T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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145.1 | Go for a 6oz | LEDS::ZAYAS | | Tue Mar 24 1987 15:54 | 11 |
|
If you have the room and can tolerate the weight, put a 6oz
tank in. I've got a .25FSR in my Scout and it still has about 1/3
of an 8oz tank after I'm exhausted. That's running 15+ minutes at full
bore.
If you ever need to loose weight for a fun-fly or something,
just don't fill the tank up all the way.
But if you're just putting around and not minding the clock
too much, it's better safe than sorry. I hate dead-stick landings!
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145.2 | no problem here | ROCKET::ONEILL | | Wed Mar 25 1987 06:53 | 10 |
| I have an O.S 35 that was first fed from an 8 oz. tank and was later
changed to a 6 oz. tank. The 6 0z's. gives me plenty of time to
cruise around at full trottle as well as anywhere inbetween. I went
from 8 to 6 oz to save weight and dont feel I sacrificed to much
flight time (although I'm not one for 15 min flights any way, ten
is fine for me ). Also, I've found some of my best landings are
dead stick ( I've heared that from others about their landings too
)but dont get me wrong, I'm not recomending them, by all means,
use 8 oz. if it will fit and you want the extended flight time,
(hope this helped a little)
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145.3 | what size for a .049 powered glider? | OPUS::BUSCH | | Mon Aug 08 1988 10:03 | 18 |
| Only having flown a glider, and that only a dozen flights so far, I've got a
couple of questions regarding fuel. In my inogrance ;^) I would have thought
that fuel was fuel. What are the differences between one mixture and another?
What are the properties of different types of fuels and when would you use them?
I don't recall the specifics but we bought some 10% (whatever that means) for my
son's OS-40 powered PT-40 from Bob Fish. Is this a good/bad fuel, and can it be
used for a Cox TeeDee .049?
Also, I'm tired of traipsing through the waist_high grass and brush to plant the
stake for my high-start and to retrieve the tow-line for each 2 minute flight (I
took up gliding 'cause I thought it would be a relaxing sport. WRONG!). Tonight
I'm going to try to build a power pod for the plane, and the purists be dammned.
I got a 1 ounce tank but whoever I showed it to said I'd be up in the air
forever. With an .049 on a glider, what would be a reasonable tank size and what
would be the corresponding running time? What I need right now is stick time.
I'll work on the finesse later.
Dave
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145.4 | 1 ounce too big | IGUANO::WALTER | | Mon Aug 08 1988 14:29 | 16 |
| Re: -.1
This is getting a bit off the subject, but a 1 ounce tank is a
bit big. I have two power pods for the TD .049. One is 1/4 ounce,
and gives about 2 minutes run, the other is a D&R Products (?) pod,
maybe 1/3 ounce and gives about 3 minutes run. That's long enough
to get the plane to around 600 feet or so.
I had a very difficult time getting the engine to run reliably.
I finally took a hard look at the fuel delivery system and found
it was allowing air to get in the line in several places. When I
sealed the lines, it ran much better. So watch out for that.
Dave
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