I have read Bret Bucks "bench trimming" article and have tried to follow it and others as well. As a result, almost all of my new planes have "flown right off the bench" so to speak. BUT, today, I had a real thrill, twice actually. A guy that has launched me on many occasions with out any problems, launched my new Skylark. As it took off, I thought the lines had snagged the grass (impossible actually), but that is what I thought. It came in at me. I pulled the handle back and backed up quickly. The plane got airborne and snapped into regular flight. What a tug. The rest of the flight was almost perfect. First flight, full pattern, with very little to trim. Had to move the lines about 1/8 inch forward. All else just great. Second launch, same pit man, same results. It again came in at me, only this time the prop broke, thankfully. Engine died trying to eat grass. LOL
Well, the pit man thought it was his fault the first time and was shown, by others, how to launch a CL plane. Redundant, but he took the blame. Me, I am so used to planes chasing me, I just sighed with relief the darn thing didn't gore me.
Seems the tail wheel was arranged to turn the plane to the left. Ah, this is the one I didn't roll on the ground to check how it would taxi. This is important, always during the bench test roll it on the floor for at least ten feet to see how it tracks. A slight right turn, OK. NOTHING to the left, ever. My pit man was not to blame, much to his relief and I told him so. If I didn't trust him to launch me correctly, I would never had asked him to do so. He is a true gentleman and took all blame when he didn't have to. It was my fault for forgetting an important step in bench trimming a model. A .51 coming at you ain't funny.
