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General control line discussion => Open Forum => Topic started by: John Castle on April 15, 2009, 08:49:29 PM
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Another broken prop...
Learning to fly inverted is harder than it looks. I think I got my down up <=
Anyway the plane will live to fly another day. :)
John
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Avoid the whole "down is up and up is down" by thinking pf the model in terms of "top and bottom." No matter what the orientation of the airplane, the top and bottom is always the same. If you are upside down, and getting too low, give it "bottom control." It helps me and others to hold my hand and handle parallel to the ground also, but the handle will still have bottom and top to it.
Good luck and have fun,
Dan McEntee
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Hello
I agree that using the "top and bottom" mindset is a big help.. If all your breaking is props your learning better than I did !!!!!
Dalton H.
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John,
I feel ya on this one! I used to tell myself to remember that when inverted, "my pinky pulls up". Just a thought. ;)
James
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Best way to learn inverted flight is to stretch out lazy eights. On the back side you're already thinking "down" to turn it back over, just wait a second or two, then 3 or 4, before giving it that "down". Don't think of it as inverted flying, just think of stretched-out eights. Pretty soon you'll be going most of a lap before turning it back over, then you're almost there.
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I think its been said here before, if you turn the handle sideways, palm up, its very hard to give "up" when the handle is in this position, and if you stop turning with the model it automatically climbs from iverted!
A lot of modellers say this is a bad habit to get into, I've been flying inverted this way for 40 odd years, I,m not a brilliant pilot but I can fly smooth laps inverted this way, and I don't think I've crashed one inverted! every other way though! ;D
Cheers Neville
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When I learned, I did the handle tilt thing. Still kinda do. I fly with the handle tilted to the left upright and to the right inverted. Not sidewise, but just tilted.
Are you coming to Portland this weekend? We can help you there.
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Best way to learn inverted flight is to stretch out lazy eights. On the back side you're already thinking "down" to turn it back over, just wait a second or two, then 3 or 4, before giving it that "down". Don't think of it as inverted flying, just think of stretched-out eights. Pretty soon you'll be going most of a lap before turning it back over, then you're almost there.
What minnesotamodeler said. Your comfort level is raised because 1) all turns start upward, away from the ground, 2) having to wait only a second or two longer than the last time to complete the lazy eight and get back into level flight is MUCH better than "how long can I go inverted before I crash?", 3) progress can be just as gradual and conservative as you like--even it takes you 50 lazy eights to fly one complete lap inverted, you still have a plane in one piece and you are ABOVE ALL having fun!, and finally 4) by the time you start to get comfortable with lazy eights and inverted flight, you are 3/4 of the way to doing an outside loop the EASY way--NOT the way I tried learning them, by the Kamizake Method, where you start up high, dive toward the ground, lose your nerve, and splatter your plane all over the field. The lazy eight way is MUCH easier and better. y1 <=
Hope this helps,
Kim Mortimore
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Thanks for the tips. I will give it a try :D
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It's a bit like putting a man on the moon... everyone thinks its easy. A lot of people also think Control line looks easy but how many of them can actually do it. Keep on trying... you'll get the hang of it with practice.