T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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336.1 | GEE-BEE'S DEMAND CERTAIN LEVEL OF SKILL | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT RC-AV8R | Wed Oct 21 1987 14:36 | 21 |
| Brian,
If you don't mind my asking, what's yer' skill level. I only ask
since these "sexy racers" can be quite a handful for the fledgling
R/Cer. The stiff, narrow-track, taildragger landing gear setup
will be especially challenging.trying for a less experienced pilot
but, if you have 3 or 4 sport-type birds under yer' belt, you should
overcome this and enjoy the snappy performance available from the
Gee-Bee's.
Unless yer' "quite" experienced, I'd recommend you stick to the
model-Y Sportster as the short coupled R-1 type is fully capable
of eating even the expert pilot's lunch!
The Coverite kit produces a nice model but I'm not sure that anyone
else kits the Sportster. Henry (Mr. Gee-Bee) Haffke has plans
available for several larger sizes, check Model Aviation's plans
service, but you may wish to start with the kit to find out whether
you like the bird or not (and whether it likes you).
Adios, Al
|
336.2 | OOOOPS! I GOOFED ON THE MODEL DESIGNATIONS... | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT RC-AV8R | Wed Oct 21 1987 15:35 | 16 |
| Brian,
I goofed on the model designations in my reply (-.1). It is the
"E" (not the "Y") and Sportster models that are of the friendlier
persuasion. The "Y" ("Spirit of Springfield, Mass.") and "R-1"
models were the short-coupled little demons that had the (undeserved
according to some) reputations as man-killers and are "verrry" dif-
ficult models to handle.
Except for slightly "dicey" ground handling, the Coverite kits make
fine sport models for the modeler with some low-wing and taildragger
experience. Be aware, however, that they "are not" trainers and
should be "worked up to" if yer' still in the preliminary stages
of learning to fly R/C.
Adios again, Al
|
336.3 | Perhaps... | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Wed Oct 21 1987 22:27 | 22 |
| Al,
I certainly respect your words of caution regarding the handling of
Geebee. I've now been as model for four years, and have built and
flown several trainers and motorized gliders, a sportster 40
w/ a O.S. SP 45 w/tp(flies very nice by the way), a top flight
contender 60, a balsa USA citabria pro, ad a pits bi-plane.
I AM interested in building a nice sport plan that is "HOT" but still
not the type of bird that you are ALWAYS having to fly in front of.
Perhaps the GeeBee isn't the bird fer me... I just really liked the
lines, and thought I'd inquire. Have you any personal experience with
the model??? Do ya think it might be more than I'm ready for?? What
Model is the E-Model?? The only ones I've seen are the E model, and
the sportster, but not sure of the difference other than cosmetic.
Hadn't heard of the R1.
Thanks for the input Al... It's greatly appreciated. Ya sure seem
to have quite a few answers.
Brian "keep um out of the trees"
|
336.4 | | THESUN::DAY | Just playing with my chopper.... | Wed Oct 21 1987 23:24 | 30 |
|
I was intending to build the Gee Bee R1, but I drifted into
Helicopters.... I shall build one sometime tho... The R1 is
THE Gee Bee, tha one that looks like a backwards Coke bottle..
Model Aviation do some 1/4 scale plans that come out at 72"..
they also do the Gee Bee Z which is pretty much like thr R1
but a bit thinner... Same size....
The model E is a completely different plane, there are some
1/4 scale plans in the UK for that one..... I don't think
that ones very attractive tho...
The Sportster that Coverite do is different again, I've only
seen odd pictures of it.. Doesn't look like a real Gee Bee
to me.....
I haven't seen a model R or Z in the UK, which is one reason
why I wanted to build one, let alone flown one... However the
things I've read about both the R, Z, and Es is that despite
their wierd shapes they are relatively easy to fly.... Check
out the Haffke articles..... Got my interest up again now,
maybe when I've finished the Hellcat, Pitts, and Jungmann...
cheers
bob
|
336.5 | I'M SOOOOO CONFUSED.... | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT RC-AV8R | Thu Oct 22 1987 12:21 | 52 |
| Brian,
From the description of yer' past projects, I'd speculate the Coverite
Gee-Bee would fit ya' just fine. I only advanced caution for yer'
consideration if you had "not" built/flown much more than beginner-
types. With the skill level you described you should get just what
you want; a mildy hot but relatively friendly sport model.
As to the various Gee-Bee production models, I'm getting a little
confused, myself. I KNOW the Sportster is a nicely proportioned/
coupled ship with generous wing area as a friend in Texas has one
he's campaigned for the past 6-yr.'s or so. I, too, thought the
model-E was similar to the Sportster with only cosmetic and, maybe,
engine changes, i.e. the Sportster had a radial engine and the "E"
had an inverted in-line engine....I still think that's correct.
