The flying monkeys got me...

Helis, Fixed Wing, RC Sailing

AMA 957918

Pirate Kid Skeleton by RadDezigns.

Sunday, August 30, 2020

Brain said "ABORT!", thumbs said, "WE GOT THIS!"

And that folks, is why we should not fly with our thumbs, but rather with our brains. This happened a couple of days ago, and I didn't want to revisit it...

Big 18x10 prop on an 26cc, its got some kinda torque roll. She had a bit of torque roll with the 17x8 I had on her, so no surprise this would be worse. Started the take off roll and she needed left rudder, then a little left aileron, then she needed more, than started to fly and rolled left, backed off power, Brain said, "ABORT!", but the Thumbs said, "WE GOT THIS! POWER!", she lifted more and rolled more, off the runway at 1 foot AGL and her right wing struck the high weeds, she tumbled in on to her nose.  I was stunned and mad at myself! So pissed I forgot to take a photo of the crime scene, so the first pic is after pulling her out of the weeds and setting her on the runway.



The wings are okay, but the fuse where the lower wings attached has been twisted out and broken up.



Both front wing cabanes are yanked out, an both sets are twisted. The energy went there instead of into the wing. The rest of the fuse is fine. The damage is limited to the lower wing-fuse. But its pretty bad at first glance.





This is the part that worries me. The damage is bad on the starboard side, the balsa sheet is torn up to the switch. This is shaped. My skill set doesn't go there...



Port side not so bad.




I pulled the wing tube parts out of the wreckage, which is scary, so I haven't  examined the insi



But before that fun, I plugged in a battery on the Cornell, and the reciever flashed, and would not come on again. Then I realized the battery lead had parted, and that was the end of that. Stiff as a rod where the heat and solder had soaked into the wire, I guess.  Snapped like a twig. 



Had to pull the ESC harness, only to realize I had the wrong sex EC5 connector installed, pictured here. I had to cut those and put the correct one on. Done. Its always something. I think I was still mad about the Waco. 

Wasn't at the field for more than 45 min... Still haven't looked at the Waco, worried I have done small but complex damage. No doubt I will have to pull all the electronics and tail servos to get to the broken bits, and that curved balsa section is going to provide me with an opportunity to learn a skill I would rathe not have to learn.

Damn thumbs...

Tuesday, August 25, 2020

My Workshop 8/25/2020

 





Waco Adjustments

 Last flights with the Phoenix Waco RCGF-USA 26cc, I noticed the need for a LOT of right up aileron to correct a left roll.  Back in the workshop it was apparent that the left wing, which is the one I remove for transport, had a small neg deflection in the leading edge of the upper wing. I corrected this with a shim and a re-drill of the alignment peg hole inboard and installed a small shim on the outboard side. This gave her a good incidence which I think will alleviate the problem. We'll see next time I take her out.




Outboard shim.



Inboard peg hole adjustment.



I had taken off the 17x8 APC prop to clean and paint it, and since I had an 18x10 and the RCGF-USA 26cc engine is rated for it, I threw it on. It looks amazing. Its much beefier than the APC. I think with the reduced throttle curve at the low end, this will be sweet, and she will try to rip the wings off at WOT.  I had planned just to repaint the tips of the APC prop, but since I was painting it I decided to paint it silver (allegedly chrome. Is there a real chrome rattle can paint out there?), with white warning tips. Came out pretty nice. 



The paint is "chrome", more of a shinier metallic silver. 



Waco is all set for our next outing!

Soft RCGF (Original) Threads...

One of the few problems with the original version RCGF 10cc engine is the soft threading of the spark plug site at the top of the cylinder  (this engine is now "obsolete", and this is not a problem with RCGF-USA 10cc Stinger engines).  As of today I have stripped 3 of these in 9 years. Today was removing a spark plug wire from one of the oldest engines I have, probably 9 yrs old now, and the whole sparky came out still attached to the ignition plug adapter, stripped clean from the cylinder! 


All excited, the replacement muffler arrived from Joe Nelson at RCGF-USA! 



A little JB Weld gasketing and done!



Engine looks good, finished trim of the cowl for a nice fit (not shown).




All ready for testing. I noticed some fraying of the shrink wrap around the plug adapter so turned her over and pulled the plug. Resisted a bit then came out. ALL of it, sparky and all!



Clean stripped the cylinder head spark plug opening! The past two times I did this I "over tightened" the plug, so I've learned to have a soft touch.



Tried to re--tap it...



But there just wasn't enough left...



Just a peak at the inside holding the plug in, for giggles. I had wiped some of the carbon build up out, will give it a nice clean with some steel wool. I need a fix, surely this might happen again with the old cylinder heads.


So, instead of buying another cylinder head for $56, I decided to try this nifty adapter thingy! This is a 10mm-to-1/4 32 spark plug adapter from CH Ignitions, made of steel. I found myself thinking once again if anyone had a fix for this sort of thing. Surely this is not a unique problem. I hadn't searched for the right thing in the past, but today wondered if there was an adapter, and voila! So that's on its way, through eBay. Challenges remain: I have a 1.5 and a 1.75 modulus 10mm tap, not sure which this is, but have an inquiry in. Now this is really designed for a 10mm opening to allow a smaller spark, like down from a CM6 to a 1/4-32, not so much a retapped hole, so we'll see.

