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Conference vmszoo::rc

Title:Welcome To The Radio Control Conference
Notice:dir's in 11, who's who in 4, sales in 6, auctions 19
Moderator:VMSSG::FRIEDRICHS
Created:Tue Jan 13 1987
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1706
Total number of notes:27193

1228.0. "STUKA-DID THEY REALLY FLY?" by POLAR::WHITTALL () Wed Jul 11 1990 19:56

    
    
    OVER THE PAST FEW MONTHS I'VE TRIED CONVERTING A GUILLOWS STUKA
    INTO AN RC PLANE. I INSTALLED A MICRO FUTABA SYSTEM AND 1/2 AA
    BATTERIES TO KEEP WEIGHT TO A MINIMUM. THE RECORD FLIGHT TO DATE
    IS ABOUT 60 FEET OR 15 SECS. THE PLANE STARTS TO BANK OFF IN ONE 
    DIRECTION AND WON'T RESPOND WHEN I TRY TO CORRECT IT.IT FALLS OFF
    TO THE LEFT OR THE RIGHT. ON THE RECORD FLIGHT OF 60 FT. IT LOOKED
    LIKE I GOT THE BUGS IRONED OUT THEN IT PULLED THE FASTEST SNAP
    ROLL I'VE EVER SEEN THEN GRAVITY SUCKED IT INTO THE GROUND. I WAS
    POWERED WITH A .049 HIGH COMPRESSION HEAD 6 X 4 PROP. IT SEEMED I
    MIGHT BE SUFFERING FROM LACK OF SPEED CAUSING TIP STALLS, I TRIED
    ON OS 10 AND THERE WAS NO PROBLEM WITH POWER THEN, THE PLANE TOOK
    OFF LIKE A ROCKET AND DID A BEAUTIFULL LOOP. UNFORTUNATELY IT 
    FINISHED THE LOOP 6 INCHES UNDER THE GROUND. AGAIN IT DIDN'T RESPOND
    TO THE STAB OR RUDDER. DOES ANYBODY HAVE SOME SUGGESTIONS,
    I'M STARTING TO BELIEVE STUKAS NEVER DID FLY. THANKS IN ADVANCE,
    IN THE MEAN TIME I'M GOING TO CRUISE THE SKY WITH A NICE FRIENDLY
    TOP WING MODEL.
    
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1228.1ODDS OF SUCCESS DIRECTLY PROPORTIONAL WITH SIZE...UPWARD::CASEYATHE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) 551-5572Thu Jul 12 1990 12:1068
    Re: .-1,
    
    Well, yer' givin' me a tailor-made opportunity to air some of my
    favorite beliefs/prejudices with this one.
    
    1.)  Little airplanes do not fly...they FLIT!  The smaller the
    airplane, the harder to fly; it has to do with Reynolds-numbers being
    too high and, perhaps most importantly, wing-loadings that are way too
    high.  This occurs simply as a matter lack of building materials which
    are sufficiently light to produce a suitably light but strong structure
    for flying purposes.  For example, if metals were the only material
    available to us, then the smaller the model, the proportionately
    heavier it'd be as we go down in size.  The Guillow's models are
    already a bit weighty (due to all the plastic scale details) for good
    flight under rubber-power alone...now add engine, radio, batteries,
    etc. and you have an undesireably high wing loading.
    
    2.) The Stuka had a high-aspect wing, i.e. it was highly double-tapered, 
    producing a very narrow chord at the tip and this condition is custom
    made for tip-stalls, *especially*if*the*wing*loading*is*high*.  There
    just isn't a whole lot that you van do about this except to reduce
    weight (vis-a-vis wing loading) as much as possible.  About the only other 
    thing you can do is build 2-to-3 degrees of washout into the wingtips. 
    This will help to prevent the tips from stalling 'til _after_ the
    center-section has stalled.
    
    3.) With all that taken into consideration, I wouldn't even _attempt_
    this airplane without ailerons!  At its very best, the plane'll be
    squirrely enough that it'll REQUIRE all the control authority you can
    get.  Rudder and elevator only are fine for high-wing, floaty kind'a
    planes (like J-3 Cubs, Aeronca Champs, etc.) but this doesn't provide
    the control necessary for a project such as yer's.
    
    4.) In order to enhance their marketability, makers of rubber-powered
    kits (like Guillows, Sterling, Comet, etc.) are quick to add the phrase
    "Can Be Radio-Controlled" to their kit boxes.  And this is not entirely
    untrue but they fail to tell the unsuspecting modeler (usually a beginner)
    that accomplishing R/C flight will require LOTS'A skill, cunning and
    moxy which is the domain of the highly experienced modeler.  The small,
    light, all-foam ARF [so-called] trainers from Testors (and others) are
    a REAL challenge for an experienced modeler to get to fly so how can we
    possibly expect that an even smaller, more heavily wing loaded plane
    has any better chance to succeed?!!
    
