Last Saturday night, the Blacksheep Squadron had the "Two, Three, or Four Off the Floor" indoor contest at the El Coriso Park gym. It was for multi-motored rubber powered models which could be Multi-motored Minnows, two, three or four props or tri-motored, or four-motored "No-Cals". The No-Cals could be larger than the legal 16 inch wing span and had to approximately represent a "real" airplane, and all launches were to be R.O.G.
El Coriso is an interesting venue that is not without it's challenges. It is a quite reasonable space for indoor flying, being twice as large as our usual indoor space, Stonehurst Park. However, unlike Stonehurst, El Coriso does not have a flat ceiling. The clear height is about 27 feet, but above that are open roof trusses. There are also six basketball backstops hanging from the roof trusses around the edge of the space. To clear the space, they can be folded up to a horizontal position about two feet below the trusses by an electric mechanism. This has lead to a conjecture about the possibility of a model making a "carrier landing", 25 feet up, on one of the backstops
There was actually no contest because Minnow's always fly well no matter what you do to them. Don Butman took all four categories with his Minnows.
Don with a Tri-motor Minnow
Don's four-motored Minnow
My effort was second in the four-motor category. I took the No-Cal approach. My subject was the Fokker F.36 airliner. It is high-winged with a long tail moment and fixed landing gear...a good subject.
It is a larger than legal No-Cal with a 24 inch wing span. I chose to use four stub motor sticks on the front of a T-shaped motor stick with some diagonal bracing to avoid having too much wing structure. The four motors went to a common, two sided, motor hook that stuck out on both sides of the fuselage. As it turned out, the wood I chose for the motor stick was too light and I had to add more bracing to the motor stick assembly. The rest of the airplane was conventional No-Cal construction with 3/32" X 1/16" material instead of 1/16" square for additional strength. The wing tips were very old school being bamboo, and the tail surfaces were 120% over scale. Balanced, with rubber, it weighs 25 grams and has 90 square inches of wing area. Of course, I built it the afternoon before the contest.
Does it fly? It took a while to get it trimmed and to find the right sized rubber to get it to R,O.G. and then I had a problem. The number of winds to get it to R.O.G. and establish it's turn was also enough to get it up into the roof trusses. It got stuck in the trusses and Dave Gee's deft use of his retrieval pole got it down with no damage. I finally found the number of winds to get it cruise just below the trusses, but ended the conjecture about a model making a "carrier landing" on one of the stowed backstops. Dave had to get the pole out again. Anyway, despite the truncated flight times it was good enough for second.
Here are some of the other entries:
General Aircraft Fleet Shadower
Something Farman from the 1920's
Ford like tri-motor
Ford tri-motor
Professor Fate's #4 If there had be a charisma prize, this entry from Steve Higgenson would have won hands down.