The flying monkeys got me...

Helis, Fixed Wing, RC Sailing

AMA 957918

Pirate Kid Skeleton by RadDezigns.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

BlitzRCWorks MX2 Unboxed

My BlitzRCWorks MX2 arrived yesterday and I unboxed it with much excitement. But I was surprised at some of the poor quality of the design decals, which were awkwardly applied in some places, designed poorly in others, and done nicely in others. Its a ginormous foamie, and it does look very nice! Got it on sale for $150 (regularly $350 they told me) from bananahobby.com. This was my first purchase from them.



The box (added this pic 4.22.11 on its way to recycle).



One wheel pant wasn't glued, the other had a lot of glue spillover (the white dots).



You can see the line where the plastic cowl joins the fuselage. Just with handling this chipped and flaked along the lines. You can see a large folded crease near the front, the black line. These were present on both sides.



The other side. You can see a wavy wrinkle across the front of the cowl too. I wanted to inspect the ESC and the motor, but I could not get the cowl to come off. I feared breaking it if I persisted, and the already chipping decal was coming apart. When something goes wrong it will need to come off... not sure how that is going to go.



My kit was an ARF. They made  my order by taking an RTF kit and pulling the receiver and the transmitter. I know this because the box says RTF and I bought it ARF. In repacking they chipped 2mm off the faux exhaust pipe.



Apparently a simple cross over of flaps was the choice solution for the decals across the top of the fuse at the vertical stabilizer.



It is clear the decals were designed to cross the hinge lines, but weren't always cleanly cut.



The tops of the wings looked awesome. The undersides saw the across-the-hinge-decal problem in several spots.



Micro pictures made up the otherwise generally complete instruction manual. They managed to get it all on one page, but I couldn't make out any details.



The canopy covers the electronics and battery bay.

Next up, the build!

Sunday, April 10, 2011

Another pretty darn good flying day!

Today was meeting day at MCRCC. It was windy, so I didn't head out to the field until around noon. I didn't get to fly my Cubby or my Alpha, but I did get to corkscrew my EXI 450 into the ground.



I had set her up with the new miniMEMS gyro and converted her to a tail boom servo. The latter because the original fuselage servo tray cracked off. The EXI require complete removal of the tail box from the rear of the fuselage to put the tail boom servo brackets on. A lot of work but easy enough. The gyro seemed to be set up fine, but I made a mistake I made once before... I lifted off the first time and the heli turned slowly.  I set it back down. I made the mistake of thinking it was that the gyro was reversed. I reversed the gyro, strike one. I then noticed that the blue light did not illuminate on the gyro after having reversed it. I figured it needed to be rebound, mistake number two.  Rebinding it did not solve the problem, but I decided to fly it anyway, strike three. It lifted off and twisted high and violently corkscrewed into the ground. Over in 2 seconds.

On inital inspection the tally is: broken main blade, bent flybar (almost certainly bent main rotor shaft and feathering shaft comes with that), two stripped metal gear servos, bent tail tube, bent tail rotor shaft, broken tail blade, sheared off tail guard. I have the parts, but its a good week's worth of work.


Jerry and Bob setting up one of the MCRCC trainers for me.
Jerry was presented with the first AMA District ACE award for  excellence in contributions to our hobby today! Congratulations, Jerry! As one of your students, I am thrilled for your recognition by the AMA!

But here's the part that made it all better! It was too windy for my planes, so Jerry offered to buddy box me on one of the club's 40 class nitro trainers. We did three hops, and it went pretty well!  But the winds wreaked havoc and on the third landing attempt of our final hop a wind shear dropped it in the last tree at the approach end of the runway. It came to rest on the ground completely unharmed.

I continue to be really glad and excited to have joined this flying club! I enjoy the people and the flying field more than I imagined I would.

Saturday, April 9, 2011

I Can Fly! A totally awesome day!

This morning I took the rebuilt Cubby and my ERazor 450 out to the church field. I came with both a confidence I can fly and a strong motivation to just get on with it. I was a little worried about how the Cubby would fly, being a bit bent, but it flew great. Made me a little nervous at first that it wasn't responding well to the inputs, but I think I was under controlling a little bit when I felt that was happening. I really enjoyed flying today, and I brought back both aircraft relatively intact! I did run into another Ent, but this time it was my fault as I lost sight of the fact it was closer than it appeared.

The importance of these videos is not in my skill or the videography, neither of which are very good, but in that I managed to do it at all! (I wasn't able to adjust the contrast, so things are a bit washed out).



Flying awesome, until I run into an Ent...but we escape this time!



While waiting for the Cubby repairs to dry I took the ERazor 450 up.



Finally a good takeoff, flight and fair landing!

An incredible, awesomely rewarding day!

Wednesday, April 6, 2011

Acute Power Loss

The video tells the story. Still not quite sure what happened... Out of frame a bit as I was using the keychain hatcam.


Cubby Rebuilt

You can read the story of loss and recovery of the Cubby here, but here's the rest of the story!


The wing took major damage. The huge chunk bashed in on the right leading edge I filled with piece of carved closed cell foam which I glued into place, covered with package tape, and then Ultracoted to cover and strengthen.



The wing was almost divided in half. I put a 6.5 in length of 1/4 inch dowel in the middle as a spar, then glued the halves together, and held them tight with package tape. I then Ultracoted the area for more strength and to improve the look.



The underside with the package tape.



Tried to save the battery. One cell was discharged to around 2V, the other 2 were below 2. I recovered 2 of the cells, but the third one would not take a charge, so I had to recycle the battery. I used my Skycharger out on the deck with the battery in a flowerpot in case it caught fire. Never seen a LiPo fire? Google it... quite impressive. 



