OOOOOO, sounds goodAnd video.
pSST. - Just between us... I plane to do them allTT would be a good candidate for sure, but I think the explorer would look just perfect with this wing. The arrow is a natural fit, and I'm also the only one who voted for airliner so far. An airliner style fuselage would look really clean with this wing.
Awesome. Had a feeling you'd want to experiment with multiple options👍. I'll be following this one.pSST. - Just between us... I plane to do them all(I suppose I have enough start filling in the build log section)
I looked at my fleet and noticed I have a distinct gap with jet-liner craft. I have looked at a number and plan to build a few. I suspect the new 50mm edfs will find a home with these builds.An airliner style fuselage would look really clean with this wing.
I looked at my fleet and noticed I have a distinct gap with jet-liner craft. I have looked at a number and plan to build a few. I suspect the new 50mm edfs will find a home with these builds.
As a plus, my girlfriend used to work for Piedmont Airlines, and this wing on an airliner body might help pull her deeper in. 🤠
As and ye shall receive! (i before e except after...got it)You could see it a couple of times, I’d personally love for another video in daylight. Did you experience and wiggle towards the tips of the wings?
TT would be a good candidate for sure, but I think the explorer would look just perfect with this wing. The arrow is a natural fit, and I'm also the only one who voted for airliner so far. An airliner style fuselage would look really clean with this wing.
Anything with a tail would negate the main benefit of this design... Proverse yaw means you dont need a rudder to coordinate turns so you can save yourself the weight of those components.pSST. - Just between us... I plane to do them all(I suppose I have enough start filling in the build log section)
I Will. (I've always noticed. how twist-able the foam can be, and figured if it gets glued that way, it will stay twisted and strong-ish.)Yea, we need lights on the next one! 😃 (yea I know you were too excited to wait....)
20:1 is pretty dang impressive for dtfb!
I still haven’t found the time to read the nasa paper on this, are you planning to add control surfaces?
Or just drive it with a tail? (Or would a tail just remove all the positive traits....) 🤔
On your next wing please take more pics of the process of getting the twist in.... I’m still really curious how you managed that. I probably won’t get to one of these till after FF (got a few projects in the ready cue) but I am really intreagued by your success trying to build such a wing out of dtfb! 👍👍
Every plane I add this wing to will NOT have a tail.Anything with a tail would negate the main benefit of this design... Proverse yaw means you dont need a rudder to coordinate turns so you can save yourself the weight of those components.
I've venture to say that flying wings and rudder-less canard configurations would see the most benefit from this wing configuration.
My brain started there. I considered doing that sandwich method... and realize how much of a pain it will be, to cut out, set up, and ensure everything was perfect. Laziness drove me to consider a simpler method. Sometimes that's the best method. Give it a try and tell us about your success!My idea for getting the twist in with FB was to 3D print a bunch of negative formers (they go in the outside of the wing) about every inch or two. One set for the bottom of the wing and another for the top.
Massage the foam for the lower wing skin into the general shape and then weigh it down onto the bottom formers.
Glue my spar in while making sure the shape still matches the formers and then fold the top skin foam and use the top formers to sandwich everything into shape while the glue dries.