Kewl…!!!! I have never flown from water. I think I would really enjoy it.More pond flying today. Had to hurry as winds picked up substantially later in the day. 3 batteries worth, mostly just touch and goes. Vey cool to fly on water. More please.
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That's awesome. It is amazing how little weight it takes to either make or break a good handling plane. I kind of chuckle to myself some times when people ask me if I had to do anything special to get my plane to balance on the CG. "CG"? "What's that"? LOL. I just start tossing things in with just a little organization and hope it flies well. Ummm, couldn't be why Marie is a tad tail heavy huh? LOL.... Good job Doug. Now take all that weight off the nose.I actually got out and did some flying yesterday. It was 64 degrees and sunny. It was a bit windy early, but dropped as the day went on. Pretty much perfect. Today was windy and rainy with some Tornado warnings and it may snow overnight. Like they say around here, if you don't like the weather, just wait a minute and it will change.
I flew my 120cc Hangar 9 Extra. Since I started flying it it always did very nice knife edge spins. Ever since I repaired the engine box when the top of it came off and the bottom came loose, it was almost impossible to get it to do one. The only thing I could come up with was that I added just enough nose weight that it changed the CG just enough to not want to knife edge spin anymore. Since I flew it last I changed the tailwheel which added 1.2 ounces to the tail. I've been anxious to see if it would knife edge spin with the extra tail weight. The answer is YES. It's way better now. I'm even considering taking out some nose weight to see if it can fly even better.
With this one if I took all the weight I have on the nose off, it would probably crash.That's awesome. It is amazing how little weight it takes to either make or break a good handling plane. I kind of chuckle to myself some times when people ask me if I had to do anything special to get my plane to balance on the CG. "CG"? "What's that"? LOL. I just start tossing things in with just a little organization and hope it flies well. Ummm, couldn't be why Marie is a tad tail heavy huh? LOL.... Good job Doug. Now take all that weight off the nose.
That is interesting to see that 1.2 oz can make such a change on 120cc plane. From this it really makes sense to putting the the gas tank right on the CG.I actually got out and did some flying yesterday. It was 64 degrees and sunny. It was a bit windy early, but dropped as the day went on. Pretty much perfect. Today was windy and rainy with some Tornado warnings and it may snow overnight. Like they say around here, if you don't like the weather, just wait a minute and it will change.
I flew my 120cc Hangar 9 Extra. Since I started flying it it always did very nice knife edge spins. Ever since I repaired the engine box when the top of it came off and the bottom came loose, it was almost impossible to get it to do one. The only thing I could come up with was that I added just enough nose weight that it changed the CG just enough to not want to knife edge spin anymore. Since I flew it last I changed the tailwheel which added 1.2 ounces to the tail. I've been anxious to see if it would knife edge spin with the extra tail weight. The answer is YES. It's way better now. I'm even considering taking out some nose weight to see if it can fly even better.
More than likely. Interesting thing... a number of years back I assembled a (I believe) Dave Patrick Extra 300. (I think I have a photo somewhere) Beautiful plane. That was the plane I put my first DLE 55 on. It flew like nothing you ever seen. Loved the inverted flat spins. Flatter than any pancake I have ever seen. But that was "AFTER" I got the balance corrected. I maidened it so absolutely tail heavy that when I slowed down, the nose went into 45 degree incline. Like a slow motion harrier with no power. (Or at least it seemed that way) Once I got the CG corrected, it really did fly oh so sweet.With this one if I took all the weight I have on the nose off, it would probably crash.
Remember the rule: 3:1 ratio. For every ounce on the tail, it takes 3 on the nose to correct. By adding over an ounce on the tail, He actually removed 3 from the nose. And in a 3D environment depending on the plane, that can be enough to make all the difference in the world. On a 100cc plane, it really does make an impact. On a 50 pound Behemoth Yak? Not so much. LOL.That is interesting to see that 1.2 oz can make such a change on 120cc plane. From this it really makes sense to putting the the gas tank right on the CG.
Nice plane really like colour scheme.More than likely. Interesting thing... a number of years back I assembled a (I believe) Dave Patrick Extra 300. (I think I have a photo somewhere) Beautiful plane. That was the plane I put my first DLE 55 on. It flew like nothing you ever seen. Loved the inverted flat spins. Flatter than any pancake I have ever seen. But that was "AFTER" I got the balance corrected. I maidened it so absolutely tail heavy that when I slowed down, the nose went into 45 degree incline. Like a slow motion harrier with no power. (Or at least it seemed that way) Once I got the CG corrected, it really did fly oh so sweet.
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Remember the rule: 3:1 ratio. For every ounce on the tail, it takes 3 on the nose to correct. By adding over an ounce on the tail, He actually removed 3 from the nose. And in a 3D environment depending on the plane, that can be enough to make all the difference in the world. On a 100cc plane, it really does make an impact. On a 50 pound Behemoth Yak? Not so much. LOL.