I will be pulling this motor and setting it aside. Joe has sent me a replacement engine for the Stik's RCGF 10cc, also about 9 years old. I did a number on it and he called it "kaput". Once that's in we can get this engine tested and get her up in the air! Hopefully that will be here in the next few days!

Monday, August 24, 2020

The Perfect Swing!

Much like yesterday I got chased off Mt Hudson by a storm, but I was ready for this one and boogied out just before the fireworks began. Up to then it was a sunny beautiful day! I loved every minute of it, and the flights were like that day of perfect golf swings that make you stay in the hobby just when you were starting to doubt, reminding you that you can do this and are pretty good at it.



I wrote about the storm yesterday, but I didn't share the excitement of flying the Eflite Cub 450 ARF yesterday. They don't even list it as an archive in Eflite anymore, but it is memorialized on Horizon's Facebook Page. My old friend, back from the days when Eflite made real planes and not just foamies. Don't get me started on discontinuing the Ultimate only to bring it back as a foamie abomination... This one is a sweet flier, simple, to the point, always a pleasure. A 450 motor powered by a 3S 2200 mAh LiPo, old school AR6200 without a satellite. Flew 3 packs before the deluge drove me out.





Today was like yesterday as I mentioned, starting out sunny and warm, no winds to speak of. But I could see thunderheads brewing to the west from whence they come, so I was watchful and aware my time may be limited. Weather radar suggested it would skirt by along the southwest, but I was wary. This is at the gate to SNHRCC, the very steep road to the top.



Ah, the Eflite Cornell, another plane they abandoned. It was discontinued back in 2011, but I got this one from somewhere, back in 2015, my third one. This is one helluva sweet flier! Conditions were perfect for her. Its one of those planes I will always have a version of, if not this one, another make, another size. It takes me back to the Cox 0.049 U-Control version back in the 70's. This one can also be set up as U-Control. She didn't need her Orange Stabilization system, but it sweetened the deal. Flew 4 packs on her, about 20 minutes or so, simply enjoyable flight. Her landing gear are tough and she handled the grass well. Such a pleasurable scale flier. The leggings I put on her are pretty sweet too. She has a new AR 620 onboard and also flies 3S 2200 mAh.



FINALLY, the RCGF-USA 26cc equipped Phoenix Waco. I set her up a week or two ago for the season and just haven't been able to get her airtime. Today was the day, the perfect conditions so helpful, though a breeze was evolving from the approaching storm to the west. She starts with one throw of the prop and hums merrily along. Its a lot of engine for this aircraft, designed as a 15cc aircraft. She has an old school AR6200 with a satellite onboard with a satellite, and the Hobby Eagle A3-L V2 stabilization system she really doesn't need. She is an amazing flier and just a pleasure. Stable, can fly slow on approach with no bad habits. She doesn't like having the stabilization ON at takeoff. Made several adjustments, including dropping the gain down to about 35-45% on the A3-L. Curiously today she required a lot of right roll subtrim. Maybe the wing took a tweak? I will be checking the incidence on the wings and see if there is something I can adapt. Its not a problem, just not pure. This is one BIG plane. I don't recall if she had a muffler on the exhaust tip, but I will be looking into it. Flew her for about 30 min total, several landings, in between adjustments.





Once again, the dulcet tone of the RCGF-USA 26cc!
 


This is what happens when you are not paying attention next to a freshly landed 26 cc engine cylinder, a nice partial thickness burn on the inside of your right distal forearm. Ow.



And then the clouds came. I watched this build, this is from the lower gate at the dump, about 1/4 mile from the field. Just after taking this pic the lightning started. Left just in time!
 

Sunday, August 23, 2020

Thunderstorm on Mt Hudson August 23, 2020

It started out as a beautiful day, no winds but for some brisk occasional gusts. These became more frequent, but the skies were scantily clouded. An hour later that changed rapidly. The storm came from the west, and you could see the first thunderhead forming right overhead. It got dark, then a light rain. I closed up my car, but thought that I could still fly, but by the time I got back to the electric side of our field (the west) I could hear the rain hitting the trees on the west side of the runway and called out to the boys, "HERE IT COMES!". I though maybe just some rain. It rapidly became a storm with wind, hail, thunder and dense hard rain. Being on the downhill side I was soon ankle deep in runoff. A gust shot across the field to the shelter I was under and twisted the Cubby in my hand, cracking the horizontal stabilizer, easily fixed when I got home. Wx radar indicated this wasn't going away for a few hours, so I left, telling the boys what the radar indicated. Slow moving storm. When I left it was still pouring, and at the outer gate to the dump the rain water was over my ankles not 20 min after it started. As I filmed this I was so hoping it wasn't going to turn into a news video of how a bunch of guys got hit by lightning in Hudson!


Saturday, August 22, 2020

All set to fly tomorrow!

 


The reciever/ignition pack is charged in the Waco! 



Pulled my old friend off the wall, the Eflite Cubby, from the day when Eflite built quality balsa ARF instead of foamies... with her AR6100 (I think... its an older Spektrim 6 channel in a hard case). 



Several packs charged for the Cubby!



Last, but certainly not least, one of my Siberian cats, Zaphod, 
is all charged and ready to go!