your plane could also be wobbling because the prop blades are out of balance; see if the propeller tends to "fall" to one blade and add weight to the other until they seem to balance out
someone else can probably explain this better than i can
your plane could also be wobbling because the prop blades are out of balance; see if the propeller tends to "fall" to one blade and add weight to the other until they seem to balance out
I believe Coach Brian posted a video demonstration on how to wind a rubber band somewhere in these forums. He uses a helicopter in the video. As for its use this season, I believe that helicopters aren't used because the weight of each device must be above 8 grams. IIRC, good helicopters can't compete with good planes time-wise with the weight restriction.Hi everyone,
New to this forum! I have a question about something that was said in the rules. In the rules, it said we could use helicopters. Me being curious:
1) What would a design helicopter look like?
2) How would you use a rubber band to power a propeller completely vertically?
3) Lastly, has anyone seen any team build and use a helicopter?
Just something I'm curious about in this event.
Astronomy,Astronomyguy wrote: ↑February 27th, 2023, 4:44 amI believe Coach Brian posted a video demonstration on how to wind a rubber band somewhere in these forums. He uses a helicopter in the video. As for its use this season, I believe that helicopters aren't used because the weight of each device must be above 8 grams. IIRC, good helicopters can't compete with good planes time-wise with the weight restriction.Hi everyone,
New to this forum! I have a question about something that was said in the rules. In the rules, it said we could use helicopters. Me being curious:
1) What would a design helicopter look like?
2) How would you use a rubber band to power a propeller completely vertically?
3) Lastly, has anyone seen any team build and use a helicopter?
Just something I'm curious about in this event.
Any idea what the ceiling height there was? I know teams were most definitely over 3 minutes at Mentor and Kenston because of the relatively high ceilings. I do have a feeling that Tower Heights has the ability to get higher times than they're showing right now.randomdogonapc wrote: ↑February 27th, 2023, 12:11 pm Recently, I competed at the West Liberty-Salem invite in Ohio. Because I am not sure if it is allowed to post the full results, I will just say the highlights for flight. The #1 flight time was a 2:46, and this should be the current best in state, considering that most teams in Ohio were there. I must say, the rumors of a 4 minute flight time were scaring me, and these more tangible numbers are a huge relief to me. Oh, by the way, this was Div B.
Frost,Frost0125 wrote: ↑February 27th, 2023, 2:24 pm Hi!
I know this may be a difficult question to answer, but I was wondering what flight times I should be aiming for for regionals? I'm from John T. Hoggard in NC in the Wilmington region. I've been in Scioly for a while, but this is my first year doing a build event. I have what I think to be a fairly well-built Freedom Flights plane, but I haven't gotten the chance to fly it yet, due to lack of gym space.
Also, is there anyway to see flight/wright stuff times for past regionals/state tournaments?
Brian Z,BrianZ wrote: ↑February 27th, 2023, 2:05 pm My team's very first flight on our plane was 3:32 in a 37 foot ceiling arena (the arena where regionals and state are held, in Missouri) with the air on. We were so pumped, but we haven't gotten those results since, and in regionals we barely broke a minute due to some unlucky crashes with a wall, a wire hanging from the ceiling, a basketball hoop, the ceiling, and another wall, all in the same flight. One or two insane flight times aren't worth nearly as much as repeatable, consistent flights. Our goal is a four minute flight at state, and I'm sure it's possible, especially if we can get them to turn the air off, which they didn't at regionals. There is a big drift across the arena, even when the air is off (it was off for SO last year), but especially when it is on, and the big looping wire that used to go the the hanging scoreboard is right in the middle of the court. It is pure luck if you hit it or not. One team flew between the two wires (maybe 18 inches apart) in the loop twice in one flight, and their next circle missed the wires by 5 feet.
Even my own school either can't or won't turn off the air handlers this year, after getting a new system. It's so hard to figure out what our planes are doing when they're blown around that much. There is bound to be a big ol' circuit breaker somewhere that I can pop, but sometimes it feels like what's the point of practicing in calm air anyway, if the air is going to be blowing at the competition. It's disheartening, and I fear the rise of computerized thermostat systems are going to be the demise of this event.
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