FC – “Am I correct in my assumption that a large part of the thick airfoil on clpa planes is to hold back the engine?”
I think that’s probably true. The general trend today seems to be to bolt a bunch of horsepower on the nose. Back in “the old days”, we flew some rather large airplanes on Fox .35 engines. Today these same airplanes are flown with .40 to .46 size engines.
I noticed this when I returned after about 35 year layoff. The horsepower thing along with thick airfoils and more drag in the current designs.
The way I see this is the increased drag along with higher horsepower creates a model that flies in a narrower speed band than did the old stuff. The drag keeps the speed variations down. This would be a good thing for the electrics too.
Remember how we use to fly faster with the old stuff. Wingovers were a classic example of trading kinetic for potential energy. You had to fly fast enough to carry some speed over the top of maneuvers like a wingover to have any kind of tension overhead. I probably lost most of my airplanes due to loss of line tension aka control in the overhead eights. I can remember being on my knees more than once while flying the second eight. Today, overhead line tension is not a concern even at the slower speeds.
More to the point of this thread, with properly balanced props, the need for lateral rigidity in the nose goes way down for electrics. Most of the weight savings can be had up front but as Ron pointed out there are still the same aerodynamic stresses present on the airplane regardless of type of power source.
I think I still like the idea of putting the batteries on or close to the CG. Just one less mass moment to deal with. I do wonder though if this would translate into a pitch sensitive, twitchy airplane if the nose moment of inertia was reduced too much.
There also problems associated with a model being too light. (I hope Sparky doesn’t read this part!
) So I don’t think we can go nuts with weight reduction.