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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 |
1519.0. "European Chronicles #1 - IN RCSD May issue" by COWBOY::DUFRESNE () Tue May 04 1993 08:47
Gang:
This the first in a series of articles due to start with this month's
issue of RCSD.
Comments welcome!!
MD
------------------------------------------------------------------------
European Chronicles
by
Marc Dufresne Copyright 1993
Domaine de Belle Croix
17, rue Albert Camus
77330 OZOIR-La-Ferriere, FRANCE
Tel/FAX: +33 1.64.40.12.24
TITLE: No, No... East, man, Go EAST!!
Europe, 1992, The Single Act, Maastricht, German re-unification, The
opening of Eastern Block...
These items filled our lives over that past 2 years, standing on
their head a lot of things we took for granted. So, when I was
offered an opportunity to leave the US and work in Europe, I
jumped at it, fullfiling a long held dream. Location: Paris,
France. The arm twisting lasted about 2 seconds.
When I called up RCSD to have them change my address, Judy asked me
if I would like to write about what I encountered in Europe (The
planes, the equipement, the contests, the way people take to the
hobby). "Anything that I felt would be of interest to RCSD
readers", she said.
I'm just one of many: Loves to build. Loves to fly. Build'em,
fly'em, break'em, fix'em and fly'em again: that's my usual style.
Mostly fly for fun. Go to a contest every so often. Latch up with
some friends. Usually end up at the bottom of the roster. Maybe
break or loose a plane in the process.
So I hope to report on what I see, as a ordinary modeller,
discovering a completely new environment. Comments, ideas on
possible topics will be welcome.
The expectation is that I will be here indefinetely. I've had to
think hard about what to bring and what to part with. Homegoods are
relatively simple. All the electrical stuff gets sold/given away: It
won't work here. Furniture can come, if its worth it or fits: Houses
here are smaller. When it came to gliders and associated gear, this
was confusing, somewhat.
I knew, from scattered readings that frequencies were incompatible.
And that for gliders, the Europeans seem to favour the big stuff
(3-4 metres). I got in touch with the French Aeromedeling
Association (FFAM). The they told that as far as frequencies were
concerned, France has two sets; 41 MHz and 72 MHz.
72??? Could it be that...Naah... no such luck. The frequency
increment in France is on even number (72.000, 72.020,...) while
the US one is on odd numbers (72.010, ...). OK - so change the
crystals, you say. I'd seen some discussion on this on my company's RC
Electronic Bulletin Board (BBS) and I got the sense this was really
a pain. And since my gear was not all that great, I said "Hey -
When in Rome... Lets get some of this European stuff!"
So I pack the airframes (An ANTHEM, a PULSAR and an ORCA), spare
parts, hand tools, books, the kitchen, CD's, clothes, some
furniture and give the rest away. Well, not all of it: I sold the
car.
Paris: 11M people packed in a circle 50Km in radius. Freeways
everywhere. Congested freeways. Mass transit is extremely well
developed. Paris underground is like swiss cheese what with the
metro, the urban rail system and 5 major intercity train stations
packed with 300Kph TGV bullet trains. Wonderful food. The arts.
This place I'm going to like!
Anyway, spent a week looking for a place to live. Found it in a
quaint, typical looking (to a North American) town on the outer
eastern periphery. Major feature: A garage, that I can turn into
a workshop.
Impressions so far: Its impossible to get lost in this country.
There are signs everywhere to tell you where you are and where to
go. There are city plans posted on billboards at major
crossroads. Forget about the North American cardinal road signage
system (North-South, East-West). You are told about what is the
next town(s) up the road. YOU are expected to know that said town
is in the direction you want to go. A map is a definite asset to
get started. After that, put the map away and follow the signs.
Works everytime.
The road system is excellent condition and people drive fast
(130Kph is not uncommon). I've been passed by VW Rabbits doing
150. The BMWs and Mercedes come at you from the rear at 180/200
Kph with headlights blazing: You bear right and hold on tight for
the shock wave. Motorcyclists abound, always go faster than you
and will pass on either side. Their life expectancy, I've been
told, is low. Gas cost $5 a gallon.
In the same vein: everything is more expensive, thanks in part to
a VAT at 19% on everything. But the quality is also higher. With
that quality comes sophistication, either in compactness, features
or simplicity of operation.
Which leads us to my first visit to a hobby shop. Finding one in
my area took some doing. I had to raid the newstand twice for
airplane model magazines. In France there are three, covering all
topics. One of them list FFAM club activities as a public
service. Also useful to find out about hobby shops, at least those
that advertise. Everything is grouped by area or departement. I
live in the Ile-de-France area (Paris and vincinity). I found this
hobby shop about 35Km northeast from where I live. It was the
closest, short of going into Paris (congested, no place to park
and probably more expensive).
So, in about 45 minutes, taking the tourist road, I end up in this
other quaint typical french town, looking for a hobby shop. Being
Saturday, its congested, and there is no place to park. So much
for that idea. Finally, I park french style (ie dump the car
wherever you can, except where there are yellow lines. Park there
and you get a (expensive) ticket), squeezing the car between two
trees, on the sidewalk, on the church plaza in the middle of
town. Now walk to find the store. Its a hole in the wall, run by a
guy that knows everything and has at least one of everything,
...if you are into power.
