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Author Topic: My new PDK RM Jr. Trainer  (Read 799 times)

Offline Mark Mc

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My new PDK RM Jr. Trainer
« on: October 16, 2023, 07:59:32 PM »
At the annual control line contest at Reeves field last month, a young boy and an elderly visitor showed up at the contest, but when there was a lull in the competition flying I realized that there was not a club trainer that we could have used to put the youngster or the retread up in in the circle.  I talked to a couple of other club members and they agreed we could use a club trainer.

I also realized that it’s been a few years since I built a Ringmaster for the annual Fly-A-Thon.  So I figured I’d kill two birds with one trainer.  The other two club members said that a C.G. L’il Wizard would be good, but it gets pretty windy around here.  I thought a .15 sized plane would make for a better trainer in the variable winds at the field.  I also thought that a slab wing would be better than a built up wing.  So, thinking on it for a little while, I decided on a Pat King Ringmaster Jr. Trainer.  Pat King sells kits for all his plans, but he also will sell a .pdf file of any of his planes for $5.  I contacted him and got a .pdf of the plane and looked them over.  Now, I am congenitally incapable of building anything exactly per the plans.  But, since this was to be a club plane and not my own, I resisted.  The only changes I made were to install a bass wood strip along the leading edge of the wing for prang protection, use a hardwood dowel insert in the wing for the bellcrank, and a wire skid at the back.  I also tapered the top and bottom rear of the wing rather than leaving it square.

I won’t do a build thread because this is basically just a Beginner’s Ringmaster, just .15 sized.  I built it for a Medallion .15 engine, being a Cox Fanboy.  I just used an aftermarket head that uses standard glow plugs, as I’m the only Cox fanatic in the club, and the only one likely to have a precious .15 glow head.  Everyone has a standard glow plug in their flight box if one burns out.






The only things I’ll talk about are a couple of things that I’ve found out over the years when building sheet wing planes.  When I used to cut out the wing slots for slab wing planes I’d invariably cut the slot with a slant.  So I’d end up doing a lot of sanding to get the slot right.  It never seemed to be right and the slot would always be too large for a tight fit.  One day I had an epiphany.   I realized that my tee sander would be perfect for the job, using the leg I’d normally hold in my fingers as a guide.  I just turn the sander 90 degrees and sanded the slot perfectly.







The other thing I learned the hard way is to cut out the wing slot and engine bearer slots before cutting out the rest of the fuselage shape.  If you cut the fuselage blank before you cut the slot and sand it to shape, you can put too much pressure while holding the top and bottom of the fuselage blank and crack the fuse below the wing cutout.




Mark

Offline 944_Jim

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Re: My new PDK RM Jr. Trainer
« Reply #1 on: October 16, 2023, 09:20:16 PM »
That's pretty cool, Mark. What is the wingspan?

I'd like to hear how your glow head works out. Is it a KamTechnik, MECOA, or an old Charlie's head?

Offline Mark Mc

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Re: My new PDK RM Jr. Trainer
« Reply #2 on: October 17, 2023, 03:31:13 PM »
Jim, it's a MECOA adapter.  It came on the engine when I acquired it.  I don't rightly remember where I got the engine, most likely off of eBay.

Mark
« Last Edit: October 18, 2023, 12:34:00 PM by Mark Mc »

Offline Dennis Leonhardi

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Re: My new PDK RM Jr. Trainer
« Reply #3 on: November 03, 2023, 02:10:34 AM »
Really good thoughts here!  I carted around a Flite Streak Trainer with a McCoy .19 Red Head engine for several years and it served the purpose really well.  Finally left it with a 15-year-old neighbor who mastered inside & outside loops, eights, inverted flight and flying 2 in a circle with it. All sheet construction is so much easier to repair.

Completely agree: .15 to .19 much better than 1/2-A, solid sheet balsa, love your use of hardwood.  I've often used bass "sticks" to make wings solid, and a strip down the middle of a profile fuselage works wonders too.

The Flite Streak Trainer (Brodak now makes it) uses plywood to beef up the center section of the wing too, but Pat's kit looks great for a .15 and his kits are awesome.

One other thing I've done for years is to epoxy a dowel through the fuselage vertically at the wing/leading edge joint.  You won't believe how much that solidifies that joint until you've tried it.

Kudos!

Dennis
Think for yourself !  XXX might win the Nats, be an expert on designing, building, finishing, flying, tuning engines - but you might not wanna take tax advice from him.  Or consider his views on the climate to be fact ...


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