Hello! Everyone, There is something I need to ask. The rubber motor for a free flight model airplane acts like a tourniquet. When winding up the model for a flight it does the same thing that a tourniquet does. How do you prevent the dreaded implosion? As a boy, (9 or maybe 10 years old at the time) the fourth Guillows kit I built was the 900 series P-51 D Mustang. I was quite pleased with myself after I had completed this model.
I had painted the plastic prop hub cover bright Tester's red, "and because it was all I had at the time", I gave it a neutral gray paint job from a spray can. It did some surprisingly good test glides. Then I was winding the rubber motor for the first short powered test flight when I heard the crunching sound
to my horror, the little airplane's propeller was pulled all the way back to the former behind the rear of the canopy, I was distraught with grief
How could such a thing happen
I had read the instructions so well and had done such a good job. This experience traumatized me for days
on end. It was more than a two years after this before I tried to build another Guillows model. I did build the 900 series Cessna Birddog and because it had a plastic nose piece that spread the stress over a larger area it could take the pull of the (tourniquet) rubber motor. It lasted for a week or so of many successful but short flights.
Now I see you guys building these incredibly lightweight and beautifully built model airplanes, and I know that you all use contest rubber for the motors, and achieve many long duration flights.
How do you all manage to prevent the heartbreaking implosions that I experienced as a boy
I do want to be able to build rubber powered free flight model airplanes as well as the RC conversions.
But how can such light and delicately built models withstand the powerful pull of a tightly wound rubber motors
I have seen videos of guys stretching and winding 4, 6, and 8 loop rubber motors and am awestruck by how much stress these lightly build model airplanes can take
. I can see how a model airplane powered by an electric motor can work being built so lightly built. "On a side note here", I think I now understand why there are not too many companies making timers for electric powered model airplanes anymore. It occurred to me that if a twisted person
who wanted to build a bomb
How such a timer it would make things easy for them to do this. I don't understand why anyone would want to do such a thing
but we now live in a world that doesn't make a lot of sense to me.
I know this doesn't have anything to do with building model airplanes, but for the longest time, I was perplexed by the lack if entrust in electric powered free flight. All of the digital wrist watches I have ever owned have had this adjustable countdown feature, and such a device could be made for limiting the powered flight times of electric powered free flight model airplanes, but such a device could be used by some "lunatic fringe" person to cause great harm to folks.
But rubber powered free flight is something that could not be used by men with evil minds to cause harm. So electric powered free flight will never be the truly cool part of this hobby it could have been