T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
630.1 | Worlds smallest / lightest RC model? | CHGV04::KAPLOW | Set the WAYBACK machine for 1982 | Tue Jul 26 1988 19:17 | 12 |
| The lightest RC model I've ever heard of was a radio controlled
model rocket glider, and weighed all of 35 GRAMS (1.25 oz)
including the rocket motor! The model itself wasn't much more than
a 12" span HLG. The electronics were a handmade micro-albin
superregen RX driving a handmade pulse actuator and 2 hearing aid
batteries for power. The rocket would barely make it off the 3'
launch rod, so the rod was placed on the edge of a slope soaring
cliff for the flight. I have plans of this model somewhere, along
with RX and accuator construction information for anyone foolish
enough to want to build something this small.
20 ounces almost sounds like an excess compared to that.
|
630.2 | Peanut-size! | CLOSUS::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Wed Jul 27 1988 11:24 | 31 |
| Ken Willard built a peanut-sized cabin biplane in the late '70s;
I have the article around somewhere. That is the smallest I've
heard of using conventional RC gear. There are others using
superregen receiver/escapment, the most notable being a very
tiny slope soaring glider, I think its span was around 10", that
Bill Winter wrote up in his column a few years ago.
I've got a 30" span model that I finished over a year ago but
haven't gotten around to flying. I've had trouble with the .020
engine, and the radio has been swapped around for higher priority
projects. Its rudder-only with a Tower micro system.
If you haven't, be sure to check out Eloy Marez's Electronics
column in Model Builder; he mentions "Wee RC" frequently.
BTW -- I've been experimenting with cardboard as a building
material, using a 36" span Northwest Dakota as a test subject. I
mention this because I have hopes that it may be a viable
material for small models (and large too).
So far the results have been mixed at best: the material does not
have any significant working advantages over balsa, and does
suffer a weight penatly, though not as bad as foamboard. It's
also slow to glue, since the thing that works best seems to be
Titebond. I'm planning to experiment with celuloise cements this
week.
I was pretty excited about the stuff last week. Then I finished
a wing and it turned out to be twice as heavy as a conventional
wing! When I finish the Dakota I'll have enough experience to
file a note on cardboard.
|
630.3 | BALSA FLIES BETTER......!!!! | PNO::CASEYA | THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) | Wed Jul 27 1988 12:49 | 7 |
|
|
| | 00 Adios, Al
|_|_| ( >o
| Z__(O_\_ (The Desert Rat)
|
630.4 | Small Model Fun | 43518::BODDINGTON | Andrew, RE02 F/M8, 830-4557 | Thu Jul 28 1988 12:51 | 17 |
| I'm also a fan of small Models. I have built a Ken Willard designed
kit called the 'Roaring 20' (kitted by Top Flight?), which was 20"
span. This was powered by a Cox TD.020 and had 2 channel Mini Sanwa
radio.
In the past one of the favourite radio's for small models was the
Ace pulse proportional single channel gear. I built a twin
rotor autogyro for this, again powered by the TD. This came to an
unfortunate demise downwind in some gravel pits, when I flew it
in too strong a wind!
My father has built a 7" span Delta for fun. This was powered by
a scaled down version of the Mills 0.75cc diesel engine (about
1/3rd capacity) and had a single servo from one of the new light
weight radios.
Andrew
|
630.5 | WEE RC IS ALIVE AND WELL | CHARON::SWEENEY | | Thu Jul 28 1988 17:11 | 35 |
|
I am presently building a prototype wee rc receiver. It uses
the Signetis TDA7000 FM receiver on a chip sold at radio shack.
With only one tuning coil it should weigh no more than 10-12 grams.
If it works out, I will build another using its surface mount
cousin and surface mount caps etc. It might weigh as little as
5-6 grams. With silver oxide batteries and an appropriate servo-
actuator an all up weight of 20 grams should be possible. It will
be used in a 2oz 30in span hand launch glider. By tilting the rudder
,you can trim for medium speed straight ahead,get a nice slow thermal
turn in one direction, and a spiral dive in the opposite direction
,all with a single channel proportional set up. What I need to know
is, who makes an airborn channel fm transmitter that also switches to am?
I need a new Tx and heard that someone makes such a beast.
In a different but similar vein I'm also involved in an
ultrasonic control project. It uses an electeret mike into a high
gain bandpass filter. This signal is fed to a PLL (phase locked
loop) and runs an antique actuator by varying the tone duty cycle.
