As the title states, this is the reason I can't bring myself to get into the RC plane hobby. Cool, exciting and depressing all at the same time.
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HOLY SHIT
I had no idea technology had gotten up to actual jet turbines in RC planes! When I got out of it "ducted fan" was the cool shit.
A high school teacher of mine built balsa woor replicas like the one in the picture. He told me he built one for a guy only to see it crash and destroyed on the first flight after delivery.
He built this one in the late 80s. I watched him build it during the school year. He past away a few years ago and the family was going to trash it. I was happy to take it. I wish I knew how many hours he had in just this one. Oh and he had only one arm after loosing one at the shoulder in an accident.
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Pretty sure Chad @LongRifles Inc. was into high-end RC aircraft for awhile...
HOLY SHIT
I had no idea technology had gotten up to actual jet turbines in RC planes! When I got out of it "ducted fan" was the cool shit.
Now, if only people video taping "UFO"s on their retarded history Channel shows had camera skills like this guy....
Ouch.
Watching the European guys crash their giant 40-50% scale planes always hurts. Some of the giant scale multi engine turbine scale builds can run 70k+.
Had my fair share of crashes too. I mostly fly helis nowadays since I don't have a good local field for planes anymore. A "light" crash on one of my 700s is usually $450 minimum. Always hurts, but it doesn't happen often anymore. But with the helis at least it's all bolt together. Way less painful than stuffing a scratch built plane that you have hundreds of hours into building.
The couple of bigger 3D planes I still have are all RTFs or ARTFs so you can easily buy replacement fuselages, wings, tails, etc, already pre built and skinned. Losing money in a crash hurts, losing all the time spent building a scratch built is worse.
Also have a turbine heli, but setup for acrobatics and not a scale build. Last year when I was flying had a flameout caused by a worn out fuel line going to the clunk pickup in one fuel tank, so it was only pulling fuel from one tank... Flameout happened in the middle of nose down outside funnel fairly low to the ground. Just barely managed to autorotate down, somewhat hard landing but no damage. Decided to call it a day after that, replaced all the fuel lines that week.
The turbine hasn't hit the dirt yet, but I am not looking forward to the day it does... Lol
If you want to get into planes, never a better time than now. Lots of reasonably priced RTF planes out there, many now offering gyro stabilization and automatic "rescue" recovery and leveling if you get confused on the sticks. Of course, you have to remember to hit the rescue button before you're out of altitude for the recovery...
Yep, turbines are fun. Expensive, but fun. I'll be the first to say my electric helis have way more power and you can fly them much more aggressively than my turbine heli, but you can't beat the turbine for sound and smell.
Had a BVM bandit turbine plane for a while but sold it when the local flying field closed. Would love to build a thrust vectored turbine if I had a good spot to fly it. Trying to convince my farmer buddy who owns the land where I fly my helis to let me put in a runway for planes, lol.
Some of the multi cylinder plane engines sound incredible too. I really want to build a 90+ inch warbird with a moki radial or kolm inline... At current market prices I could probably sell a couple boxes of primers on gunbroker to pay for one.
Buddy, they're sticking turbines on everything these days.
Army Jerry says "Buy more ammo."Someone I work with is big into rc helicopters so we always hear aboot and see a bunch of carnage. He tries to get any of us he can to join him but fuck that. I can think of a million other things to burn money on
Buddy, they're sticking turbines on everything these days.
As the title states, this is the reason I can't bring myself to get into the RC plane hobby. Cool, exciting and depressing all at the same time.
Cool stuff! I did the RC plane thing for a bit - built a couple and crashed 'em.
Lesson learned: Real Airplanes are easier to fly...
Seems like a lot of europeans in those videos. Is this what you do with your money when you can't buy ammo?
That’s very cool! Thats a great career he has ahead.My son started with RC planes, then got into the Civil Air Patrol, where he got his glider certs and then went on to getting his private pilots license. The Civil Air Patrol was the best thing for him. Got him interested in things that have led him to Embry Riddle Aeronautical University, Indycar (AJ Foyt), and working for a company that's working with Space X. He's also been involved in a classified project for the military. I actually gave them some pointers on that project. Sad to say, they didn't make it to the final round. Probably my fault.......
I was into the hobby for a number of years and gravitated towards large scale pattern and 3d flying. My local field was really strict with noise ordinances so I had to go electric on everything. Running 12s lipo and high efficiency Hacker/Neu Brushless motors, these big planes(40% scale) would pull 5000+ watts at wot. These photos were taken back in 2012 when my son was two. Good times...
We got fussed at about noise too at a field here that had zero houses for at least 5 miles. My response was to straight pipe an 80cc Yak that I had.
I wasn't invited back. . .
Lol!
A buddy built a pitts with a straight piped DA200, which he got to fly *once* at any field he visited... He quickly got the reputation of being "that guy."
It has mufflers now.![]()
Where there's a will. . .