I’ve got something for you to build then!
That's a beautiful bird!Well...last night
I have done that but usually part of the crash, . The picture of your rx, is that with the antennas fixed? The antenna wire is a small coax cable and there is a small lead going through the center along with the outer cable, by the picture it just looks like you have them just twisted together.Hey pilots
Flew my SU-35 v5 today in the wind 😂😍
had a great time with fellow pilot - practising high alpha in the breeze lol
until my radio buzzed and screen went off, I know my batteries were low as it was beeping at me but 8.9 is still goos for bit flying
as a said my radio buzzed and my beloved jet went into a 💀 spiral 💥🔥
View attachment 169581
I blamed the radio for whatever reason I could think off, never lost signal yet.
anyway I happily took her home in many pieces flapping about in the wind and a pocketful of broken parts ready to put her back together. Warmed up the glue gun and Stripped her back Only to find the antennae were missing from my receiver lol
the dam prop chewed it up and spat them out lol
went back to the crash site to find them lying there lol
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messed about with it and wired the antenna back together and fixed ma girl 😍
just got the nose to sort now
lesson learnt
alway keep your back flap shut tight lol
no flying weather now till next Wednesday 😭😭
Happy flying pilots
sorry It’s not the best pictureI have done that but usually part of the crash, . The picture of your rx, is that with the antennas fixed? The antenna wire is a small coax cable and there is a small lead going through the center along with the outer cable, by the picture it just looks like you have them just twisted together.
Haha, just gotta love Indiana! Whenever we get a thunderstorm I think of you guys over there... We got a ton of rain yesterday and so I have this little guy set up and a fairly large puddle in mind!Well, I just finished charging the last of 16 batteries. Tomorrow there's supposed to be a break in the constant meteorological onslaught associated with living in Indiana and I intend to exploit it as wholly as possible
sorry It’s not the best picture
I separated out the tiny lead in the middle from the outer cable twisted both outer cables together and hit it with tiny bit solder , did same with inner wires. Tested it with radio and it made connection. Not sure I should trust it tho
It was an absolute perfect evening here in Henry county. I got all my battery packs emptied out before I made a mistake coming in for the last landing and sent another prop back to it's maker. Gonna have to fix the old Mig3 for tomorrow, multiple days in a row with no wind or rain this time of year can be hard to come by.Well, I just finished charging the last of 16 batteries. Tomorrow there's supposed to be a break in the constant meteorological onslaught associated with living in Indiana and I intend to exploit it as wholly as possible
Congrats on a sucessfull flight, even if there were some crashes involved. I need to pick up a freighter one of these days...First day in the hobby flying. FT Freighter in a large parking lot. Learned a lot in a short amount of time, had a few hard crashes but the plane took it well. The T-tail protects the props during your average Jingles landing. I need to figure out a way to improve pitch up on the tail since I have to be flat out to climb. Maybe cut it off and remount it (EDIT, going to splice in a shim and bring extras until I figure it out). I had it pried up with tape for the second half of the flight window and it flew a lot better, but a couple crashes wore out the tape.
Lessons learned:
-Tape the wheels in to the wheel wells. Walking around for 15 minutes looking for one that popped off was annoying. (also consider painting the wheels yellow or blaze orange to help find them)
-Remove the batteries from the transmitter when done. I had the set in for three days, they died before I flew for a minute.
-Hit the rate button and go in to high-rate unless you have a LOT of area to fly in. My area was about 200'x400'. High-rate would be good in a 200x200 area with little to no wind.
View attachment 169708
Sounds like a successful first flight, how does it fly considering its controlled by only 2 motors and no servos?First day in the hobby flying. FT Freighter in a large parking lot. Learned a lot in a short amount of time, had a few hard crashes but the plane took it well. The T-tail protects the props during your average Jingles landing. I need to figure out a way to improve pitch up on the tail since I have to be flat out to climb. Maybe cut it off and remount it (EDIT, going to splice in a shim and bring extras until I figure it out). I had it pried up with tape for the second half of the flight window and it flew a lot better, but a couple crashes wore out the tape.
Lessons learned:
-Tape the wheels in to the wheel wells. Walking around for 15 minutes looking for one that popped off was annoying. (also consider painting the wheels yellow or blaze orange to help find them)
-Remove the batteries from the transmitter when done. I had the set in for three days, they died before I flew for a minute.
-Hit the rate button and go in to high-rate unless you have a LOT of area to fly in. My area was about 200'x400'. High-rate would be good in a 200x200 area with little to no wind.
View attachment 169708
Many years ago a member of my club gave a similar plane to my kids. Basically it‘s a power glider, more throttle means more lift so it goes up, and throttle differential controls the heading. Change the angle on the horizontal stabilizer would increase the AOA and cause stall. The only way to make it climbs faster is to increase the pitch on the props.Sounds like a successful first flight, how does it fly considering its controlled by only 2 motors and no servos?