T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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502.1 | A little heavy? | MDSUPT::EATON | Dan Eaton | Thu Mar 31 1988 12:41 | 18 |
| I saw a Solo 1 last summer at a field while visiting my in-laws
in Mich. Unfortunately I don't remember what the fellow had for
a power plant. What I do remember very clearly is watching this
fellow's instructor guide the plane at full throttle the entire
length of the field. At the end of the field was a ditch with a
slight lip. The plane hit the lip and staggered into the air. Once
airborne it seemed to fly well. Never forget how when the plane
was half way across the field the owner started saying "Its not
going to make it" each time with a little more worry in his voice.
All the time his instructor is saying "Don't worry. No problem".
They ended up taking the landing gear off to save some weight and
hand launching for the rest of the day. The plane did handle the
abuse and flew ok. If this is your pick then I'd suggest keeping
a real close eye on the weight or else make sure you have a ditch
lip to launch from. 8^)
Dan Eaton
|
502.2 | Get tough! | TOWNS::COX | Scott C. Cox | Thu Mar 31 1988 16:12 | 16 |
| Joel,
Being somewhat of a novice myself, I was recently looking around
for a good durable trainer to get me through the "hard times"!
After destroying a beautiful Eagle 63 with my instructor by my side
(poor guy took it harder than I did, almost cried) I bought a
Duraplane.
My Duraplane flys well with an O.S. FP but with a 30 You could probably
fly through brick walls! If you're tired of demolishing hard work
try the Duraplane, they aren't kidding!
Good luck!
Scott
|
502.3 | | MPGS::PERCUOCO | | Fri Apr 01 1988 10:38 | 9 |
| RE: NOTE .2
SCOTT,
HOW DID YOU DEMOLISH YOUR EAGLE?? I'M GETTING
READY TO LEARN ON MY EAGLE 63. IT'S A REAL NICE
PLANE. HOPE IT FLYS AS WELL AS IT WAS EASY TO BUILD!
TOM
|
502.4 | Duraplane dissapointment | GERBIL::JAFFE | The Big Blue Buster from CMG | Fri Apr 01 1988 13:59 | 13 |
| Scott,
My condolances on the early demise of the Eagle. I went down to
the local kit pusher last night and opened the box for the duraplane.
A member of my club told me to avoid it because of poor flight
characteristics. "Boy -- What a piece of junk!!!!" The foam wing
was misshapen, small and real flimsey. The other plane they showed
me was a EZ box 20. That looked nice but for the $110 they wanted
for it it did seem a little small. The larger EZ BOX was also
ovewrpriced at 160. I got home and called Tower and ordered my
Solo I with the extra aileron wing and a new conquest to go with
it. I'll report back in a few weeks and let y ou know if I still
feel good about my decision.
|
502.5 | Wasn't the Eagle's fault! | TOWNS::COX | Scott C. Cox | Mon Apr 04 1988 13:50 | 23 |
| Tom,
I think I'm one of the few people alive that has destroyed an Eagle
but the circumstances were unusual: At Goddard we fly from a field
on the Antenna Test Range. About 15 degrees and 500 ft. from the
end of runway 27 there is an 80 ft. antenna test tower built of
aluminum pipe and big enough to support a 20 x 20 ft. control tower
about 60 ft. from the ground. This sucker is BIG! Well, being
a little squirrelly with the Eagle (it was to have been my first
solo landing after a few successful approaches), everything was
fine until the tower decided to jump out in front of me and eat
my airplane! The best way to describe it was to imagine what an
Eagle would look like if it were crammed through a 4 in. pipe!
Luckily all of the expensive bits, engine, receiver, etc. were salvaged
but the airframe was beyond repair.
Good news though! Last week I won 1st place in iron-on film with
my new Eagle covered with Black Baron film. This Saturday is it's
maiden flight. Wish me luck!
One to beam up!
Scott
|
502.6 | Solo I - In the Beginning | GERBIL::JAFFE | The Big Blue Buster from CMG | Fri Apr 08 1988 16:06 | 30 |
| Tower delivered my new Solo I yesterday alon with a new conquest.
Seems like Christmas all over again. Upon opening the boxes (I ordered
the additional aileron wing) I was taken aback at how few pieces
there were always having built kits before. The fuse is made from
a moulded plastic that seems light enough but very strong.
I spent 3 hours last night and completed the engine mounting, cowl
mounting, pushrod placement, and servo tray and servo installation.
The instructions are clear enough, especially if you have built
at least one plane before. Everything fits like a glove and they
have some parts developed to make things easy.
About the only thing I do not like at the moment is the small radio
compartment. Between the 8 oz. round tank and the servo tray holding
3 standards in a 2 + 1 configuration, I barely have room for the
reciever and battery pack. I guess I could have mounted the tray
back further but I followed the instructions and mounted it over
the landing gear bolts. As it is the cable pushrod they supplied
was too short to go from the throttle to the servo arm. Just having
completed a SIG Kadet Mark II which has all the room in the world,
I guess I am in culture shock.
Next steps are to finish the radio, add decals to the fuse, mount
the stab and fin, connect the pushrods to the tail surfaces, join
the wing halves, and balance and then I'm off. The box says that
an experienced builder can complete it in 3-4 hours. More
realistically, I'd say 8-10 .
Hope to have a report on the rest of the assembly and some words
about a sucessful maiden flight by monday.
|
502.7 | the wing failed for no good reason | HAMSTR::JAFFE | The Big Blue Buster from CMG | Mon Apr 11 1988 11:15 | 70 |
| This reply covers completion of the Solo I and a report on its maiden
voyage.
