materials
- builderguy135
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Re: materials
Design and quality of the plane matters soooo much more than the material you use. Also, read the previous year's glider threads please... all of the information is probably on there too.
- isotelus
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Re: materials
Well, not necessarily. Wood is usually the main part of gliders, to prevent stall from lighter gliders made out of foam or paper or similar materials. Foam could be used to increase the surface area of the wing or something similar, but unless you have a good way to counteract stall, I would not suggest building with a relatively large amount of foam.builderguy135 wrote:Design and quality of the plane matters soooo much more than the material you use. Also, read the previous year's glider threads please... all of the information is probably on there too.
Last edited by isotelus on January 16th, 2019, 3:04 pm, edited 1 time in total.
SLHS '23
- builderguy135
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Re: materials
Foam obviously has its pros and cons but you don't need it to do well in glider.isotelus wrote:Well, not necessarily. Wood is usually the main part of gliders, to prevent stall from lighter gliders made out of foam or paper or similar materials. Foam could be used to increase the surface area of the wing or something similar, but unless you have a good way to counteract this, I would not suggest building with a relatively large amount of foam.builderguy135 wrote:Design and quality of the plane matters soooo much more than the material you use. Also, read the previous year's glider threads please... all of the information is probably on there too.
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- isotelus
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Re: materials
Yeah, of course. This goes for pretty much any non-wood material- does anyone on here know of a successful glider that was primarily non-wood? I would be interested to know how that would work.builderguy135 wrote:Foam obviously has its pros and cons but you don't need it to do well in glider.isotelus wrote:Well, not necessarily. Wood is usually the main part of gliders, to prevent stall from lighter gliders made out of foam or paper or similar materials. Foam could be used to increase the surface area of the wing or something similar, but unless you have a good way to counteract this, I would not suggest building with a relatively large amount of foam.builderguy135 wrote:Design and quality of the plane matters soooo much more than the material you use. Also, read the previous year's glider threads please... all of the information is probably on there too.
SLHS '23
- builderguy135
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Re: materials
I made a modified Protege design for Rustin and it worked quite well. I broke it a few days before so I used a simpler wood glider tho :\isotelus wrote:Yeah, of course. This goes for pretty much any non-wood material- does anyone on here know of a successful glider that was primarily non-wood? I would be interested to know how that would work.builderguy135 wrote:Foam obviously has its pros and cons but you don't need it to do well in glider.isotelus wrote: Well, not necessarily. Wood is usually the main part of gliders, to prevent stall from lighter gliders made out of foam or paper or similar materials. Foam could be used to increase the surface area of the wing or something similar, but unless you have a good way to counteract this, I would not suggest building with a relatively large amount of foam.
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Re: materials
Yes we have the same question. Is cardboard allowed since it is technically paper?
I submitted a question on the official website, but I don't think they'll answer it, since it's about materials.
I submitted a question on the official website, but I don't think they'll answer it, since it's about materials.
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