T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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180.1 | Do Scratch | RUTLND::JNATALONI | | Fri Jun 09 1989 12:41 | 26 |
|
I'd like to add some supporting comments to your description of
Scratchbuilding.
I'm not a Master Builder by any means, but have mangled enough
kits so that a typical set of plans can be somewhat comprehensible.
I totally agree with you Al, that if you've worked a few kits you'll
have little problem creating your own. I think this is particularly
true if you start out by sticking to good old fashioned basics.
As an example, I am building, from a single sheet plan (John Pond)
of the old Berkeley Buccaneer (Free flight design). Everything
you'd need is there by way of information. Sure, there's a lot
of tracing, cutting, shaping, sanding, etc. - but it's gratifying.
In addition, you can easily modify as you go along to suit you
particular needs, i.e., Beefing up, Lightening up, addition of
control surfaces for radio assist (as needed). My ship is not
finished yet, but it is framed up - and it looks so pretty setting
there that I hesitate to cover it. (Silk & Dope, of course)
GO FOR IT !
John Nataloni (Spell that- "Old Timer")
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180.2 | First scratch build | POLAR::SIBILLE | | Fri Sep 28 1990 15:23 | 31 |
|
Hi,
The plan are from a book called "MODEL PLANE BUILDING from A to Z"
published in 1965. I have build kit airplanes before with good success.
I whas looking for a simple enough airplane I could build for my .049
engines which I don't know what to do with. I had a Falcon junior last year
with an .049 rudder and elevator. It flew great and aldo demanded more
concentration then my bigger airplanes I just love it for it size.
I found this plans for an AERONCA for a .049 with rudder only as
control and decided to try and make two of them with ailerons, rudder,
elevator and engine. I might fixe the rudder if the extra weight for
an extra servo appears to much. I have half a dozen .049's with the
tank attach behind, which gives an autonomy of about 5 to 7 minutes. I have
succeded with my Falcon junior to modify the .049 and add a extra gaz
tank which gave me a 20 minutes autonomy. I'm planning to try to modify
them further adding some king of speed control. If that works good, I
have plans in the same book for a biplane Babcock Mark III and a
Fokker D-7. both run out of .049's. I know small plane are harder to
fly but that is one more reason I like them. The Aeronca will be my
firts scratche build airplane and is a small investissement ( another
reason I like small airplane, I can also have 10 airplanes that size
before I run out of room ). I am usually laft at the field when I bring
my Falcon junior but it ends when it is in the air and they can see
what it can do. Thank you for your input, it helps a lot. If you have
more, don't be shy.
Jacques
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180.3 | The article text will come with the plans | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Wed Oct 17 1990 17:27 | 4 |
| As I just found out when my P-38 plans arrived, RCM will send the text of the
construction article along with the plans when you order them.
No pictures but it's better than giving up ;^)
|
180.4 | More than I bargained for! | MISFIT::BLUM | | Tue Jun 22 1993 10:28 | 43 |
| The F3E sailplane I am constructing around a kevlar fuselage is
progressing slowly. I am seeing that you get more with a kit
than originally meets the eye.
The last two "kits" I built were the Robbe Calibra and Arcus.
These kits come with presheeted wings and all the "hardware"
necessary to get the plane in the air. Last but not least
all the dimensions(wing area, planform, stab area, incidence, etc)
and engineering has been done.
Almost no time is spent thinking when constructing a kit. Granted
you might make small changes if you really don't like the way something
is done, but overall you just assemble the thing.
I have spent a lot of time thinking about spar structure and how to
bolt the wing to the fuselage while still leaving room for 27
batteries. What seemd like a relatively simple project is turning
into a long, drawn out affair waiting for parts and paying numerous
$5 shipping fees from various suppliers(Soarcraft-Teflon tape, CST-
carbon fiber, fiberglass, Tower-wing holdown bolts, etc).
In the end I hope to save about $150-$300 over a similar commercially
available offering(Calibra Pro-$270 or Freudenthaler Surprise II-$399)
The biggest problem besides the protracted construction time is - THE
PLANE MIGHT NOT FLY WELL, OR WORSE IT MIGHT CRASH! Hopefully, I have
done my homework and the wing will stay on the fuse and will not fold
and the dimensions and incidences are correct, etc,etc. ALL these
factors have been decided and hopefully debugged by a reputable
manufacturer when you purchase a kit.
The only good things I can see at this point is I have a foam cutting
rig in place and a wing press for "future projects". Also, it will be
satisfying if the plane flys well to be able to say that the ship -
"is my own design". We'll see.
At this point the Calibra Pro sure looks like a good deal.
Regards,
Jim
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180.5 | When in doubt, copy! | MICROW::PHILLIPS | "DECtp Engineering TAY1-2 DTN 227-4314" | Tue Jun 22 1993 11:06 | 13 |
| Jim,
Good luck with your project! Sounds like you're having *fun* with it. I would
suggest copying the setups(incidence, stab area, etc...) from an existing(and
known good) design.
The foam cutter and wing press will always come in handy on future projects. I
know I cringe at the thought of scratch building another balsa wing!
Just my .02 cents,
-Lamar
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180.6 | | COWBOY::DUFRESNE | | Tue Jun 22 1993 11:27 | 0 |
180.7 | Borrow shere you can | MISFIT::BLUM | | Tue Jun 22 1993 12:29 | 19 |
| re: -2
Lamar,
Believe me, I am liberally borrowing from other designs. My
current engineering dilemna is where to locate and what to construct
the wing holdown blocks from in the foam wing. The must be able to
withstand wrenching high G turns and speeds of maybe 150 mph.
I have no examples to go by. I am thinking of epoxying vertical
grain balsa capped with ply/kevlar to the main spar. 1/4" nylon
holdown bolts would be used to hold the wing to the fuse.
There are many of these considerations to be dealt with.
Thanks,
Jim
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180.8 | Wing holddown example in June 93 RCSD | MICROW::PHILLIPS | "DECtp Engineering TAY1-2 DTN 227-4314" | Tue Jun 22 1993 13:02 | 18 |
| Jim,
On page 9 of the June RC Soaring Digest, they show the wing hold down for the
Synergy III. It's not clear from the picture if any wood is used, but you can
see some type of cloth(glass or kevlar??) is used in the layup. The setup appears
to have a T-nut encased in an epoxy layup.
Whoops! I just reread your note and saw you were looking for a setup inside the
wing itself. For the wing, a layup of carbon fiber and kevlar over the hold down
area might help. My 2 meter Alcyone wing hold down bolt pass through the wing
(a one piece wing) just in front of the spar. A basswood block is epoxyed in
whe the two wing halves are joined. Then a band of 6 ounce cloth(2" wide) is
wrapped around the joint. With the basswood block glued to the spar, it helps
spread the load out over the wing.
Hope this helps!
-Lamar
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