Thursday, May 26, 2011
Forsberg Field Dedication - North Mankato MN
On May 21st the City of North Mankato and the North Mankato Quiet Flyers held a dedication ceremony for the newly constructed Forsberg Field city park. This is a RC flying park for use by the public with electric powered RC aircraft.
Back in early 2010 the club was flying off of the local middle school soccer fields. However whenever they were in use by the soccer clubs, football teams, marching band or other groups the RC flyers would wait till the fields were clear to fly. One day a soccer coach stopped to talk to a couple members about flying and how the fields are often busy. They met again and did some flying together. Well this coach got the club in touch with the city administrator and talks about a place for the RC flyers to fly without disruption ensued. A year later the park has been setup in an industrial area where the planes have room to fly without obstruction and without bothering any neighbors. There is a 120 x 70 foot paved runway area with grass overruns on all sides.
The dedication ceremony went well even with some rain early on. The club put on a display of various aircraft including trainers, jets, warbirds, gliders, helicopters and more. Many people enquired about learning to fly and the instructors were busy handing out information and setting up contacts.
This is a great partnership with the city and a bunch of local RC flyers to help grow the hobby and introduce more people to aviation and the RC hobby.
Thursday, May 19, 2011
GWS FW-190 Maiden
A few years ago I picked up a GWS FW-190 kit when they first came out. The FW-190 is one of my favorite planes and I had to have it. I could not leave it stock and just have fun. I had to modify it. I went about adding mechanical retracts, split flaps, filled and glassed the airframe, changed the cowl to be closer to scale and added some detail to the cockpit. Well time got away from me and I jumped on and off the project over the past few years. I finally decided I had been putting it off long enough and sat down to finish it. It came in at a portly 37 ounces and was on the edge of being tail heavy.
My friend Mike and I decided we were going to go maiden a couple planes and set aside an afternoon that looked like it would be decent. We loaded everything up and headed to the field. We figured that we'd get things setup and charge a few packs and mid evening the wind would calm down to a calm 5mph. Well it did calm down but not much. It was still close to 10mph but it was down the runway. The sun was setting and I was not going home to wait longer. So I let her roll down the runway and off she went. It flew well but needed some aileron trim. I did a number of circuits, tested the roll rate and then started getting ready to see how she would land. I tested the flaps and they were very effective but made the plane balloon quite a bit. I had dialed in some elevator with the flaps but not enough. I dropped the gear and started in a landing pattern. It started to settle in nice but around 5-7 feet from the ground it would get very pitch sensitive. I made about 10 passes working in the flaps and some down trim. Each time it would get close but either start to stall early or ballon on me. I finally got the timing down and got her on the ground with no damage.
I'm going to re-check the CG as I feel it is still a little tail heavy. I'll give her another go on a calmer day and see how the landings go. But I was happy with how it went even with the crazy landing attempts.
My friend Mike and I decided we were going to go maiden a couple planes and set aside an afternoon that looked like it would be decent. We loaded everything up and headed to the field. We figured that we'd get things setup and charge a few packs and mid evening the wind would calm down to a calm 5mph. Well it did calm down but not much. It was still close to 10mph but it was down the runway. The sun was setting and I was not going home to wait longer. So I let her roll down the runway and off she went. It flew well but needed some aileron trim. I did a number of circuits, tested the roll rate and then started getting ready to see how she would land. I tested the flaps and they were very effective but made the plane balloon quite a bit. I had dialed in some elevator with the flaps but not enough. I dropped the gear and started in a landing pattern. It started to settle in nice but around 5-7 feet from the ground it would get very pitch sensitive. I made about 10 passes working in the flaps and some down trim. Each time it would get close but either start to stall early or ballon on me. I finally got the timing down and got her on the ground with no damage.
I'm going to re-check the CG as I feel it is still a little tail heavy. I'll give her another go on a calmer day and see how the landings go. But I was happy with how it went even with the crazy landing attempts.
Tuesday, May 17, 2011
My first try at Discus Launch Gliders
So I can across a deal posted by a friend on RCgroups. A few of us had been looking at a new inexpensive DLG (Discus Launched Glider) and one of the distributors ran a 50% off sale around Easter. So a few of us jumped on the deal and waited. The planes started arriving and we debated the gear we'd put in them. I finally pt mine together last night. The build was quite simple for anyone that has put a few airplanes together. However there were no instructions included and what I gleamed from the web helped but there were still gaps in the instructions that left me to think it out. Well it didn't take too long as I was able to finish it in an evening with multiple interruptions.
This morning I took it out to a soccer field before work and gave it a few tosses. It was fairly tame and once I got the launch method down it was not too bad. I was able to keep it in the air for about 30 seconds at most but it was a cool morning with no wind so lift was not to be found.
I'll give it some more flights and report back on my thoughts about this entry level DLG.
This morning I took it out to a soccer field before work and gave it a few tosses. It was fairly tame and once I got the launch method down it was not too bad. I was able to keep it in the air for about 30 seconds at most but it was a cool morning with no wind so lift was not to be found.
I'll give it some more flights and report back on my thoughts about this entry level DLG.
Here is the video of my flights:
Futaba Releases a new radio with all the bells and whistles.... even a camera!
Futaba announced the release of a new 18 channel radio today. It's a first of it's kind with 18 true channels and a new version of the FASST 2.4 technology called FASSTest. It also features an SD slot for system updates, model memory and more.
Check it out online at: http://www.futaba-rc.com/systems/18mz.html
WATTS OVER OWATONNA 2011
The dates have been set for the WATTS over Owatonna fly in so mark your calendars for a great weekend of anything and everything related to electric RC aviation. The Southern Minnesota Model Aircraft Club welcomes you to our field for this great event!
The event officially starts on friday and goes all weekend. There will be a pilots raffle from the many generous donations from all our sponsors. Saturday evening will feature a BBQ dinner with all you can eat potatoes and sweet corn followed by night flying and a bon fire. Come camp out with us and enjoy the entire weekend.
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