T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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183.1 | Why not consider the PT-40 | ANKER::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Thu Jun 04 1987 10:30 | 11 |
| Re:< Note 183.0 by GOLD::GALLANT >
I strongly recommend Great Planes' PT trainers as the
first plane. They build easily, are incredibly strong and are
extremely stable. They can be built either as 3-channel with a
lot of dihedral or 4-channel with less. The only drawback I can
think of is that the plane is so stable that you cannot get it to
roll with the ailerons. The bottom line is that if it's a first
plane and you want ailerons then this is the best buy around.
Anker
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183.3 | Clearification | GOLD::GALLANT | | Thu Jun 04 1987 11:17 | 12 |
|
I have as a first plane a PT-20, and am buying a wing
kit to put alerions on and try a flat bottomed wing with
alerions. It has a .25FSR that I hope will find a home in a
couple of years in a Sportster 20. But Im now looking for
a semetrical foiled forty shoulder wing to build over the winter.
I have seen the Trainer 40 from Great Planes and I think there is
an inherant design problem (tail heavy). I intend to stay away
from it. As far as the Train-Air 40 I dont know anything.
Michael Gallant
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183.4 | Triner 40 tail heavy? No, mine isn't! | ANKER::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Thu Jun 04 1987 11:36 | 22 |
| Re:< Note 183.3 by GOLD::GALLANT >
> I have seen the Trainer 40 from Great Planes and I think there is
> an inherant design problem (tail heavy). I intend to stay away
> from it. As far as the Train-Air 40 I dont know anything.
My Great Planes Trainer 40 isn't tail heavy with a Saito
.45. The only comments of a negative nature I'd make is that the
plane is very hot for a trainer. Because of the symmetrical
airfoil it really has to move! It flies at least twice as fast
as the PT 20. The greatest problem is that the fuselage is too
weak to stand the abuse of a novice's heavy landings and aborted
takeoff's. This can be fixed easily by home brewing some thin
ply doublers.
On the positive side the trainer 40 is very responsive to
controls, particularly ailerons, which is exactly the opposite of
the PT20. I fly both models with the same radio and have to
switch the dual rate controls between low and high when I switch
planes.
Anker
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183.5 | | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John--Stay low, keep moving | Thu Jun 04 1987 12:02 | 6 |
| RE: .3
What's a Sportster 20? Who makes it?
The reason I ask is that I have a magazine plan from MAN for a
Sportster .20, just wondering if its the same plane.
|
183.6 | Who made it | GOLD::GALLANT | | Thu Jun 04 1987 12:41 | 7 |
|
I believe the name is Sportster 20 and the manufacturer
is Great Planes. Its a nice but small low wingger thats very
acrobatic, from the four of them that I have seen.
Mike
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183.7 | | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Thu Jun 04 1987 13:26 | 25 |
|
Getting back to the subject matter of this note, I'm not
sure why you say the kavalier isn't a .40 sized plane? The
oen's I've seen all ahd .40's in them. They flew great. I
lean towards the Kavalier over the commander. The commander
ha very long main landing gear and I've heard of problems
keeping them in the wing. This is due to the leverage of the
long gear legs. i'd go with the Kavalier. A good combo would
be with an OS forty. The plane will be a little groovier than
a cabin type aileron trained. It is really a shoulde winged
plane. They do slow down well. The only issue I have is that
the plane has a lot of parts. This is true of the commander as
well. Another ship to consider is the Midwest Sweet Stik.
With the new dihedral it is a calmer plane then the older design.
One mor alternative if your trying to get into the air in a
hurry would be to buy one of ModelTech's sweet sticks. They
come with a prebuilt fuse and balsa covered foam wing. You
could probably get one in the air in about one week.
Once again, I suggest that if your heart is set on a SIG
plane go with the Kavalier. It's the better of the two kits/ships
you mentioned.
Tom
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183.8 | Another country heard from. | HPSCAD::WFIELD | | Thu Jun 04 1987 13:52 | 10 |
| If you are interested in a sweet stick, I just picked up
one of the thunder tiger sweet sticks from hobby shack.
For $70 it comes completely built ready for your choice
of covering. I was really suprised how well made, and how complete
the kit is. Every thing fits together really nice, and it comes
complete with hinges, control horns, push rods, fuel tank, wheels, etc.
The only thing I had to buy to complete it was a couple of rolls
of ultracote. I hope to see how it flys real soon.
Wayne
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183.9 | TRAINER RECCOMENDATION | DARTH::GAROZZO | | Thu Jun 04 1987 15:45 | 4 |
| I HAVE A TRAINER 40 AND REALLY LIKE IT. HAD TO PUT A LITTLE WEIGHT
IN FRONT, IT WAS SLIGHTLY TAIL HEAVEY. ITS STRONG AND A GOOD TRAINER.
