During the long summer holidays (I knew there was a reason I wanted to work in education!) I spend quite a lot of time away from home in our caravan. So as not to miss too much of the all too short flying season I always take a couple of models with me.
Limited space and the stringent COSHH and Health and Safety rules imposed by Senior Management (the wife!!) means that power models are out, so Slope Soarers are the order of day. An E-mail to a “local” club always get a friendly response and invariably someone can point you in the direction of a suitable slope.
The first model is a Bullet.
This is an “unbreakable” EPP, not very aerodynamic but ideal for finding the “good” and “bad” air on the first few flights from a new slope. In my experience all slopes have these areas of turbulence or negative lift but it’s often not obvious where they are; with this model you don’t end up with a bag of shattered balsa.
Having sorted the slope it’s time for the Plouf.
This is a super little model, launch and gain altitude, then for the adrenalin junkies convert some of the height into speed; loop, roll, inverted, high speed passes, you name it and the Plouf will do it! This is a French designed “micro” glider; I’ve built it at 125% to accommodate a “standard” AAA battery pack, it now spans an impressive 890mm and uses 2 mini servos and a mini Rx.
I downloaded the free Plouf plans from the Internet and if anyone’s interested I’ve still got the file for the plan. (A question for John; can I attach the file to this post for members to download?)
Ran out of time, I’ve said it before, a terrible thing having to earn a living, roll on retirement! I’ll add “part 1” to the title and hopefully continue tomorrow.
Limited space and the stringent COSHH and Health and Safety rules imposed by Senior Management (the wife!!) means that power models are out, so Slope Soarers are the order of day. An E-mail to a “local” club always get a friendly response and invariably someone can point you in the direction of a suitable slope.
The first model is a Bullet.
This is an “unbreakable” EPP, not very aerodynamic but ideal for finding the “good” and “bad” air on the first few flights from a new slope. In my experience all slopes have these areas of turbulence or negative lift but it’s often not obvious where they are; with this model you don’t end up with a bag of shattered balsa.
Having sorted the slope it’s time for the Plouf.
This is a super little model, launch and gain altitude, then for the adrenalin junkies convert some of the height into speed; loop, roll, inverted, high speed passes, you name it and the Plouf will do it! This is a French designed “micro” glider; I’ve built it at 125% to accommodate a “standard” AAA battery pack, it now spans an impressive 890mm and uses 2 mini servos and a mini Rx.
I downloaded the free Plouf plans from the Internet and if anyone’s interested I’ve still got the file for the plan. (A question for John; can I attach the file to this post for members to download?)
Ran out of time, I’ve said it before, a terrible thing having to earn a living, roll on retirement! I’ll add “part 1” to the title and hopefully continue tomorrow.
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