    5.) But, it _can_ be done.  A friend from California, Buzzy Watson, has
    made a thing of bringing an even more spectacular LITTLE airplane to
    our 1/8 AF Scale Fly-In's every Spring.  He's had a Guillows SBD
    Dauntless, complete with operating dive flaps and bomb release in
    addition to full flight and engine controls AND retractable landing
    gear.  Last year and this year he brought a Guillows P-47 Thunderbolt,
    again full-house PLUS retracts.  Buzzy fully sheets these models and
    beefs them up to withstand the rigors of R/C...usually powers them with
    an O.S. .10 with throttle.  And they DO fly!  However, Buzzy, a _very_
    accomplished pilot himself, leaves the flying duties to Jerry Kitchen,
    considered to be the hottest stick on the west coast, and Jerry has his
    hands REAL full with these little beasties!  I can tell you that _I_
    have no interest whatever in being humiliated by one of 'em!  :B^)
    
    My advice is (and always has been) to go with the largest airplane yer'
    budget and/or building space can accomodate...they simply fly better,
    the bigger they are.  Conversely, there is a point of diminishing
    returns as scale goes down, beyond which success is unlikely.
						 __
				|      |        / |\	   	       
      	         \|/		|______|__(o/--/  | \	   	       
      | |        00	       <|  ~~~  ____ 04 ---- | --------------------
    |_|_|        (O>o		|\)____/___|\_____|_/	   Adios amigos, Al
      |     \__(O_\_	        |	  |___/	 o	   (The Desert Rat)
1228.2Reynolds numberROCK::MINERDan Miner, DTN:225-4015, HLO2-3/D11Thu Jul 12 1990 16:5732
RE:  Note 1228.1 by UPWARD::CASEYA "THE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) 551-5572"
>>    1.)  Little airplanes do not fly...they FLIT!  The smaller the
>>    airplane, the harder to fly; it has to do with Reynolds-numbers being
>>    too high and, perhaps most importantly, wing-loadings that are way too
>>    high.  

    Al, I have to agree with everything you've said, except one teeny
    tiny nit-pick which was probably just a slip-up on your part.

    As the chord of the wing gets smaller and/or airspeed goes down, so
    does the Reynolds number.  Reynolds number is defined as:

            Re = k * chord * airspeed

    where k is a constant dependent on the units used for chord and
    airspeed.

    So, for small models, the Reynolds number is too SMALL.

    Other than this little typo, I have to agree with most (or maybe
    even all) of what you've said...

                       _____
                      |     \
                      |      \                          Silent POWER!
      _        ___________    _________   |            Happy Landings!
     | \      |           |  |         |  |
     |--------|-  SANYO  + ]-|  ASTRO  |--|              - Dan Miner
     |_/      |___________|  |_________|  |
                      |       /           |     " The Earth needs more OZONE,
                      |      /                       not Caster Oil!! "    
                      |_____/
1228.3I STAND CORRECTED.....UPWARD::CASEYATHE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) 551-5572Thu Jul 12 1990 19:1522
    Gracias fer' the correction, Dan'l.  I was never real sure about
    Reynolds number and how it affects models except to know that it was
    too one-way-or-the-other for models to fly as well as the prototypes
    and the situation gets worse the smaller the model gets.  The statement
    that big models fly better is more than a statement of prejudice by the
    giant scale guys, IT IS ABSOLUTE FACT!
    
    For example, the itty-bitty Pee-47 I described in .2 challenges even
    the most skilled R/C pilots to get it up and down in one piece, the
    .20-size standoff version designed by Rich Uravitch as a companion to
    the little AT-6 that many clubs have pylon races with is better but can
    be treacherous of any pilot error, the .40-powered JEMCO P-47 is better 
    but remains pretty skittish, the .60-.90 powered Holman Jug is pretty 
    honest and the 80" Baker Jug with Webra Bully, Quadra-50, etc. flies like 
    a baby carriage, completely stable and friendly, even forgiving of some
    pretty ham-fisted pilotage.  I rest my case.......
						 __
				|      |        / |\	   	       
      	         \|/		|______|__(o/--/  | \	   	       
      | |        00	       <|  ~~~  ____ 04 ---- | --------------------
    |_|_|        (O>o		|\)____/___|\_____|_/	   Adios amigos, Al
      |     \__(O_\_	        |	  |___/	 o	   (The Desert Rat)
1228.4INFLATE IT WITH HELIUMPOLAR::WHITTALLThu Jul 12 1990 20:3522
    THANKS GUYS, YOUR INFO SURE MAKES A LOT OF SENSE. I AM NEW TO THIS
    SPORT (2'ND YEAR) I'M SORRY I SORTA FELL IN LOVE WITH THE LOOK
    OF THE STUKA. I PRESENTLY FLY A 42" COWBOY, 52" SCOUT 15 AND A 
    GENTLE LADY WITH A 9 FOOT WING AND ELECTRIC POWER. AS YOU CAN SEE
    I'M MORE ACCUSTUMED TO SOME PRETTY TAME MODELS. I DID HAVE A LITTLE
    ALFA (34" WING I THINK) WITH AN OS .10. IT WAS FUN UNTIL THE WING
    SNAPPED ABOUT 200FT. UP. THE GREEN PLASTIC BAG CAME IN HANDY. 
    
