WIDDOG wrote:Thanks much Howard and as always great posts.
I have noticed that most of my weight problem comes from the balancing clay and not so much the wood. Also I noticed that the ole Comet kits say that they are designed specifically for rubber power. I have been thinking that for my next build to try a Comet kit and compare. I'm not trying to knock Guillow's here in anyway. However, I feel that since they don't make the Cox motor that Guillow's should adjust it's kits to rubber power only. There are other problems with the Cox motor. They are too loud, messy and take their own accessories. I think that the days of the Multi Purpose kits are numbered and Guillow's should go with kits that are specific to Rubber Power. I always felt Guillow's should add a Corsair to their 500 Series line up. I also feel it should be designed solely for rubber power.
My point in directing you to my L-4 thread was that most of my lightening efforts were directed behind the center of gravity to minimize the amount of clay needed to balance the model. I've gotten so good at this that sometimes my models actually need tail weight.
Actually, the days of rubber powered kits may be numbered. At the moment there is only one source of good rubber and if that goes away we will all be flying electric (quiet, and not messy, getting cheap). While the field of electric power is developing so fast that it would be pointless for Guillow to put electric power conversion instructions in their kits, all the newer, full bodied, kits (Guillow and everyone else's) are designed with electric power conversion in mind. Air motors are making a comeback too (quiet, not messy, a bit expensive, needs larger model). I have a scale design on the drawing board that can be rubber powered, electric powered, and can be powered with a Zephyr air motor and should fly quite well with any of them.
The current line of Guillow's kits are designed to be built successfully by the widest group of people possible including newbies and older folks who have lost some manual dexterity. Since something like 60 to 70 percent of scale stick and tissue models are built as static models this has been a successful marketing strategy. With the advent of laser cutting more attention is being payed to supplying lighter wood and getting good flying characteristics. If you have ever seen plans to the older line of Guillow's kits they were too light to be built by the average newbie with structures like large, sparsely framed, box fuselages made with 1/16" square stock and 1/16" X 1/32" diagonals. (By the way, they did have a Corsair with about a 20 inch wing span.) The one's I've tried really float, but they can be frustrating to build. If you really want to get a 500 series model to fly go over to the opposite side and build a Hellcat. Build it carefully, and straight and I think you will be pleasantly surprised. Better yet, build the 700 series Fairchild 24 (laser cut) and fly that before you try another 500 series model.
Howard