I think many people built the Strega ARF/ARC or even the kit with the stock flaps and most certainly it didn't fly well even with rounded LE, specially if power with a detuned stunt engine. This thing needs some serious power to drive it through the corners and against the wind.
Stregas got a bad reputation down here. Having 3 ARC in stock and no body buying I decided to built one the right way, put a powerful and properly setup engine on the nose and show how's this business is done. My initial idea was to show and sell, but the darn thing flew so well that exceeded my own expectations, it quickly became my No1 competing model for now.
After Unknown Pilots #1 and 2 flew an ARF Strega at the first International ARF-Off (coming in 1 and 2, by the way) shortly before the 2007 TT, I took the opportunity to check the airfoil on the Silver/Red Strega that Kent flies. The critical part of the airfoil (i.e. the first inch or so) was COMPLETELY different from the ARF version. The ARF came to a point and complied with the usual "45 degree departure" angle people have been using since 1951 to fair the leading edge into the sheeting. Kent's was much more blunt and couldn't have been achieved with a standard square LE on it's side. I think that's a pretty critical difference. The basic Patternmaster-type design isn't great by Impact standards but it's perfectly competent if executed correctly. I think that's were the ARFs seem to have missed the boat.
I agree that lots of power is required -that's why I am concerned about ST51s. The ARFs are pretty heavy as they come and the airfoil (despite difficulty generating lift) is pretty draggy. Plus it's just big. As long as people want to use 4-2 break motors or 4-strokes, the old rules about size/weight/engine size still applies. 35-sized=525-575 squares and <45 oz, 46-sized=620-660 square inches and <56 oz, ST60=700-750 and <65 oz. The Strega is clearly in the ST60 range (not surprising since the basic Patternmaster was designed around the ST60) and first flew with that. You might get away with a Saito 56 (snice you can run 4-strokes gutted out to the max without them getting jumpy) but I certainly wouldn't try anything less than that. I am sure that you could overcome a lot of the issues with a RO-Jett or PA61 on a pipe and just use brute force to keep the speed up in the corners, but if you have those you probably ought to build a better airplane for it.
Once the airfoil on the ARF-Off champion model was blunted (in 10 minutes, at the field, with a hand rasp and a positive mental outlook), it was reportedly flyable. I expect it has all the usual Patternmaster/Cardinal type response (slow/heavy around neutral, explosion corners, massive control loading - which is about how it flew with the pointy leading edge, except you add abrupt stalling in even soft corners and some round maneuvers) but that's clearly a matter of preference and is probably intentional. Fix the stalls and the ARF-Off airplane was flyable enough.
But in comparison, and sticking to ARFs - the Vector is clearly in a different time zone in terms of performance. Reasonable control linearity (a little "exponential" compared to Impact/TP/Infinity but easy enough to adjust to), even control pressures throughout the travel. Of course the handle loads are much less just because it's smaller but it's much more consistent and doesn't take two hands to get out of level flight. That's one reason the Strega was so hard to keep from stalling with the pointy LE - it takes tremendous force to get it to do anything, but only a tiny bit more and it's cranks up into a very tight corner. Same with all the Patternmaster/Cardinal-type airplanes - actually, the ARF Cardinal as it comes is even more like that, but the LE is blunt and it's light enough to not stall when it happens. The fix to the Cardinal is to take about 1/2-3/4" of the TE of the flap, and I expect that you might get the same thing on the Strega. It might make it more prone to stalls but I think the flap or lack thereof is not the issue- it's separation at the LE, and putting on big flaps isn't going to fix that.
Brett