER. Why? because it is in my opinion, a very good first plane because:
It will be a good first plane.
- No landing gear
- Pusher setup will protect your props
- Good wingspan for easy and calm flight performance
- Could accept a 2200mAh 3S battery (pretty common)
- Once you can handle it well, u can go for the sport wing to improve your skills.
All the plans directly from FT are to scale, exactly how they should be built. In Adobe Acrobat Reader you can scale them up or down, which is something I do often. I like to download plans in full size, open them in Adobe and then tile them there is whatever scale, albeit 100% or either side ofWas jus looking at the plans, if I printed the out on full-sized paper are they to scale? Could I just print the out and cut the outline out from the paper?
So if I just print them out on standard paper and trace the cuts into foam board I should be fine?All the plans directly from FT are to scale, exactly how they should be built. In Adobe Acrobat Reader you can scale them up or down, which is something I do often. I like to download plans in full size, open them in Adobe and then tile them there is whatever scale, albeit 100% or either side of
Yes, there are various ways builders transfer from plans to FB, but that's the jist of itSo if I just print them out on standard paper and trace the cuts into foam board I should be fine?
Thanks!Yes, there are various ways builders transfer from plans to FB, but that's the jist of it
Are you going with the Explorer?Thanks!