John Bieran took this great photo of our flying field, Wagner Field, on the top of what I call Mt. Hudson, the closed landfill, in Hudson, New Hampshire. Southern NH RC Club.
The flying monkeys got me...
Helis, Fixed Wing, RC Sailing
AMA 957918
Pirate Kid Skeleton by RadDezigns.
Saturday, April 18, 2020
SNHRCC Wagner Field
John Bieran took this great photo of our flying field, Wagner Field, on the top of what I call Mt. Hudson, the closed landfill, in Hudson, New Hampshire. Southern NH RC Club.
Du Bro RC Products
Du Bro RC makes a wide variety of amazing RC parts and solutions. I asked for stickers with my spinners, and they don't disappoint!
Friday, April 17, 2020
MX-Bach RCGF-USA 35cc is Up for 2020
Brought the MX-Bach down from it's bat perch on the ceiling to inspect and set her up on the Spektrum iX12. This is one of my favorite planes. I really like the larger engines, they seem to run better and tolerate weather and pressure changes better, start 'em and fly 'em! I had the wings on when I set up and programmed her into the radio, but forgot to take a pic.
Well, the clunk has a woodie... I really like the clear tanks.
The Tygon tubing is hard as a rod. I have been replacing these with Viton tubing.
Much better! Viton tubing.
The tank reinstalled. I think you can see it in the video the foaming from engine vibrations. Very little of that passes to the engine. At the bottom of the pic you see a pair of wires running over the side bulkhead. That is the ignition light wire I seem to have passed incorrectly, I cut the wires, passed it under the bulkhead, and used those melting heat-shrink connectors to rewire it as I can't get the plain on the soldering bench. I love those things! Push the wires with a small exposed end, into the tubing, one on each end so they mesh in the middle, use a heat gun to heat shrink and melt the solder. Voila!
The engine in run up. If you listen carefully you will hear the changes from Flight Idle to Approach Idle, and Landing Idle. I do this to prevent the engine from stopping in idle in fight, but slowing the plane down nicely. I hit Approach on final to slow it and as I cross the threshold I move it to Landing Idle, the slowest idle with a pretty reliable RPM. No needle adjustments, just had to find the new throttle end points on the iX12.
Tuesday, April 14, 2020
Great Planes Twin Star, and Sukhoi SU-26 with RCGF 10cc Up
I have been slowly working on getting my aircraft ready for the flying season, and programming them into the iX12 one by one. Taking care of any gripes, inspecting, and tuning things up a bit.
The Twinstar is up and ready to go. Painted the 8x8 prop tips because I could, but I bought a pair of 8 x6x3 blade props and a couple of spinners. The smallest cheap ones I could fine were DuBro 2". The current ones are 1.5", so not much difference. I think they will actually look better being more flush with the cowls.
This is such a sweet plane. A balanced and capable flyer, a delight to fly.
Took the Sukhoi SU-26 with its RCGF 10cc engine out and set it up on the iX12. The engine runs fine, but in setting the end points it wanted some tuning, which got weird. After going back to defaults and working my way up, the needles seem a bit rich turn wise, but are now working great. The engine won't run at the standard 1-1/2 L and 1-3/4 H, and are out about 3-4 turns... but she is giving me 7800 RPM with the 13x8x3 Master Airscrew, idling down without going low and coming back up (ie H too rich), and accelerating without hesitation. She is where she needs to be.
All cleaned up, programmed in, set up the Orange Stabilization, and cleaned up loose cote.
After I was all done I decided to put a DuBro muffler extension on her, hoping to keep oil off the plane, and that it doesn't change the exhaust compression too much.
I need a day off with good weather, too many planes to get up in the air.
Friday, April 10, 2020
PT-19 Cornell Got a New Pair of Pants!
I love the Eflite PT-19 Cornell. The Cox 0.49 control line version depicted here with the Eflite model, was one of my first airplanes as a kid.
Eflite PT-19 Cornell and the Coc 0.49 U-control version.
Here is my current PT-19 Cornell! It's a pretty model, but I find the plain wire landing gear a distraction. I have always wanted to do something about them. The real plane has a wrap around fairing. I decided today would be a good day to make some.
I planned two halve wrapped around the wire gear. I shaped themmsomthat the back was angle slightly.
I sanded them down to make them a bit aerodynamic. I wasn't looking for perfection.
I CA'd them to the wires. I left a little space between the top and the wing to allow for movement of the wire on rolling on grass. Sanded them a bit smoot and filled gaps with CA.
I wrapped them in cote.
Sweet!
Baby got a new pair of pants!
All I need to do now is bind her and program her into the iX12 and she's ready to fly again!
UPDATE: I put a new Spektrum AR620 in, replacing an old AR6100, and bound her to the iX12, programmed her in, set up her Orange Stabilization, and she is ready to go!
Fine tuning done
Stormy winds out there, no fly day, but I did finish tuning the RCGF 26cc. So much easier now that whatever its problem was is solved! Since it's slow, painted the prop tips.