The rest of the Solo went together as easily as the first session
and was completed on the 2nd evening of work. There are some hitches
that should be mentioned in the assembly.
1- The power plant should be mounted farther foward on the mount
as I had to do some minor surgery to the cowl to accomodate the
spinner and to balance the plane required 6 oz. of lead in the nose
which could have been cut down by a more forward engine.
2- The directions call for a side mounted servo in the wing. They
provide two posts and direct to angle the servo towrds the aileron
horns. They say that this provides a lower profile and a stronger
wing because there is less cut out (only 2 1/4 " holes required
for the posts). The problem is that the side mount style interfered
with the side of the fuse. This also was corrected with minor surgery.
3- For those that like a little foreshadowing- The wing is joined
with one spar. It is made from plastic and shaped in a U. It contains
the dihedral and is insered using epoxy about 9" in each sid of
the wing. Epoxy is also put on the foam at the joint. The joint
is then wrapped with a black adhesive backed paper tape (provided).
There is no hint of reinforcing anything or a need to do so.
The final adjustments were made on Saturday, day 3. The plane looked
great and checked out ready to fly.
MAIDEN VOYAGE
Sunday was clear and crisp with a stiff wind saying "novice I dare
you". After waiting most of the afternoon for it to calm down, my
instructor (who had been flying all afternoon) said he would take
it up to trim it out and pass judgement on flight quality. The Enya
30 seemed more than sufficient to pull it off the grass and shortly
thereafter, my instructor had it trimmed and flying straight and
level. He made several passes and everything was going fine. The
box was passed to me and still eveyting was great. I did find it
more tippy than the Mark II having less dihedral but I was doing
fine UNTIL a sharp gust and a little too much aileron pushed me
over. NOT TO WORRY - my instructor had me up high and I passed
the box back quicksy to his experience thumbs. Without a concern,
he started to gain control and then SNAP - the wing folded and the
right side drifted on way while the rest of the plane headed straight
down.
The post mortem was both good and bad. Not a scratch or dent in
the fuse - the motor was still solidly mounted and although it went
in nose first, the only damage to the front was the spinner. The
servo tray was just slightly off due to the servo tray breaking
on one corner. Pushrods remained connected to broken horn and servo
connectors. I did lose the tail feathers but they are easily repaired.
The bad news is that the wing snapped right down the center joint.
The spar was cleanly cracked and the foam joint separated jagged
indicating that the epoxy held but the stress on the spar caused
the fall. I have a second wing for it and I am going to join this
one using several 1/4" dowels and brace the kit supplied spar with
a dowel inside the U.
All-in-all I have mixed emotions. I am going to give a call to Aristo
Flight and see what they say. Perhaps the thing to do is use the
indestructable fuse with balsa built up wing form another source
and do the same for the tailfeathers.
Comments and suggestions PLEASE
Joel
|
502.8 | Almost Ready for Wind | K::FISHER | Battery, Mags, & Gas Off! | Mon Apr 11 1988 11:49 | 35 |
| > Comments and suggestions PLEASE
>
> Joel
1. I was wondering how long it would be before somebody reported
damage while flying this last (Very windy) weekend. I've lost
and damaged more planes because I flew in windy conditions than
any other reason (and I'm terrible at landings).
2. I haven't seen an ARF yet that seems to make a good trainer.
There are several "Laser" style ARFs that cost approx $300 that
experts have been having good luck with.
3. You did the right thing having an instructor flying.
4. You're lucky that the crash didn't take out your engine and radio.
Consider that God's way of warning you to put your Enya and radio
in something more deserving.
5. Ever notice how slowly the ARF actually go together? I think it
means "Almost Ridiculous Frustration".
I'm not an expert Joel - but when you go to the field and see planes
that have had 100 plus flights on them - they are not ARFs.
I think you can go to your local hobby shop and get a PT40, Falcon 56,
or any other common all balsa trainer and get it together nearly as fast
as repairing the plastic plane and get a lot more return on your invested
hours.
_!_
Bye ----O----
Kay R. Fisher / \
================================================================================
|
502.9 | glass the wing and scratch the feathers | SPKALI::THOMAS | | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:55 | 12 |
|
Joel, Did the center section tape rip or did it seperate from the
wing covering. I would opt to use fiberglass and resin or epoxy
to reenforce the center section of the new wing. You can the paint
the epoxied area with Poly U and it should be a lot stronger and
look ok.
I would't use the stock tail feathers. I would make sheet balsa
replacements and the cover them with some shrink covering.
Tom
|
502.10 | Glass the Center Section | LEDS::WATT | | Mon Apr 11 1988 13:57 | 20 |
| I had a flightcraft Arrow II for a couple of years (still have it)
and I beat the **it out of it without ever folding the wing. I
did induce some creases in the covering due to overstress in a crash.
You MUST glass the center section of this kind of wing to prevent
failure. I am surprised that the kit did not recommend this. The
Arrow kit suggested it, but did not say it was required. The wing
construction was identical to yours with a single plastic spar in
foam. I glassed a six inch section in the center before applying
the plastic protective covering. DO THIS WITH YOUR SECOND WING.
If you do this, the wing will not fold up. You must use epoxy to
attach the glass as polyester will eat the foam for lunch. I got
hundreds of flights on my Arrow before retiring it. I destroyed
the fuse in a mid-air last year, but the wing survived after patching
it. A new fuse was cheap, so I did fix it and fly it some more.
It really did not fly that well because of excess weight, but it
was a good plane in the wind. I would recommend that you build
a better plane while you are flying the Solo.
Charlie
|