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Trevor Crook

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Everything posted by Trevor Crook

  1. David Have a look at the Durafly range sold by Hobbyking. I've got the Trojan and it's excellent. From memory they also do a Corsair and Skyraider. The UK store also had a non-Durafly Hurricane, which is a bit different, if it's still in stock. All of these come kitted out with servos, motor, ESC and retracts - you just have to add the RX and lipo. For £100 -ish they are great value. Sorry if this looks like a Hobbyking advert! I've no connection other than as a customer.
  2. Erfolg If you're not averse to foam, there's a very nice Durafly 1100mm Mk 24 on the way, and the UK warehouse stocks the Durafly range. I've already got the Trojan, my son has the Vampire, and both fly superbly with no modifications. Money is already being set aside for the Spit, although that new Sea Vixen looks terrific too....
  3. Shaun All the advice above is good. In case you need more of a steer, I'd suggest a motor of around 1000 - 1300kV, a 1300 3s lipo, and a 7x4 or 8x4 prop, which will put you in the 150W ballpark. If you haven't got a wattmeter, it's well worth investing in one for tuning in the power you need, without stressing the power train. The above setup will draw around 15A so an 18-20A ESC should be OK. As has been said above, choose a bigger battery if you have the room and need the weight.
  4. I've got the older MSR, and can fly this confidently around my lounge. I spent some time breaking a T-Rex 450 and lost confidence and sold it. I got the MSR to fly indoors when the weather stopped fixed-wing flying for too long. I can now hover nose-in and fly circuits. If the later model with stabilisation is better, you should have no problems. If it starts going pear-shaped, just chop the throttle. I've not broken mine yet.
  5. Tony I didn't take any steps to reduce weight, as modern electric power trains are light and if chosen wisely give at least as much power as ic. Sorry I didn't take any build photos. The u/c clamps you can see are screwed into a ply section epoxied to the bottom of the fus. The wire legs go up though the ply into hardwood blocks (about 25mm) which are glued to the fus sides. Good luck with the rest of the build - they fly really well.
  6. Keep us posted on the weight when it's finished, Tony. My electrified one weighs exactly 4lb with 3000 3s lipo on board. My fuselage mod may help knife-edge performance and my torsion bar mod avoids bent u/c
  7. And here's the cowl removed. Battery box at the top, with ESC velcroed to its underside. You can just see the motor down below, with a Rx pack underneath it. Here's the axle end, with the shirring elastic wrapped around the 16g cross-pieces which are soldered to the leg. The axle with the wheel on is bound and soldered to these cross-pieces in the centre. You can just see the slot in the wooden leg fairing that stops the axle moving fore and aft. This shows the wheel deflected. Note the axle fairing, which has a thin ply top, glued down in the middle and wrapped with solartex, but the ends can flex up with the axle. Finally, a view of the underside, showing how the 16g cross-pieces are bound and soldered to the legs.
  8. OK JC, as promised, here are some photos of how I've arranged my U/C springing and cowl fixing: Here's the cowl in place, just retained at the front by the dummy radiator cap that rotates on an offset screw
  9. JC Sorry for the delay in responding re. request for photos. I'm a bit pressed for time for a couple of days but I'll try to provide some piccies before the weekend. I'll get the cowl and also the U/C as you've mentioned that also. Instead of using a single axle soldered across, mine has two lengths of 16g wire, spaced apart by about 4mm, soldered across between the legs and protuding by about 10mm, bent apart slightly at the ends. The wheel carrying axle is, as you proposed, 8g wire bound and soldered in the centre to the 16g pieces (running between them). I wrap shirring elastic between the ends of the 16g pieces, over the top of the wheel axle, to act as a spring. The U/C fairing is slotted to accommodate verticle movement of the axle. As you say, a picture is worth a thousand words - I'll try to oblige soon.
  10. I fitted a 4.8V rx pack to mine, under the motor, and the cg is perfect, albeit with a 3s 3000 lipo. Regarding the cowl. you can't use a spigot as the cowl has to be lowered down vertically. I've fitted a dummy radiator cap with an offset screw, so it just swings around over the top of the front of the cowl. Nothing holds the back, but it can't go anywhere. As the cowl is so well located (I've got flanges to prevent it moving sideways) magnets will work just fine.