I also checked the EVO 10cc on the Sbach and she runs fine. She has a 13x8x3 blade prop. It performs well but seems a little under powered. I picked up an 11x8x3, and a 12x2 scimitar to see if less props would lead to faster RPMs, more thrust. The 11x8x3 looks really small. I may try them, but think I will stay with the 13x8x3 for now.
Wednesday, April 8, 2020
Well, that took a lot longer than it should...
There's this thing where one thing leads to another. Today was a day where one thing lead to another. It actually started last night, up until 1 am (did not know) working a problem. I barely remember how this evolved.
I finished up the Sbach.
I found this on You Tube, and it showed you can, so I did!
I finished up the Sbach.
Added a x-cross truss to absorb any torsion and fore-aft stress. This hardpoint is going to be the only thing left in a crash.
I have the engine tuned pretty well now, good idle. I am tired of not having the cowl on, and since she is touchy and needs her low needle adjusted frequently, I put a small hole in the cowl to access the low needle without thpaking the cowl off. This is a beautiful plane. I hope she settles down and let's me just fly. Never buying another Evolution Nitro Conversion.
I have mentioned this new tail wheel, but I like it so much I want to mention it again! It was one of the repairs this run.
Next I took on the gravelly RCGF 26cc that had been running fine but over the past 2 weeks has been changing and running horribly sounding. It was time to take the engine apart, to take the carb apart, and clean everything.
In breaking it down I found that the two front cylinder screws were tight, but when I replaced them they were actually stripped on the engine side. These are M4 10mm so I replaced them with 14mm M4s, to see it they would bite deeper down in the screw path, and between that and fresh threads, it worked perfectly; they felt tight going in and snuggled down nicely. While cleaning the carb, cleaning the spark of carbon (it has been running rich), I think the cylinder not being tight may have been an issue. There is some oil around the cylinder-motor box aft joint, so maybe. Either way, I ran it today and it rocks sweet now. I solved the problem, whatever it was.
In an aside, the spark is an M4F. I have no idea what that is, and wonder why it's not a CM6 like the 30cc?
All put back together.
And then this happened. The attachment to the throttle has always been an issue waiting to pop up. It snapped off. I don't like the geometry it gave, and the throttle control horn sweeps up at either end, dipping in the middle. I think it did that so that when closed it avoided the screw inn the base you see on the right. But it created a dynamic that makes the linkage challenging. I wanted to put a ball clevis on it, but they don't go on wires The standard metal ones I have are a bit long, and I have never soldered a rod or wire to a metal clevis. I had no idea if it was possible. Add to that the wire was starting to unravel handling it. It needs the wire as there is as noted so much movement at this end but for some reason really has a lot of movement at the servo. You can see in the photo I figured it out.
I found this on You Tube, and it showed you can, so I did!
So now this end of the engine is fine! I just set the needles to stock and will need to tune them.
The servo end had its problems. The servo arm could be longer. It rotates a lot on both ends. This required me to free up the tube in the anterior wall on the right there, so it can sweep back and forth. I then had problems with the set screw on the control horn not releasing, and had to pull everything, and yank it off. Now I needed another one of those wire linkages for the control horn. I found one that works. I have to use this and I don't have a longer control horn that fits the servo and the control horn linkage. I had to figure this out. In the end it works well. But in rotation at the high throttle end it pulled the servo forward and bent the deck. I had to put a cross piece to strengthen the floor, and in the end was able to set the endpoints to not require so much rotation. I also had to shave the motor mount next to the clevis as the wire aft end of the clevis would catch on it and click over it. Shaving it off with the Dremel solved that. I finally took her outside and ran her up. Tough getting her to start, but she did and runs wonderfully. I was setting the endpoints and tuning the low end for idle, and the battery died. Swapped it out. A few runs later the power switch failed on, the electrical ignition cut out would not stop the ignition, and she wasn't responding to the throttle running WOT! I pulled the battery connection and stopped it. Testing showed the switch failed on. What I don't understand is why the electronic ignition kill didn't work and why she stopped responding to the throttle.
I have a computerized switch I replaced the simple slide switch out. That sunnovabitch didn't want to come out. That took an hour. I created a hard plate of plywood to put the push run-off switch to storage the force of turning it on and off. All fixed. The interesting thing is I was looking for fail-on switch, and they are hard to find, and not cheap. Harder still was finding a magnetic one. I have a couple of these computerized switches on planes and they are great, but bulky and require a firm surface. That took an hour.
During fueling I saw gas spraying out of the unused hole (it has a two pipe system, vent and combo fill-engine line) on the tank stopper... I made a piece of pipe filled with solder and pulled the tank, shoved that in there. Problem solved, but that took an hour.
Finally all done. It was past 7 pm, a little late to be running the engine, so fine tuning the low end will have to wait.
Whew. And to think the wx was so nice I could have been flying. When I have a plane with a problem though, I have to focus on that, so that's what I did, and why last night I suddenly realized how late it was.
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