ITS A NICE SIZE AND EASY TO SEE. I WOULD RECCOMMEND IT AS A FIRST
PLANE.
|
183.10 | Falcon 56 Mk II | TALLIS::FISHER | Battery, Mags, & Gas Off! | Thu Jun 04 1987 17:00 | 9 |
| You guys aren't listening - there is some reason why more people have learned
to fly with a Carl Goldberg Falcon 56 than any other RC Plane.
_!_
Bye ----O----
Kay R. Fisher / \
==============================================================
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183.11 | SIG FAN | SVCRUS::EVERS | | Thu Jun 04 1987 17:01 | 21 |
|
I reply the first note if your looking for a trainer do not buy
the kavelier or comander they are not trainer aircraft.SIG
manufacture will suggest that you buy the KADET MK11.That's
the one I trained on and it is very easy to build step buy
step detailed instruction I found it very easy.
I am now in the proccess of building the SIG KAVELIER with
an o.s. 40.The KADET that i just sold is a good trainer because
it has a flat bottom wing with airloins,and very stable.
You could put an o.s. 40 on the KAVELIER if you want.The
KAVELIER has a semi-semetical wing witch unlike the KADAT
makes it very unstable for the beginner.If you have any
questions call me @223-6967.
I think that for the beginner sig makes a very good aircraft.
KEEP'EM FLYING
Jerry
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183.12 | I like my Kavalier! | LEDS::HUGHES | Dave Hughes (LEDS::HUGHES) SHR-4/B10 237-3672 | Thu Jun 04 1987 18:19 | 43 |
| Lot's of opinions again! That's good, it means there are a lot of
good planes to choose from.
I just finished my Sig Kavalier and got it in the air this week.
I love it! It is a "40 size" plane; the ads say .29 to .40 but
I can't imagine it with a .29. I have an OS 45FSR which is plenty
of engine for it.
It has a rugged landing gear, as Tom pointed out, and that's important
to guys like me who occasionally have a somewhat harder than
recommended landing. My first few flights wound up short of the
landing strip (it comes down faster than the Kadet, which is what
I was used to), and dropped into tall grass with no damage whatsoever.
A low-wing plane would likely have sustained some gear/wing damage
from one of those landings.
If you're looking for a first trainer, though, I wouldn't recommend
the Kavalier. It is my second plane. I started on the Kadet Mk
II. The good thing about the Kavalier is it picks up where the Kadet
left off. Meaning, I can fly it slow and steady, it's easy to take
off and stable on landings. But I can now begin increasing the speed
and trying some of the aileron maneuvers that you can't do on the
Kadet.
If you start with the Kadet, I wouldn't bother with putting ailerons
on it. I have Kadet wings with and without, and it's designed such
that the ailerons and rudder do much the same thing (ailerons are
just like more rudder), which is why I wouldn't consider the Kadet
a good aileron trainer.
The Kavalier is not difficult to build, but it does take a significant
amount of time and moderate skill. It was somewhat harder than building
the Kadet (I got my Kavalier for Christmas, and just finished it
last weekend, but I didn't put consistent time into it).
One of the guys I fly with just started with a PT40, and we think
that's a great first trainer, and probably has better aileron action
than the Kadet.
If you're anywhere near Westboro, MA, let me know and you can check
out the Kavalier some day at lunch time.
Dave Hughes
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183.13 | Kavalier looks good to me | LEDS::LEWIS | | Fri Jun 05 1987 00:00 | 8 |
| Mike, I think you're on the right track - put an aileron wing
on the PT-20 and follow it up with the Kavalier. You can put
a 40 in it. Check out Dave's Kavalier next time you join us
at lunchtime. Looks like a nice plane to me.
Everyone got a bit carried away with their trainer recommendations.
Funny how emotional people get about their trainers! I guess it's
kinda like your first child.
Bill
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183.14 | Oh yeah... | LEDS::LEWIS | | Fri Jun 05 1987 00:01 | 4 |
| I forgot to add that a plane is only tail heavy if you let it be.
Bill
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183.15 | Sportster 20/Great Planes | EARTH::SCANTLEN | | Fri Jun 05 1987 08:48 | 14 |
| On aileron trainers, and the Sportster 20 (two different beasts).
I've taken a new member's Great Planes 40 sized aileron trainer
up for him earlier this spring with excellent stability and
controllability. It balanced nicely, and as Bill said, tail
heavy isn't forever (I paraphrased that).
The Sportster 20 (now after some 20+ flights for my new one), is
also by Great Planes, and it flies great. Having built Goldbergs,
Top Flites, Midwests, Krafts, Sigs, Royal, Sterling, kits in the
past, I liked the Great Planes kits. (Don't ask where all the above
planes are).
-Mike
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