Yesterday evening the wind and rain both stopped long enough to go fool around with the toys. I've been doing a lot more building then flying for the last year or two and I've got several planes that have yet to be flown.
Last night was the first flight for my new BiSlob. It was scratch built from the Flying Models artical and blown up magazine plans. The engine is a Fox 35 that I got for free off ebay. It had been in a bunch of junk engines. Everyone of them was burned up or otherwise trashed. The Fox was missing all the front end hardware and the nva, and someone had tried to polish the case with a buffing wheel. The compound had removed the Fox 35 script, along with the rough cast texture, and so on. The engine had been full of compound. I cleaned it out, but didnt replace anything, just threw 40th anniversary spray bar and old flat sided needle in it, along with a 25 thrustwasher and a random prop washer. The fuel tank is a brass 3-4oz tank of unknown origin, probably Japanese, also from ebay. Even the prop came from Ebay, a junker APC 10-6. Anyway, it started on the third flip and ran the sweetest 4-2-4 you've ever heard. The plane is a handful like any BiSlob, hard to fly level but hovers and loops like no other. The tank ran out and it landed without breaking a thing. I don't know that I've actually ever landed a BiSlob on the wheels before.
Next up was the big Orange Skyray 35. It got some play last summer with a Fox 19 stunt and BB, but the engines never co-operated. Now its got a 1954-ish vintage Fox 35 that was about $20 off Ebay. It fired a couple times, but there was something up with the fuel delivery. When it finally did run for more than a second or two the fuel line fell off the vintage spray bar since it wasn't very long and didn't have a barb.
We were about to head home but we had the 15+ year old Twister in the car with the LA 40. With plenty of daylight left we pulled it out and gave it a shot. The LA started right away and ran beautiful... for about 3 minutes. Then it took off in a two cycle and flew another 7 or 8 minutes in a runaway. We backed it off a couple clicks and I put in a full pattern on it. It ran perfect until about the horizontal sq 8's when it took off in a runaway.
That's about 20 flights now on the LA 40 with every tuning combination under the sun, and it still doesn't work right. Meanwhile the worlds ugliest, most abused, discarded, Fox 35 runs like a clock the first time out.