  11. Danny,the reason I suggested spruce spars is that the kit I had (admittedly many years ago) had spars that weren't very hard. There is a stress point where the dihedral braces end, and mine had the spars fracture here after relatively minor mishaps. You could miss a fracture under the covering very easily, leading to disaster. I wouldn't normally beef up a good design as it adds weight and moves the stress point to the next weakest part, but I think this one is worth doing. I haven't weighed my current SE5,which is built from the kit plan, but it's no featherweight, covered in Solartex - about 5lb I'd guess. But with all those wings it flies well on 400W, so I don't think weight is supercritical.
  12. JC Looks like you're going to make a nice job of it. Can I offer a couple of tips? If it's not too late, replace the 1/4 square balsa wing spars with spruce - far more forgiving of minor accidents, and negligable weight gain. Also, I can't remember what the official method of holding on the top wing is, but on both the ones I've had, I used nylon wing bolts (M5 i think) screwing into tapped hardwood blocks. Have fun with the build, it flies really well.
  13. OK, a bit more detail on mine. The motor is an E-max 2820/07, and the prop is actually a 12x6 APC clone. From memory, this motor is about 900kv, and pulls just under 40A, giving about 400W. This gives good scale performance for 8 minute flights on 3s 3000 batteries. By all means go for a higher power setup, you can always throttle down more.
  14. Mine flies nicely on around 400W - 600W would give Pitts-like performance, although you can, of course, throttle back. The motor is an E-Max (900kV) from Giant Cod/Shark, with a 3s 3000 pack and, I think, an 11x7 prop. I'll try to post some more specific figures when I've at home tonight.
  15. Mike If you haven't decided yet, have a look at XT60s. They give a good quality connection, the polarisation is foolproof (they even mark the polarity) and they are cheap and readily available. UK eBay sellers have them for less than £10 for 10 pairs, including heat shrink. They can be a little difficult to separate, but generally better than Deans.
  16. Durafly Trojan I bought one of these from the 1100mm range a couple of weeks ago, and Tony asked on the previous page how the nose gear fared in use, so i thought I'd do a quick write-up. The kit comes in a nice box that would not be disgraced on a model shop shelf. the well-packed contents don't let it down - quality of mouldings and fittings are on a par with the Parkzone Wildcat I've also bought this year. Instructions are sparse, but at least theyt give the C of G position. No control throws are mentioned, so I used outer holes on servos and horns, except for the rudder where I used the inner horn hole. I dialled in my customary 25% expo. and that's fine. Glue (UHU Por Type) is provided for gluing in the tailplane. The only assembly issues were the motor rubbing slightly on the dummy motor, which was easily fixed by shaving the prop driver orifice with a scalpel, and marginal ground clearance for the prop. The noseleg is a bit short. There's room in the bay to retract a longer unit, but I couldn't see how to get the leg out of the retract unit, so I fitted a bigger wheel and trimmed 5mm off each prop blade, then re-balanced. The sprung gear doors don't quite close over the bigger wheel, but there's no buzzing or straining. I've had 8 flights so far, and she flies superbly. Take-offs are easy using half flap, there's enough power for scale manouevers, and landings on full flap are slow and controllable. No noseleg breakage issues so far. No time to write any more at present - overall verdict excellent, if anyone wants to know more, I'll try to answer any questions asked.
  17. Been to SMC only a couple of times as I live 60 odd miles away. Each time I had to wait a bit to be served, as staff were busy with phone and shop customers. However,when my turn came they were polite and helpful. Very well stocked shop, too.
  18. Just bought a Durafly T28 Trojan from HK. Ordered it on Monday night, it arrived today - pretty good. I ordered a spare prop while I was at it and the lot came to about £110 delivered. I've spent about an hour looking at all the parts and testing all of the electrics - everything seems to work ok. The quality of everything looks very good, and the value for money seems excellent. OK, it's not a large model (43" span) but it's fitted with 7 servos, electric retracts (noseleg has doors), an 850kV motor and 35A esc. When I started RC flying servos were £15 each - incredible! I'll file a flying report when it's happened.
  19. Mark One of my flying buddies is a satisfied Multiplex user like yourself, but he's also bought a Spektrum Tx (DX8!) so he has access to the range of bind and fly models, specifically for indoors. You could do the same, although a DX6i would be a cheaper alternative that would do all you wanted. Peter Excellent summary of DSM2. What's really cool is the way that Spektrum have acheived full compatability beteween DSM2 and DSMX transmitters and receivers. Like Buster I've not had problems with DSM2, and can continue to use it with newer DSMX Rx's, but if I upgrade to, say, a DX8 Tx everything will still work.
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