T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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1044.5 | Powered Glider info | CSOA1::RANKIN | | Thu Jul 06 1989 12:30 | 16 |
| Well, bac to the orrig question in .0
I have a powered glider. It is a Sofisticated Lady (Greenberg Kit).
It is powered with the TeeDee 049 mounted on a D&R (I think) engine
pod located on top of the wing. This is one mother of a motor for
its size. A friend of mine has the black widow mounted on his similar
plane and it has never been as high as mine.
The TeeDee comes with 2-3 head gaskets in it to make it so that
you can start it when it is new. As the engine breaks in, you
gradually take them out.
I would definitly do this combo again.
Good luck
JR
|
1044.6 | OS 20 Four Stroke | WR2FOR::BEATTY_WI | | Fri Jul 07 1989 20:22 | 7 |
| I saw a piece O' cake with an OS 20 four stroke on it. It was an
excellent combination. Plenty of Power, quiet and enough weight
up front to balance well. On the color combo's I usually run a
piece of dark trim along the leading edge, it helps you get the
plane level from a great distance when landing.
Will
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1044.7 | Its a Butterfly flying bye | CSC32::M_ANTRY | | Thu Jul 13 1989 16:06 | 7 |
| re: .6 I bet you are thinking of the Butter Fly. I had a OS Max 25
that was ported on mine. Way to much engine. It was funny the thing
would fly just as fast on 1/2 throttle than it would full boar. Just
goes to show that DRAG is something to be considered.
re: .0 No ideas on the engine. They do make a .074 engine that may
help out.
|
1044.8 | almost there... | CSCOA3::HOOD_DO | | Mon Jul 31 1989 18:13 | 19 |
|
Well... I put the Tee Dee .049 on there, and it has twice as much
power. I still have the problem with it being tail heavy. I moved
the wing back about 1/2 inch, but i still have to add WAY to much
lead in the nose to approach balance. the engine weighs about 1.2
ounces, and I have been advised to move the engine out at least
an inch ( glue a balsa block/plystrip on the nose, and remount engine).
My question is....how far out can I move the engine? I would like
to take ALL of the added_for_balance weight out of the nose and
move the engine out until it balances. This would SIGNIFICANTLY
lighten the plane, but are there any rules_of_thumb I need to follow
concerning prop/engine and wing placement?
BTW... The plane does fly , and I made my first RC landing this
past weekend (if you count being "talked down")! It's amazing how
much concentration it takes for just a 5 or 10 minute flight ( for
a beginner).
Doug
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1044.9 | | TEKTRM::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 235-8459 HANNAH::REITH | Wed Aug 02 1989 10:06 | 3 |
| You could always saw the nose off flat and mount the engine there...
But then it wouldn't be a glider would it ;^)
|
1044.12 | More speed needed for extra weight | LEDS::COHEN | Some limitations may apply... | Tue Aug 22 1989 17:32 | 4 |
|
You got it wrong. A heavy plane may gain altitude in a climb more
slowly than a light ship, but, given identical aircraft, differing only
in weight, the heavier plane will fly faster and maneuver less agilely.
|
1044.13 | Fast is relative(its still the slowest in the sky) | CSCOA5::HOOD_DO | | Wed Aug 23 1989 10:16 | 27 |
|
Actually, it is pretty fast down wind or in a dive. I finally
got one windless day (Sunday) that I didn't have to fight the wind.
I ended up mounting the engine on a 1" square balsa, 2.5 inches
out in front of the old firewall. I mounted the 1oz tank on the
balsa, and moved the battery up where the tank was. This completely
balanced the plane without adding additional weight.
I had already flown it 10 times, and was anxious to solo. I still
wanted someone beside me to talk me down and remind me of where
I was (for a landing), so one of the guys that normally put it up
for me hand launched and I flew the entire flight. From that point
on, I hand launched it myself and flew the entire flight.
The Tee Dee .049 develops full power after running 30-60 seconds.
I switched to 25% Nitro, and took a gasket out of the head.
If you don't hold back a minutes, and if it is windy, this plane
is VERRRY tricky (especially close to the ground and tail heavy).
Now, I hold back at least 30 seconds, fly in near zero wind, and
the plane is balanced. It is very easy to fly and yes, it can be
fast.
I am still going full speed ahead on the Falcon 56. I dont like
having to wait for windless days to be able to fly, and I want to
do an aileron roll.
Doug
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1044.14 | PLACING A .15 ON A ELECTRIC SAILPLANE | WMOIS::ALDEN | Doug | Thu Sep 10 1992 13:08 | 11 |
| I just purchased a Airtronics Eclipse electric sailplane. Has anyone
had any experience outthere either with this particular kit or placing
a .10/.15 glow engine on this type of plane (it is similar to the Great
Planes Spirit, and Goldberg Electra ?
Any experience/advise would be appreciated.
Doug Alden
DTN 241-4274
WMOIS::ALDEN
|
1044.15 | I wouldn't do it | MR4DEC::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Fri Sep 11 1992 11:48 | 12 |
| Re: <<< Note 1044.14 by WMOIS::ALDEN "Doug" >>>
Doug,
I have one and would NOT recommend putting a glow engine
in it. The airfoil generates a lot of lift when the power is on
and the plane will climb at a very steep angle when under power
if its trimmed for minimum sink when unpowered. You obviously
didn't get the deluxe kit that includes a motor (that is actually
one of the best deals in town).
Anker
|
1044.16 | LOOKING FOR A KITE | WMOIS::ALDEN | Doug | Fri Sep 11 1992 13:22 | 8 |
| Thanks for you reply. From your response I gather i will be able to
fly it up high and cut the engine and glide down or keep the engine
at a constant RPM and adjust the trim. It sounds like if I want to
fly around adjusting the RPM, it will be very difficult.
I was looking to fly the plane like a kit. Keep it up high, place the
engine to idle and float it around. Maybe I should have went to K
Mart for $1.99 and buy a real one. :-)
|
1044.17 | Can be Done - NOT a Kite | LEDS::WATT | | Wed Sep 16 1992 12:04 | 11 |
| I have the Eclipse running with the stock geared electric motor. You
could put a .10 glow engine on it and it would fly ok. One advantage
to the electric is that you can shut the motor off and restart it when
you need to gain altitude again. As Anker said, this plane is not
designed to fly fast so don't overpower it. The electric is probably
about equivalent to an .049 engine in power, but the gearing allows it
to swing a bigger prop. Most glow engines won't idle for very long
before they quit unless you keep the idle speed fairly high.
Charlie
|
1044.18 | OS FP15 POWERED ECLIPSE | WMOIS::ALDEN | Doug | Wed Oct 07 1992 14:42 | 18 |
| I built the eclipse. This kit is A1, the quality of the wood, the
instructions, and what they do to make it easy for one to build.
The plane had its maiden voyage with the OS15 FP. I seemed to get only
1 ounce of the 2 ounce tank before it stopped. I have since installed
a 4 ounce. The plane was lots of fun flying it around and toward the
end of the flight I would climb it way up high and the engine would
stop and then glide down. Also the 15 is not that noisy. A 10 would
have been fine. A .049, probably would be wimpy.
I could go on and on....
This hobby has no limits...
Doug
|