dirk gently wrote:I thought about adding single dihedral point (not polihedral) in the center of the wing. It would not be scale, but hey, if you fly it rubber powered you also need to add dihedral. The good news is, with the tall square fuselage, the 172 will probably require only a minimal amount of dihedral. I even saw similar models fly on rudder/elevator with zero dihedral, the fuselage alone providing enough roll-yaw coupling.
It could be done, but it would reduce the strength of the molded canopy top, as the dihedral would force cutting away of center top area of the canopy that saddles the wing center. I cut away a small area for aileron servo clearance, but did not want to reduce the strength of the part. Of course the wing center design could be modified to essentially shave off the dihedral "v" protruding from the bottom, so as to not have to modify the canopy.
When I first started building, I put off what I thought was the "complexity" of aileron flying, until it became completely impractical to build certain subjects with rudder/elev control. Looking back, I would have simply taken the challenge of learning aileron control from the beginning, as it's much more versatile and almost easier, once a person gets onto it. My analogy would be that beginners (speaking for myself when I was one also) want to fly a plane that is controlled like an rc car. A decent high wing trainer with ample dihedral will allow for that. With ailerons, the difference is that you have to have a feel for how the plane itself really wants to fly, and then be a gentle on the controls, voting member in the scenario. Once a person has that feel however, they'll never look back and will want aileron control.
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