by kittyfritters » Sat Feb 21, 2009 4:19 pm
The reason that the Hellcat and Avenger have the reputation as the best fliers in the 500 series is that they have the most wing area. The also have good tail area, and despite being models of radial engined aircreft, relatively long nose moments. Also, even with tapered wings, the tips are not sharply tapered making them easy to trim.
Building a 500 series light with the wood supplied in the kit, usually means anything under 30 grams with the rubber. This is usually achieved by running the sheet stock through a thickness sander and/or cutting lightening holes in the formers and ribs and reducing the width of the wing and tail surface outlines. Using all of the above, and covering with Japanese tissue, I built a 23 gram Hellcat with a kit that came with 15 pound/cubic foot wood.
Building lighter requires substituting the wood. I built a Bf-109 that weighed 19 grams, all up, but I used lighter wood, 1/16 inch strip stock outlines for the keels and 1/32 inch sheet formers aft of the center of gravity. This one is definitely not tail heavy.
Tailheavyness is a major problem with most of the 500 series kits. The Spitfire and Hurricane are the worst offenders. For these two you have to use every trick you can to keep the tail light. One good one is to move the motor peg forward by one former. The motor is shortened, but moving bulk of the motor forward moves the C.G. forward and more than makes up for the shorter motor in ease of trimming.
While the Hurricane is the most tail heavy of the bunch, the Spitfire and Stuka are the most difficult to trim because of their sharply tapered wing tips. It's difficult to keep them from falling off into a spin during the transition from powered flight to glide and if either of them stalls under power they probably will bore in without recovering. The Stuka dispite it's high drag is probably the easier of the two to trim if you make the ailerons and flaps adjustable (Sandwich tie wire hinges.) Trimming either of them will remind you that balance is not just fore and aft, but side to side.
Don't be discouraged! You will become a very skilled builder if you persist in trying to make 500 series kits fly. Even the Stuka and the Rufe, built by an experienced builder, can be made to fly for 30 seconds. It's very satisfying and you will amaze other modelers at the flying field.