The "R-1" (as Bob Day has described) is the one most people think
of when they hear "Gee-Bee." It had a round, fat, stubby fuselage,
not dissimilar in shapt to a pickle-barrel, with the cockpit placed
WAY to the rear in the dorsal fin to the vertical stabilizer. A
huge radial engine was fitted and the wings were rather shorter
than you'd think was appropriate. This is the one in the classic
paint scheme of white with red scalloped trim, a pair of dice and
the number 7 or 11 on the side (there were two built). Jimmy Doo-
little flew this ship to several air-race victories and was (I believe)
the only pilot who survived it, all the others being killed.
I think Bob is correct that it was the model "Z" (not the "Y") that
was similar in appearance to the "R-1" but was more slender and
a little more aesthetically pleasing to the eye. This one (of which
a flying replica was built a few years back) was yellow with black
trim and had the legend "Spirit of Springfield, Massachusetts" on
the radial engine cowl.
This leaves me wondering what the "Y" was but I think it was another
sport-type ship similar in appearance/application to the "E" and
the Sportster...come to think of it, I think the "Y" "was" the Sport-
ster. If anyone can clarify, I'd (we'd) appreciate it.
I've seen Granger Williams' (of Williams Bros.) models of both the
"Z" and the "R-1." Both flew reasonably but were VERRRRY sensitive
owing to the extremely short coupling of the nose/tail moment arms.
Both were also absolute man-eaters on the ground!! Granger never
batted better than 500 for keeping it (them) right-side-up on lan-
ding.
That's why I proposed sticking to the friendlier "Sportster" types
`til more experience is gained. These are not above yer' skill
level but I think the Z and R-1 probably are...I would hesitate
a long time flying one myself.
Hope I've helped..., adios, Al
|
336.6 | ORRRRRRRR, MAYBE IT WAS....... | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT RC-AV8R | Thu Oct 22 1987 15:11 | 23 |
| Brian,
Man! You really stirred up the ol' "gray-matter" with this Gee-Bee
thing but I think I finally have it sorted out.
Thr R-1 and Z models were the high performance racers as I described
in reply -.5...no changes there.
Both the "E" AND the "Y" models were designated "Sportsters;" the
model-E Sportster having the in-line engine and the model-Y Sportster
having the radial engine with the NACA cowl-ring.
There were other Granville Bros. (Gee-Bee) models but I'm gonna'
quit while I'm ahead (I think). If I'm not mistaken, a museum dedica-
ted to the Granvilles and their aircraft exists in their home town
of Springfield, Mass. which contains pictures, drawings, various
vintage paraphernalia and (I believe) the full-scale flying replica
of the "Z" I mentioned. If yer' anywhere in the vicinity, it might
be worth yer' while to look into it. If you (or some other noter)
should visit this historic museum, be sure to share the experience
with us via RC_NOTES.
Adios amigo, Al
|
336.7 | Yeh, that's it | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Thu Oct 22 1987 20:04 | 26 |
| Thanks for the clarification Al. I was also able to research the
issue after I confused myself. The models that are for sale by
Coverite are the GeeBee sportster, model Y and E. Personally
I'm a radial fan, so I think my preference is the Y model. This has
me think'n that perhaps a Wankel engine might fit the specifacations,
since a real radial doesn't fit my budget. Not that a Wankel is
anything like a real radial, but at least it's round! Any personal
experience Al?
I feel the R1 and the Z model aren't quite in my ball park... I once
made a Marks Models FUN scale pits, that had an unproportionally short
tail moment. The flying characteristics were EXTREMELY touchy,
in fact any rudder deflection send the bird into a violent spin. I
found it troublesome to do even a stall turn(hammer head). Hence, I
feel the R1 or Z model might perform likewise to some degree. My past
experience has been, that if the full scale bird was "dangerous",
then nine times out of ten the model has been a hand full as well.
I'm still interested in any personal experience with this bird, that
anyone can add. I really think this plane is "winner", and I'm kind
of itching to get into it, but would also like to avoid any mistakes.
Thanks in advance,
Brian
|
336.8 | P.S. ...... | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Thu Oct 22 1987 20:10 | 5 |
| P.S. I live outside of Boston, Al. So a trip to Sprignfield is
definitely in the books... time permitting. I'll be sure to
fill you in when I go.
/Brian
|
336.9 | "Still up in the Air" | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Thu Oct 22 1987 20:36 | 9 |
| Al,
ugh!!! Al, I was just flipping through a Towers Hobby cat., and
they illustrate theE model radial engine and cowl.
