by davidchoate » Tue Jul 08, 2014 11:27 pm
I'm currently building a plane from plans. It's a good Trainer,and easy build. I spent $14 for the plan, and maybe $20 on materials (not including electrics). But I have alot of servos and stuff. Just need a motor, and a Rx. I have 2 Rx spektrum, and I use them in different planes because they are expensive. I'm glad David Lewis is talking about this stuff because he is very knowledgable on how these things fly, and how to change the aerodynamic settings for RC, or FF. Do you have any formal training David?, or just learned from doing, and reading?. I recently discovered a magazine called Micro Rc World, and signed up for a free issue. At first I would gut a Champ after using it to practice, and transfer the parts to a similar size Guillows, but a Champ weighs 38g's with batt. I cant even get my rubber powered that light. I digress, but bet a Champ would do damn good on rubber powered flight. I have one perfect except the Rx burnt out,and they dont sell just the Rx anymore, you have to buy the whole fuselage with electronics for $50.00/ I think a Chomp without the transmitter is the same price. But anyway I'm gonna say i'm done with the brick boards til theyre more reliable. and brushed motors are not good.Cheap,but no guts. I put one (a 370 ) in My 404 Zero just cause I needed the weight up front. Mounted the servos,and batt all forward, And still just balanced. Dont have the guts to maiden her yet. I'm worried the Elevator is a bit small.Oh, and I found out about Hinge tape recently. Awesome for micros,and Firelands Corp? Ares makes a nice little brushless for their Taylorcraft 130. The plane comes as a trainer, but has capability in the Rx/servo brick to add aelerons, and a ESC. My next attempt at a convert of micro size will be usisg that setup. Spektrum does make receivers that accept the 3g micro servos without need of adapters, but they are expensive. I'm just glad someone posted on conversions,and i'm glad to see that Guillows all but gives you how to do it on the newer plans. Like the Beaver & Edge with larger control surfaces etc. For flying. I use solid balsa now for tail surfaces that warp. Like they do on the 400 series plans. I'm learning, and thanks Dave and Bill for sharing your knowledge.