    ANYHOW, JUST TO BE STUBBORN, IF THE MODEL WAS SCALED UP TO SAY 60-
    70 INCH WING ,WITH FOUR CHANNELS, WOULD IT BE WORTH THE EFFORT OR
    IS THIS STYLE OF PLANE JUST TOO HAIRY TO CONTROL ? I WONDER BECAUSE
    I FAIL TO FIND ANY, OTHER THAN THIS GUILLOWS KIT, IN HOBBY SHOPS OR
    MAGAZINES.
    
                       THANKS AGAIN
    
                                    MR.
                                       BILL       OH   NO
                                                          O   
                                                            O
                                                              O
                           
1228.5That's a BIG LadySOLKIM::BOBABob Aldea @PCOFri Jul 13 1990 09:463
>>> ...AND A GENTLE LADY WITH A 9 FOOT WING AND ELECTRIC POWER. 
    
    Was that a typo, or have you stretched it a little?
1228.6MUCH BETTER IN LARGER SIZES.....UPWARD::CASEYATHE DESERT RAT (I-RC-AV8) 551-5572Fri Jul 13 1990 11:5628
    RE: .-1,
    
    As in the example I gave of the various sized P-47s, yes, the Stuka
    becomes a more viable project the larger it gets.  It remains, however,
    a bit treacherous in ground handling owing to the stiff, narrow landing
    gear and still demands that you avoid low, slow, nose-high attitudes (just
    as the real one did).
    
    To my knowledge, there are no kits for Stukas in any reasonable size
    but Bob Holman sells plans, canopy, etc. for one of ~65" span for
    .60-to-.90 power.  Bob Francis of northern Callifornia flies a quite
    large Stuka (I'm guessing ~85" span) and does a very nice job with it.
    Billy Hemple of Tucson flew an enormous Ju-87 at the last Top Gun...it
    spanned (I think) 118" and was equipped with an onboard electric siren
    which was switched on in the dive bombing run to simulate the air
    driven sirens the Stuka was equipped with for psychological effect.
    
    I should mention that both of these gentlemen are very experienced
    pilots and the Stuka's landing gear still trips them up on occasion. 
    The big ugly bird from Junkers is not for the inexperienced or the
    faint of heart...do yer' homework and get plenty of experience before
    attempting it.
						 __
				|      |        / |\	   	       
      	         \|/		|______|__(o/--/  | \	   	       
      | |        00	       <|  ~~~  ____ 04 ---- | --------------------
    |_|_|        (O>o		|\)____/___|\_____|_/	   Adios amigos, Al
      |     \__(O_\_	        |	  |___/	 o	   (The Desert Rat)
1228.7YES ITS A BIG LADY.POLAR::WHITTALLMon Jul 16 1990 11:335
    WELL IF YOU WANT TO BE PICKY IT IS 9 FEET 2 INCHES-JUST A LITTLE
    STRETCH. ORIGINALLY I FOUND THE ELECTRIC A BIT MUCH FOR THE WING 
    SO I GOT SILLY ONE NIGHT AND MADE THE BIG FELLA USING THE ORIGINAL
    BLUE PRINT AS A GUIDE. IT WORKED OUT GREAT AS LONG AS THERE IS NO 
    WIND.
1228.8SUCCESSPOLAR::WHITTALLTue Jul 30 1991 01:3616
    The stuka finally flew. With a few modifications from previously
    mentioned suggestions.
    1. sheet the whole thing with 1/64 balsa except top wing surface
       I used monicoat.
    
    2. add airlerons (real trick with one micro servo)
    
    3. add two inches to the wingspan at the tips forming a poly dihedral
      for added stability.
    
    4. powered by a os 10
    
    hand launched flew great, fast and friendly. landed terrible-tripped
    on the landing gear.
    The only problem now is what to do about landing.
    any suggestions ?