Now I'm confused again!!! I think you discribed the Y model
as having the radial... think we can get this cleared up
sometime. ;-)!!
/Brian
|
336.10 | I'll Buy that bob... | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Thu Oct 22 1987 20:41 | 5 |
| Yeh Bob, that R-1 is a real sharp looker, but I'm just a bit concerned
about the flight characteristics.... Have you seen the model fly??
Are you building from scratch??
/Brian
|
336.11 | | THESUN::DAY | Just playing with my chopper.... | Thu Oct 22 1987 20:42 | 19 |
|
re .6
I'll go along with the R1 and Z descriptions.... There
was also an R-2 and a model called the ZETA... The latter
was the Granville's attempt to enter the world of commercial
light planes.....
I thought the model E had a radial (wasp) engine like the
R and Z. The sportster had the in line one.....
love that R-1... Sometime I gonna make one
cheers
bob
|
336.12 | give me an R | THESUN::DAY | Just playing with my chopper.... | Thu Oct 22 1987 20:48 | 24 |
|
re .10
I've not seen one in the UK, which made it all the
more attractive.....
I was going to try and get hold of the Model Aviation
plan, but as I said my chopper came along, and interset in heavy
plane building dropped off....
I realise that I don't wanto give up planes and fly
choppers exclusively, so am back building fixed wings...
Trouble is I got several months work already planned so
a Gee Bee would be well into next year.... I've got to
finish the Hellcat, finish the Pitts, then I've got my
new Jungmann to build.... after that it's a definate
possibility, I have a decent .90 to go in it now aswell....
cheers
bob
|
336.13 | A,B,C,D,E,F,GEE-BEE?????????? | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT RC-AV8R | Fri Oct 23 1987 11:58 | 42 |
| Brian,
Sounds like, according to the catalog and Bob Day, we can simply
swap the model-E with the "Y" and probably be no farther off than we
are already (Hah!). I'll be seeing my Texan buddy with the Gee-Bee
at the Masters next weekend (if he attends; he's qualified) so I'll
ask him to resolve the (self-induced) confusion we're experiencing.
Bob's right about the Zeta, a model of one is pictured (in color)
in this month's Scale R/C Modeler in the New England Masters Qualifier
coverage. I'm not sure what an R-2 was unless it was a development of
the R-1. At this point, the confusion factor is high enough regarding
the 4-models we're already befuddled over so I'm quite willing not
to care too much just what the R-2 was (Hah!). If you could put
yer' hands on it (them), Model Aviation ran a series of articles
on the Gee-Bees from both historical and model perspectives a few
years back. These articles were authored by Henry Haffke who is
quite an authority on the Granville Bros. and their aircraft. I'm
sure the plan Bob Day refers to in Model Aviation is a Haffke plan.
It was in one of Haffke's articles where I "think" I remember seeing
that a commerative museum was being planned/built/something. Please
check to insure it exists before trying to find it. CAN ANY NOTERS
PROVIDE ANY INFO AS TO THE EXISTENCE OF SUCH A MUSEUM?
By all means go ahead with yer' project...I believe yer' well qualified
to handle a Sportster. I test flew one a few years back and found
it to handle quite nicely. There "will" be a learning process if
yer' not experienced with taildraggers but this should not be
considered a deterent, especially if you fly from grass which takes
much of the "bite" out of conventional gear. I, too, prefer the
looks of the radial cowl but be aware that a Wankel is not as powerful
as the everyday .40...I'm sure it'd work but you'd be wise to concen-
trate on keeping weight down. Also, radial cowls can be a pain
to mount and keep tight with the delightful added habit of acting
like a scoop shovel if you nose-over. The in-line model would appear
the more practical selection but, now yer' facing an inverted engine
so the advantages/disadvantages seem to balance out...pick whichever
model flips yer' switch and get started; every journey starts with
the first step. You'll do just fine!
Adios, Al
|
336.14 | Clear as glass! ;-) | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Fri Oct 23 1987 13:23 | 29 |
| Al,
I think we are finally cleared up! ;-)!! I wont
write anything regarding the model, because it will
probably stir some more confusion.
You didn't comment on whether you had any personal experience with
the Rotary engines??? I'm curious as to how much trouble they
can cause. ie. Any starting/running problems. I checked the
specs on the O.S. "49" Wankel, and they claim it delivers
1.27 hp @17,000 rpm. That's comparable to any "regular"
40 size engine I believe.
I am used to flying tail-draggers off a grass strip, in fact the first
bird a flew was a swizzle stick... and if you can prevent those things
from squirm'n on the ground, you got the tg problem licked, at least
that was my experience. Hence I'm not really concerned 'bout that
aspect of the bird.
