model helicopter..

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derrick

The Glue that binds us together.
I was flying these a few years ago, These do auto rotate had a couple of small crashes nothing major but still cost a couple of hundred pounds to get back into the air, A set of carbon blades were 90 quid, Cycling is cheaper without a doubt.
RIMG0018-1.jpg
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
Kids got me this for a laugh..but after setting it up today....i may want to get a bit more into this lark..
great fun for 25quid..ive always like model aircraft but never tried flying one..
i believe @vernon knows a thing or 2 about such things..



View: https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=NxcutaFYyIA


I confess to knowing nothing about the model helicopter world beyond the budget low end models. I received one several Christmases ago and, after the novelty wore off, it languished in a corner of the living room until I stood on it.
 

byegad

Legendary Member
Location
NE England
Back when Radio Control was brand new I remember watching a father and son run a RC Plane on Thornaby Aerodrome. The radio was in the back of a Morris 100 van and filled a goodly part of the back too. After taxiing and checking the controls the lad took it off from a short roll and then they father jumped into the van and they shot off down the runway in pursuit of the plane. after overtaking it they stopped, the plane did a sharp 180 and they chased back up the runway. After several repeats the plane was landed and they refueled.

We chatted to them, and it turned out the radio range was so short that after the take off roll the plane was out of range, hence the chasing in the van!

How things have changed!
 
OP
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Levo-Lon

Levo-Lon

Guru
I confess to knowing nothing about the model helicopter world beyond the budget low end models. I received one several Christmases ago and, after the novelty wore off, it languished in a corner of the living room until I stood on it.

sorry @vernon i thought you were a keen model builder..

Seems like a lot on here do though..

when i get better ill fly you a melton pie over :okay:
 

MikeW-71

Veteran
Location
Carlisle
This is mine in flight.
6878602658_ebde35f06b_c.jpg

It hasn't flown in over a year now, and it took a good few months to get to the point of hovering it under some semblance of control. The contraption attached to the skids is some home-made training gear which helps cushion the inevitable heavy and imperfect landings and stops it falling over. It cost about £3 in bits and saved me over £100 in parts. :smile:

Hard things to fly, and I didn't get to the point of nose-in hovering or forward flight. :blink:
 

vernon

Harder than Ronnie Pickering
Location
Meanwood, Leeds
sorry @vernon i thought you were a keen model builder..

Seems like a lot on here do though..

when i get better ill fly you a melton pie over :okay:

I am a keen model builder but it's expensive to embrace all of the disciplines of aeromodelling. My activities are focussed on the 'stick and tissue' rubber powered and i.c. engine powered freeflight models and i.c. powered control line line planes. I have enough engines, plans, balsa wood, tissue and ancillaries to supply a small model shop.

Construction and flying my models will re-commence in earnest in March when I have all the time in the world.

I'm patching up some of my existing models to repair 'hangar rash' and will be adding the covering and fitting engines to airframes awaiting completion.

Here's a picture of an unorthodox tailless 50" span model awaiting repairs to the wing roots.

Chad_640x360.png



Here's a picture of a scaled up 75" span airframe of the same model with an original sized wing for comparison.

chad_large_640x360.jpg


I might also have to resort to using Radio Control as some MOD sites have introduced some very strict rules about models flying beyond the boundaries of the flying fields.

Helicopters do have their attractions but a 'crash and burn' can cost a small fortune whereas a free flight model that flies out of sight (OOS) never to return costs around £80 max tempered by the bittersweet joy of seeing it sucked skywards by a booming thermal. Usually the planes are returned to the owners by honest folk who use the contact details on the stickers attached to the planes in prominent places.
 
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Levo-Lon

Levo-Lon

Guru
Excellent @vernon ..that would be more my thing if the truth be known..
I love balsa modeling as a kid..Spitfire and Lancaster etc..
that looks like a good hobby..and maybe a little less outlay..
 
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