kasper Posted April 12, 2018 Posted April 12, 2018 Gardan minicab Oops. Not the minicab - wrong rear canopy shape SIPA s90 Same designer a few years later
IBob Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 I've said this before here...but I am astonished by the sheer number of accumulated aircraft designs. Red, Kasper...setting aside the many versions of some aircraft (ie, counting a DC3 as one, a piper cub as one, and so on) do you have any idea just how many there are???
kasper Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 This one looks like fun[ATTACH=full]54708[/ATTACH] Already had that one. #268 on this thread.
IBob Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 Yep, I'd have a go at that...provide the seat and the instrument column respectively stayed where they were........( < tenor voice)
kasper Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 Yep, I'd have a go at that...provide the seat and the instrument column respectively stayed where they were........( < tenor voice) Slip a pod over the front and you’ve got basically the same as a drifter on the front of that one. Except stringer for the nose leg
red750 Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 Spot on, Birdseye. That's my lot for the time being, until I run across a few more.
winsor68 Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 I've got one...a little bit different perhaps but it is still an aircraft.
Birdseye Posted April 13, 2018 Posted April 13, 2018 Reminds me of a Keilcraft control line kit I had.
spacesailor Posted April 14, 2018 Posted April 14, 2018 me too, loved the "ladybird" KK of course, freeflight, tethered, and radio controlled, chasing golfer's down the fairway on a sunday afternoon. It flew very slow with a "Mills" .75, running as slow as I could get it, only rudder control in those days, PulseProportional came a couple of years later. spacesailor
planedriver Posted April 14, 2018 Posted April 14, 2018 Geez!, now your stirring the memory. The very first "galloping ghost" system that I made, was using acorn valves from army surplus walkey-talky's from that era purchased from Government Surplus shops in London's seedy Soho.. Crude as they were,with rudder fluttering one way and then the other as the mark-space ratio varied to stick inputs, they did work at the time, but the young-un's of today who are familiar with digital proportional might think we are a bunch of dinosaurs. Shh! . NO FURTHER COMMENT!
planedriver Posted April 14, 2018 Posted April 14, 2018 No mate, Lisle Street behind the Hippodrone Theatre. They had lot's of goodies there.
red750 Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Red, Kasper...setting aside the many versions of some aircraft (ie, counting a DC3 as one, a piper cub as one, and so on) do you have any idea just how many there are??? No idea. I've probably hardly scratched the surface. Here's my next one.
kasper Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 No idea but the pilot gets a big F for flying skills - nose wheel first is unforgivable
Birdseye Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Has hint of Siai Marchetti 208 about it, but not quite.
Blueadventures Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 No idea but the pilot gets a big F for flying skills - nose wheel first is unforgivable Elevator neutral and no flap in use?
kasper Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Elevator neutral and no flap in use? Don’t care. Nose on the ground and air under one of the mains. That doesn’t happen if you’re flying at all correctly.
facthunter Posted April 24, 2018 Posted April 24, 2018 Perhaps it's doing a take off? Flap equipped planes usually use a fair bit for landing. None or a small amount for take off. There's not much weight on either main and the nosewheel strut is not fully extended. (has weight on it , see scissor link) so it's NOT the way to be. if you want to fly safe. Weight on mains is more stable, directionally.. Nev
spacesailor Posted April 25, 2018 Posted April 25, 2018 Could it be a bit of "crosswind", just my thought about doing a "touch & go". spacesailor
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