Early experiments have been quite promising. The unit is light and
simple and works quit well up to 400' away. I use a piezo tweeter
as a transmitter element. It is intended for CO2 powered models
and micro hand launch gliders.
besides the notes repliesI can
reached at CSS::SWEENEY
|
630.6 | Will the Real Eric H. please stand up | TRUCKS::HORNBY | Soaring..not just for the birds | Fri Feb 03 1989 12:18 | 8 |
| Eric,
Is this the same Eric that used to do similar things with Slope
Soarers at the Meon Valley Club in the UK 7 or 8 years ago.?
I've recently got back into the Notes file and have seen your
name pop up in several "soap box" areas which seem to be too much
of a coincidence.... it sounds like the Eric Henderson late of
UK, MVSA and Alton... have I got the right guy????
|
630.8 | Eric H.....end of message | TRUCKS::HORNBY | Soaring..not just for the birds | Fri Feb 03 1989 12:22 | 6 |
| Sorry folks...
I said I was new back to notes......... forgot to sign off..
Regards Trevor Hornby.
Still in the UK but now moved to Southamton area.
|
630.11 | How small can we make them? | TEKTRM::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 235-8459 HANNAH::REITH | Thu Aug 31 1989 14:01 | 15 |
| I got the September issue of Model Builder (nice mag.) and was impressed with
the article that talked about using shape memory alloy wire as a "servo". For
background, this wire will shrink in length when a current is applied. This could
supply the pull in a pull/pull cable system.
My topic is "How small can we get?"
Could we make a multi channel, indoor rubber powered R/C plane with this
technology?
I always thought Multi .049 & .020 was out of reach but it is available ARF
now. I would think we could set up a reed type of system (full throw only)
and with a current limiting system maybe even proportional!
I'll throw it out to the floor for ideas.
|
630.12 | | CTD024::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Thu Aug 31 1989 16:28 | 9 |
|
Doggone, I remember a recent mag, within the last two months,
that talked about RC CO2 power. I think it was done in
Czech. (can't spell that one!). Was it Eloy Marez's column in
Model Builder?
I've mentioned this one before in this context, but in the 70's
Ken Willard published a peanut-sized .010 powered RC biplane.
Real cute too.
|
630.13 | Status update for Wee R/C? | TEKTRM::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 235-8459 HANNAH::REITH | Wed Oct 25 1989 13:34 | 8 |
| I've recently become interested in the "wee r/c" aspects and would like to
contact/hear more about what people have accomplished. I'm wondering how an
earlier replier made out with his ultralight Rx (find a Tx?) as well as
progress with the ultrasonic idea. I'm interested in the possibility of indoor
peanut size stuff. Maybe we can laminate some components onto the spars of
a microfilm model and actually warp the surfaces with memory shape wire?
Jim HANNAH:: Reith
|
630.14 | Article in latest MB | CTD024::TAVARES | John -- Stay low, keep moving | Wed Oct 25 1989 13:53 | 3 |
| The November issue of Model Builder contains an article on The
Micro Albin receiver that gives construction details for an
actuator. I haven't read it yet but it looks like good info.
|
630.15 | Don't bother trying to build an Albin | POBOX::KAPLOW | Set the WAYBACK machine for 1982 | Thu Apr 19 1990 00:27 | 29 |
| I'd be interested in a copy of this article (my mailstop is ACI)
if you don't mind, just for historical comparison.
You DON'T want to build one of these. The Albin design is a super
regen receiver. That design might have worked in the 60's, but
died from the mid 70's CB craze. ANY CB channel would interfere
with them. To use them on 72MHz would require the ENTIRE band be
clear. Not likely in todays RF environment. The only person I
ever saw use one of these successfully did so on the 10 meter ham
band, in the middle of nowhere.
The design used a pulse actuator. I haven't seen these sold for
years, since ACE dropped them from their catalog. There was a
Mattel unit available surplus a while back, that I picked up for
$10. I did build a couple of the Albin type actuators to work with
that unit. They worked, but had little torque.
The design is quite clever, but extremely finicky. One of the
transistors (what! no chips?) had to be hand selected from a pile
of them, until you found one that would work. They were hard to
build, and harder to keep working.
So much for the Albin design. The Micro-Albin was the same
circuit, but shrunk to a .5in^2 circuit board with FOURTY
miniature components on it. I know the guy who re-laid out the
components. He may be the only person who ever built one and got
it to work. He ruined his eyesight building them.
Summary: Interesting history, but save your efforts.
|