theconrodkid
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 12:41 PM |
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woops
http://mysite.wanadoo-members.co.uk/duggy/b52.wmv
[Edited on 6/9/04 by theconrodkid]
who cares who wins
pass the pork pies
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David Jenkins
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 12:53 PM |
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...especially when you know the thing was worth £30,000!
A friend of mine was at that show, and he said that the crash was spectacular.
David
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bob
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 01:47 PM |
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In my own little world i found that very funny,sorry about that all you remote controlers.
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stephen_gusterson
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 02:18 PM |
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just imagine if that was your locost tho.....
atb
steve
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john_p_b
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 02:48 PM |
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30k?!?!
that thing looked awesome when it was flying. looked gutting when it crashed though 
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David Jenkins
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 02:59 PM |
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My friend was talking to the owner(s) prior to the short flight...
8 Engines and their controlling computers, £2000 each.
2 sets of premium-quality radio gear (for 2 pilots - 1 as back-up)
Assorted computing power to keep everything running properly
A whole load of carbon fibre/kevlar panels.
etc, etc
David
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marktigere1
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 03:24 PM |
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I used to fly model Helicopters. Not cheap but its not in the same league as that plane.
Mark
If a bolt is stuck force it.
If it breaks, it needed replacing anyway!!!
(My Dad 1991)
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Peteff
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 04:10 PM |
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What happened ?
To the commentary, it stopped before the crash. How much time and effort went into that thing?
yours, Pete
I went into the RSPCA office the other day. It was so small you could hardly swing a cat in there.
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mangogrooveworkshop
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 04:11 PM |
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Rob Lane
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 04:46 PM |
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Looking at video, it almost looks like someone else switched their transmitter on. Perhpas sour grapes?
Used to happen a lot in model car racing, to the extent they had transmitter pounds to keep them in until race.
Seen guys in championship lead suddenly veer off track and crash. Obvious it was a rogue transmitter.
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Hellfire
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 05:16 PM |
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That happened to me... mine was just down to crap flying skills!
Though again, not in the same league.
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Deckman001
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 07:19 PM |
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I thought it looked like they got the direction wrong, ie plane was comming towards rather than going away, all though this is a basic error, not the
sort of thing a pro flyer would do, I have a copter that i was learning to fly, but couldn't ever get the hang of, destined for E-bay now me
thinks
Jason
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Viper
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 07:28 PM |
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Looked to me he didn't have enough airspeed, seemed to fall out of the air when turning back into wind...
Been there done that.
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Jasper
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| posted on 6/9/04 at 08:57 PM |
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Was that the one they built on the Home & Leisure Model Show??? Not that I watched it of course 
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sgraber
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| posted on 7/9/04 at 03:18 AM |
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That was an amazing model, in all aspects. It breaks my heart to think about how the builder must have felt when it augered in... Such a pity...
Cool video though! Too bad it didn't crash in plain view so we could have enjoyed the splendor of the event.
Steve Graber
http://www.grabercars.com/
"Quickness through lightness"
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Browser
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| posted on 3/7/05 at 07:52 AM |
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FOr anyone interested in this old thread, he's rebuilding it. Have a look here
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theconrodkid
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| posted on 3/7/05 at 01:57 PM |
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he certanly is a hero,better luck next time
who cares who wins
pass the pork pies
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bigandy
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| posted on 4/7/05 at 03:34 PM |
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The official investigation conducted by the LMA (large model association, who examined the aircraft/pilot to get the CAA exemption for a model plane
weighing considerably more than 20kg) put it down to pilot error. I agree. The model B52 had a control system similar to the full size, in that
control about the roll axis was accomplished using spoilers only (no ailerons).
Spoilers can only work by reducing the liff a wing produces, so they can only ever rotate the wing downwards. Now if the wing has a fairly low
airspeed anyway, deploying the spoilers is going to reduce what little lift the wing is producing, resulting in very little roll authority. this is
wosrened when the aircraft is in a highly banked turn (think of the lift required to keep it in the air. If the wing is not parallel with the ground,
it has to produce more lift to stay up. Spoilers reduce the lift etc.). This is why the full size B52 has limitations on the bank angle it can fly
at low airspeeds.
When the model crashed, I think it was pilot error that allowed too large a bank angle occur (maybe orientation problems?), making it difficult to
keep the nose of the plane pointing in the right direction. When he tried to correct the excessive bank angle with opposite roll, the spoiler did
it's job of reducing the lift over the high wing, but reduced the lift so much, that it entered a spiral dive, followed by the landing!
Gordon did rebuild the B52 (the crash was last year some time) over the winter, and unfortunately crashed it on the test flights when it was being
re-examined for CAA exemption....
Oh, and most of the equipment in it was sponsored from the manufacturers....
Cheers
Andy
Dammit! Too many decisions....
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