Gliders, I asked. "Not around here. Most activity is either South or
North of Paris" comes the reply. Odd, since I drove through
beautiful open farmland, seemingly ideal for thermal gliders.
Hummm. Must be missing something.
So, we talk about radio gear instead.
Most the radio gear in France is imported from Germany. Notable
exception is Hitec. I'm looking for the high-end stuff, so we talk
about the German stuff. There are four suppliers, most of which
partner with a japanese source. You have Graupner/JR,
Robbe/FUTABA, Multiplex and SIMPROP/Sanwa. So you have two
offerings: The standard box as we know it in the US with all
options integrated or the European tray, very extensible and
extremely flexible with its software package. To put it an other
way: with the box, what you see is what you get. With the tray,
you get to see how much you can get. Generally, the box is
considered "for sportmen's use" while the tray is for the
serious/expert hobbyist.
Keeping with the philosophy of what you see is what you get, the
box is typically sold as a package (Tx, Rx, 4 servos and charger).
The tray, on the other hand is sold "a la carte", usually Tx, Rx,
no servos, maybe a charger and battery pack, but mostly not. No
charger and battery pack you say? Useless you say? Well not quite,
'cause you will be offered a selection of battery packs for either
the Tx OR the Rx, to fit your exact needs. Ditto for the charger.
Also the top of the line model may not have all channels
configured (ie the tray you buy is 9 channel capable but what you
buy may only have 6 channels configured. You buy additional
channels or mixer as you need them).
Where the tray really shines, it's in the programmability. A top of
the line system by MULTIPLEX can store up 99 models. Graupner goes
a different route with specific program modules by type of aircraft
(F3A,B,C,D or E). Each module can store up 30 models.
One other thing, you get complete, detailed technical data about
all the components. This goes for the box as well as the tray.
I've read a couple of magazine reviews. The article comes complete
with "10x8 colour photographs with a paragraph on the back of
each" as the song goes. They will go as far as to open the Tx and
the Rx and analyse the techology inside!
Price? The tray is going to cost you more, about 25-30% more than
the comparable box package.
By now, I've got an armload of catalogs and getting the impression
that modeling here is SERIOUS stuff. Very sophisticated. Very well
thought out. Like everything else I've run into. So we move on to
ergonomics.
I'm an infirm. That is, I'm trained wrong. I fly throttle on the
left (Mode 2) while everyone here flies throttle on the right
(Mode 1). Then there is the business of what you do with the
fingers. With a box, you drive with the thumbs on the sticks and
use the fingers to work the linear slides on the side of the box.
With the tray, you drive with the index (or combination
thumb/index), controling the linear slides (up to four)located
BETWEEN the sticks with thumbs. And not to mention the pushbuttons
ON TOP of the sticks. Now I understand why the neck strap is a
mandatory item here. You can't work the tray otherwise.
The guy on the other side of the counter ends up trying to sell me
a FUTABA PCM 1024, "for compatibility". Me, I'm interested by the
other ones, especially the Graupner MC-20 and the MULTIPLEX 3030.
I leave the store with my pile of litterature, dazed & glazed.
"Now why is the European stuff so sophisticated? Even the Vision
looks cloddy and doesn't cover all the bases." The market demands
it, but why? I guess the next step is to find some local glider
freaks and get educated some more. Looks like I'm also going to
have to re-learn how to fly.
Continued next month.
-END of text-
T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
1519.1 | Loved your chronicle!. | CSTEAM::HENDERSON | Competition is Fun: Dtn 297-6180, MRO4 | Tue May 04 1993 09:38 | 3 |
| Welcome to real RC.
E.
|
1519.2 | More! more! | CHEFS::WARWICKB | Stay young -- keep your wheels in motion | Fri May 07 1993 09:08 | 7 |
| Welcome to Europe!! I have friends living in OZOIR-La-Ferriere - what a
coincidence! In fact they are over here in England at the moment.
I look forward to more of your chronicles.
Brian
|
1519.3 | Are they delayed? | 3D::REITH | Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Fri May 07 1993 09:15 | 4 |
| Just wondering...
I usually get my copy of RCSD by now. Has anyone gotten their copy or am
I the only one left out?
|
1519.4 | No RCSD for me yet | MICROW::PHILLIPS | "DECtp Engineering TAY1-2 DTN 227-4314" | Fri May 07 1993 10:26 | 3 |
| Nope Jimbo, you aren't the only one. I haven't received my issue yet.
-Lamar
|
1519.5 | It's in the mail | COWBOY::DUFRESNE | | Mon May 10 1993 09:09 | 3 |
| I got a FAX from Judy Slates. RCSD went to mail May 6th.
md
|
1519.6 | They survived | 3D::REITH | Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Mon May 10 1993 11:11 | 6 |
| In case anyone else heard the name Wylie Tx (where RCSD is) on CNN this
morning about all the tornadoes, I just talked to Jerry and Judy and
they're fine. The tornado (15 touched down in the area) veered off about
a mile and a half away and hit the town marina pretty hard. Judy was
pleased that people would be concerned and check. I let her know I'd
pass the word around electronically.
|
1519.7 | | 3D::REITH | Jim 3D::Reith MLO1-2/c37 223-2021 | Mon May 10 1993 16:01 | 1 |
| My RCSD arrived in today's mail
|