Benjamin Rowland
Member
I've flown multi-rotors a lot in the past year, but I've never flown an RC plane. Today, I made my first attempt - with a ducted fan plane.
If you've ever seen the show Top Gear, there's a line they use a lot. "How hard could it be?" they say with childlike innocence and a hint of British sarcasm. I said that to myself as I walked down the street to an empty field with this huge foam jet in my hand. To make it extra fun, there were 10mph winds. Perfect conditions for a newbie to airplanes. When I got started in multi-rotors, I was careful and precise, but today I was filled with a bit of reckless abandon.
There were several failed attempts in the beginning. The nose of the plane had this strange attraction to the ground. Good old Gravity, she never lets up. I walked back home, defeated. After knocking out some editing work in the studio, I decided it was time for a final attempt. It was dusk and the winds had calmed down. My hands were freezing. I made a valiant effort at another hand launch. Crash - more failure.
I decided I'd give it one more heave-ho as the sun dropped well below the horizon. I gave it full throttle this time, pulled back on the elevator stick, and gave it a good toss. Oh - My - God! It was flying! Thank you Lord! After a moment of sheer joy came terror. It was flying away from me, and quickly! This thing doesn't hover! I had to quickly switch my brain out of copter mode and into airplane mode. Wait - I've never flown a plane - I didn't expect it to actually fly - my brain doesn't know airplane mode. Surprisingly, I was able to fly it around for a couple of minutes doing graceless circles, but it flew. It was quite a rush. I made an attempt at a landing because I hadn't bothered to set any type of battery alarm, thinking I would be lucky to fly for 30 seconds. The landing was more of an intentional crash, but it survived.
Multi-rotors will continue to be my focus, but planes just became a new hobby.
[SUP]
Sorry for being a bit off topic, but I had to share this with you guys.[/SUP]
If you've ever seen the show Top Gear, there's a line they use a lot. "How hard could it be?" they say with childlike innocence and a hint of British sarcasm. I said that to myself as I walked down the street to an empty field with this huge foam jet in my hand. To make it extra fun, there were 10mph winds. Perfect conditions for a newbie to airplanes. When I got started in multi-rotors, I was careful and precise, but today I was filled with a bit of reckless abandon.
There were several failed attempts in the beginning. The nose of the plane had this strange attraction to the ground. Good old Gravity, she never lets up. I walked back home, defeated. After knocking out some editing work in the studio, I decided it was time for a final attempt. It was dusk and the winds had calmed down. My hands were freezing. I made a valiant effort at another hand launch. Crash - more failure.
I decided I'd give it one more heave-ho as the sun dropped well below the horizon. I gave it full throttle this time, pulled back on the elevator stick, and gave it a good toss. Oh - My - God! It was flying! Thank you Lord! After a moment of sheer joy came terror. It was flying away from me, and quickly! This thing doesn't hover! I had to quickly switch my brain out of copter mode and into airplane mode. Wait - I've never flown a plane - I didn't expect it to actually fly - my brain doesn't know airplane mode. Surprisingly, I was able to fly it around for a couple of minutes doing graceless circles, but it flew. It was quite a rush. I made an attempt at a landing because I hadn't bothered to set any type of battery alarm, thinking I would be lucky to fly for 30 seconds. The landing was more of an intentional crash, but it survived.
Multi-rotors will continue to be my focus, but planes just became a new hobby.
[SUP]
Sorry for being a bit off topic, but I had to share this with you guys.[/SUP]