And here's what she looked like in the driveway this afternoon! Took her to MCRCC Field, but it was too windy to fly... Maybe Friday!



The red stuff is th Ultracote plastic. Its the covering used when building or repairing balsa/plywood planes, goes nicely on foamies too.


Cubby back on the wall!

Sunday, April 3, 2011

Recovered the Cubby!

My friend Patrick Rochon and I gathered up his 40 ft ladder and headed out to rescue the Cubby from the Ent that had gathered her up.(Here's the story on how I lost her.)


We threw the 40ft ladder in the back of Patrick's Pick-em' up truck. This being Mississippi I required neither a seatbelt, nor a helmet, but I failed to have drunk the requisite 6-pack of Bud Light prior to this adventure.
My reflection as I sat in back serving as ballast for the unmarked ladder. 
At least I had my Boston FD Ladder 15 T-shirt on!



Patrick holding the carcass. We tried shaking the tree, but were unable to accomplish much. He brought up just getting a chain saw, but I reminded him that this being Mississippi and the tree being a Magnolia, someone would be going to jail... We trundled in the ladder through the thorny brush, and I climbed up 20ft with his manliness holding the ladder in the soft ground against a wavering tree. I used a 25ft pool brush, but still couldn't reach it from 20 ft up. The tree thinned out too much to extend the ladder, so I just started shaking the tree from 20ft up and found I had pretty good purchase from up there. I had that tree moving about 2-3 ft, and the ladder sliding all around. I was determined to get that plane out of that tree! About this time I started thinking I should have had that 6-pack, because it would be hard to explain why I fell 20 ft into the woods to rescue what some would consider a toy, and beer explains a lot of things... I managed to free the plane and it fell another 10 feet where I was able to poke it with the extended brush, eventually coaxing it out of the Magnolia. This must happen a lot in this trailer park, as no one so much as looked out a window at two strangers backing into a vacant trailer pad and climbing through the woods with a ladder...

But we succeeded! She is badly damaged, but she is no longer alone in a tree... Just in time as tomorrow will be storming!



Started on that 6-pack... Broken wing, missing right wheel and wing struts. I have replacements!



All the electronics look good.



The gyro... I don't think it was the gyro that caused the problem. I think the receiver went rogue and the gyro kept the wings level right up into the trees. But I am taking it out anyway...



Curiously, the prop-saver with two O-rings kept the prop smack dab in the middle of the motor.

So, this week I will be refurbishing my Cubby. I have already ordered a new one, so I will have two. This one will be my banger, and I am glad to have her. It reduces the fear of wrecking a "nice" plane. I know she can take a beating and keep on going! I will buttress up the wing and fix that leading edge, and be up again by the end of the week!

Special thanks to Patrick for helping me out!

Saturday, April 2, 2011

Pine Belt RC Association Fly-In 2011

I decided to head up to the PRBCA Fly-In up near Purvis off Purvis Oloh Road. This place was truly out in the boonies. I didn't fly, but enjoyed watching some really cool aircraft and some very talented pilots. Remember you can click on the pics to enlarge them!


View down the pit alley at PRBCA field.



An actual turbine powered jet. Way cool... very cool sound, smell (just like Jet-A) and this baby hustled.



The ubiquitous Cubby's.



Foamie warplanes.



Greg Whittier's (Brookhaven RC Club) ginormous scratch built PC-6 Pilatus Porter.



A Katana. Beautiful plane, skilled driver (they guy in blue).



Everyone loves a Stearman!



Greg Whittier (flying a Telemaster rigged as a jump plane) with Frank Moak, pilot of the Skydiver slung underneath the Telemaster, the coolest RC gadget I have ever seen! They are from the Brookhaven RC Club.



The Telemaster with the Skydiver underneath on takeoff.



Skydiver after the free-fall with open chute. Once the Telemaster got to altitude a flick of the switch released him from the a/c and he free falls until Frank releases the chute.



His arms move, controlling the chute! This dude is totally scale! You can see the drag chute on top. A guy in Belgium makes the parachutes. This is a fully controlled parachute. Frank can land him with amazing precision. You can see him here about to make a right turn; see how his right arm has dropped and the chute is folding the right leading edge. His arms drop and he flares the chute just before a soft touchdown. You darn near expect him to run out the landing and gather up his own chute!



Frank Moak with his Skydiver. Frank builds these from scratch. Greg and he developed this unique flight system.  I hope they will come out to our Fly-in!



Close up of the Skydiver. Frank had 3 of these and it took him a couple of minutes to fold the chute and pack it properly in the very real pack. Like the model aircraft, this model Skydiver is a precise copy of the real thing in miniature.



Some very large planes flying 3D, here in a hover. Goes to show even plankers want to fly helis!




For scale, these planes are the same size as the one below.







The MCRCC contingent. Paul Verger's Extra 300.



Paul getting his Extra 300 ready to start. Unfortunately an electrical problem grounded him. I was looking forward to watching him fly; he has competed in Pattern and aerobatics and I imagine it would have been something else to see him fly! 

It was a long drive up, a couple of hours. I paid my flying fee, but opted not to fly as I would have wanted a buddy box with an instructor and this wasn't really the place to do that. Had a nice lunch, won a kids sized T-shirt and a bunch of free Buffalo Wild Wings! Jerry Gollott won a RTF Micro flyer. No helis flying though, not by design. Someone had the new Quadcopter there. Tomorrow I am heading out to MCRCC and will spend as much time flying as I possibly can! I enjoyed meeting all the MCRCC guys and sitting with them. A good bunch of people who clearly love the hobby!