What I am concerned about, is the quality of coverite kits, since it
seems that they are the only manufacturers of such kit and I'v yet
to build one of them coverites. I don't think I'm ready for a
scratch-built yet.
Many thanks Al,
Brian
|
336.18 | Zeta? | TALLIS::FISHER | Battery, Mags, & Gas Off! | Fri Oct 23 1987 15:39 | 17 |
| > Bob's right about the Zeta, a model of one is pictured (in color)
> in this month's Scale R/C Modeler in the New England Masters Qualifier
> coverage. I'm not sure what an R-2 was unless it was a development of
Al - I've got the magazine right in front of me. Is it the Yellow Bipe on
page 41 and 42. If so is sure fooled me (and a local expert) and I even have
some incorrect notes on a photo I took of it.
P.S. The red/deep red/gold Staggerwing Beech on the bottom of page 42 is the
one that crashed during a landing approach that I mentioned on my review
of the competition earlier.
_!_
Bye ----O----
Kay R. Fisher / \
================================================================================
|
336.19 | ZETA WAS NO BIPE...... | MAUDIB::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT RC-AV8R | Fri Oct 23 1987 16:09 | 10 |
| Kay,
o, the Zeta is not the bipe you're looking at. I can't quote
you a page number but the Zeta is a low-wing, in-line engined bird
with greenhouse enclosed canopy in a maroon paint-scheme. The color
pic appears (I think) in the coverage of the meet you attended/reported
on and there is a caption identifying it as a Zeta, derivative of
the Gee-Bee.
Adios, AL
|
336.21 | Zeta Gee Bee | TALLIS::FISHER | Battery, Mags, & Gas Off! | Mon Oct 26 1987 09:28 | 19 |
| > o, the Zeta is not the bipe you're looking at. I can't quote
> you a page number but the Zeta is a low-wing, in-line engined bird
> with greenhouse enclosed canopy in a maroon paint-scheme. The color
> pic appears (I think) in the coverage of the meet you attended/reported
> on and there is a caption identifying it as a Zeta, derivative of
> the Gee-Bee.
Hah! found it - it's a black and white pic on page 66 with the coverage of
the Valley Forge, Pennsylvania, Scale Qualifier. Looks like it would be a
great sport plane - I question the wisdom of attaching the top wing struts
to the canopy though with a few clever hinges you could have folding wings and
open the canopy at the same time. :-)
_!_
Bye ----O----
Kay R. Fisher / \
================================================================================
|
336.22 | GeeBee Documentation | ARCANA::JORGENSEN | | Tue Oct 27 1987 23:06 | 6 |
| I took a trip to thre local aviation library... and found some
good documentation on the GeeBee airplanes... if anyone would
like a copy, just send me VAX mail @ ARCANA::JORGENSEN with your
LOC/MS and I'd be happy to send you a copy.
/Brian
|
336.23 | Gee Bee exhibit in Springfield Mass | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Wed Oct 28 1987 06:46 | 6 |
| Gee if anyone can figure out a reason to come to SPO on business
you could make a quick trip to the Springfield muesum(sp) to see
the GEE BEE exhibit. You could also see the full sized ZETA hanging
from the ceiling.
Tom
|
336.24 | Where is the Museum? | TALLIS::FISHER | Battery, Mags, & Gas Off! | Wed Oct 28 1987 07:00 | 19 |
| re Note 336.23 by SPKALI::THOMAS >
> Gee if anyone can figure out a reason to come to SPO on business
> you could make a quick trip to the Springfield muesum(sp) to see
> the GEE BEE exhibit. You could also see the full sized ZETA hanging
> from the ceiling.
>
> Tom
Please give directions to the museum. Don't assume I know my way around
Springfield. Also near by shopping malls and good restaurants so I can
justify the trip with my wife.
_!_
Bye ----O----
Kay R. Fisher / \
================================================================================
|
336.25 | Directions to the Springfield Museum | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Wed Oct 28 1987 07:52 | 17 |
| YES,YES,YES, sounds like a personal problem to me:-)
Directions. RT 90 west (assuming you coming from the east) to RT
291. RT291 south, take the taylor st exit. turn left onto Taylor
st. Travel app 9 blocks until you reach State st. Cross over State
st. and then take your first left. This is Maple st. This parallels
Taylor and your now heading back in the dicection you came from.
Again cross over State st. and enter the first driveway on your
right. This is the Quadangle, Museum court yard. the GEEBEE exhibit
is in the science museum.
One nice restraunt is Springfield in just down from the Museum.
Exit the driveway and take a right (right turns are the only legal
turn). Travel down app 9 blocks. On your left will be a Holiday
Inn. Excellent food at their restraunt on the top floor. Also this
is adjacent to RT 291. so getting home should be easy.
Tom
|