ScratchBuildMast
Elite member
Thinking about hopping on to Flight Simulator
Nice job on the design! Looks real slick!Woohoo!!
Awesome maiden and pylon practice, plane looks great, super clean. I was watching the pylon stuff you were doing then I heard the camm=eraman say "cut" and i thought the was trying to be videographer and director, but then i saw by the second time you have some markers representing pylons thet you were on the inside of. Now I get how it works.I got around to maidening the LA racer today. The wind was pretty stiff, but pylon planes don't really care because the wing loading is on the higher side usually. This thing required a lot of trimming, and initially I thought I had the CG wrong or something (I added 4 ounces to the nose, and on the CG stand it checked out fine ) but it was actually because somehow all my subtrims got deleted in the radio so the control surfaces were out of whack to start with. I was pretty surprised when I landed and all the control surfaces were perfectly straight, despite me adding like 80 clicks of rudder and maxing the elevator trim
View attachment 179458
An expected problem also happened, which was a lack of differentiation between the top and bottom sides resulting in me having to concentrate extra hard to keep orientation. During pylon races this is not really a problem as you should never be inverted but this plane is also really fun to do other aerobatic nonsense with. I'll add something to the bottom of the wing to make it easier at some point...
Here's a video, plus some pylon practice I did later. I had my buddy on pylon 1 judging for me since when I used to race that was the one I would tend to cut most often. I haven't put a plane around pylons with the intention of going fast for probably 3 or 4 years until now, but it's like riding a bike; it's a skill you can never completely lose once you learn it. Too bad there are no more club 40 races this year, but at least that means I have plenty of time to practice.
This plane will probably get a lot faster once the engine gets more broken in. Right now I have it spinning a 10x6 which is a little light for a 46. I think I'll either go to an 11x6 or 10x7 eventually once I get more fuel ran through this engine.
They do actually use the rudder quite a bit, they even slightly trim it to the right so when at full speed they can maintain a knife edge for the full lap . Everytime you level off in the straightaways and go back to banking in the corners you are shaving off some speed.Awesome maiden and pylon practice, plane looks great, super clean. I was watching the pylon stuff you were doing then I heard the camm=eraman say "cut" and i thought the was trying to be videographer and director, but then i saw by the second time you have some markers representing pylons thet you were on the inside of. Now I get how it works.
As a pylon racer I cant imagine you use to much rudder, all bank and yank?
Huh... makes sense with the slight knife edge thing. Learn something new every day. Thanks for the infoThey do actually use the rudder quite a bit, they even slightly trim it to the right so when at full speed they can maintain a knife edge for the full lap . Everytime you level off in the straightaways and go back to banking in the corners you are shaving off some speed.
At least in club 40 rudder is almost never used and when it is it's only to maintain your altitude if you bank it too far in a turn. You actually don't want to do this - any time you deflect a control surface it adds drag, and adding rudder to knife edge in a turn adds a lot of drag. Faster stuff like Quickie 500 and Q40 will pretty much always race with a wing dipped, especially with 3 pylon courses, though I'm pretty sure there's little if any use of rudder there either.Awesome maiden and pylon practice, plane looks great, super clean. I was watching the pylon stuff you were doing then I heard the camm=eraman say "cut" and i thought the was trying to be videographer and director, but then i saw by the second time you have some markers representing pylons thet you were on the inside of. Now I get how it works.
As a pylon racer I cant imagine you use to much rudder, all bank and yank?
They do actually use the rudder quite a bit, they even slightly trim it to the right so when at full speed they can maintain a knife edge for the full lap . Everytime you level off in the straightaways and go back to banking in the corners you are shaving off some speed.
Being pylon racing sounds a lot like NASCAR. But I am confused as to how the weight on the outer wing works...?adding a slug of weight to the outer wing positioned properly so no rudder is used.
In a way it is, any little thing you can do to shave a little bit of drag is more speed.Being pylon racing sounds a lot like NASCAR. But I am confused as to how the weight on the outer wing works...?
A couple of super flights with my Taft Hobby's Viper Jet and a couple of fun thrashing of my FT-Mini Arrow.
Put a camera on the Viper for the flights and made this fun video
I so was - you can see the picture jiggling!!!!@CarolineTyler - I am loving jets - your flying is top-notch - lucky not to lose the camera?!
I can't wait to see it!Today I did some filming for a music video. It was a lot of fun and I got some cool shots with the mavic air!
A couple of super flights with my Taft Hobbys Viper Jet and a couple of fun thrashing of my FT-Mini Arrow.
Put a camera on the Viper for the flights and made this fun video