Bill Gaylord wrote:I've flown the 190, Zero, and Spitfire at wing loadings of 14 oz sq/ft and greater. The 1/16 scale models are very manageable for grass landings at wing loadings of 14 oz/sq-ft. My models all have sheeted fuses and partially sheeted wings, which could easily be built lighter. From my experience with the series in general, about 12oz AUW is where they start to become more difficult to land, where taller grass is a benefit. I would consider landing one of these at 10oz AUW to be nearly an effortless landing
Fully sheeted models weigh. I recently finished the B25 with an AUW of 7.25oz, obviously not fully sheeted. I haven't seen any examples of your building style, so there would be nothing to compare them with that I'm aware of. There was a guy who used to give Guillows advice on RCG. He always stated unrealistically light AUWs and wing loadings. It eventually became obvious that he hadn't built, converted and/or flown any of the models he commented on, if many at all. That said, as a rule, I prefer to give suggestions based on actual relevant, proven, and documented experiences, versus advice. For that reason, I don't comment much about rubber flying models. You give a lot of advice concerning r/c conversions of these models, for a guy who hasn't demonstrated proficiency with any of them, as far as I know.dirk gently wrote:That's interesting to read about a completely different building style to my own. I can't really imagine how it's possible to get to 12oz in a 25 inch model. I got to 9oz in a 32inch model built for a nitro engine, the same model with an electric motor reached maybe 11oz, and I wasn't really trying to make it light, in fact, I used extremely hard balsa everywhere (because I didn't know any better).
Cheers.
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