The Twist-O-Jet! What a hoot that thing was. With help from my buddy John
Grigsby we modified a Twister by cutting off the cockpit and building a mount;
kind of like a tray, to mount a K&B 21 motor and ducted fan unit to. We then cut
the rudder and added twin rudders, like a Heinkel 162 Salamander. We also
changed the landing gear to tricycle gear.
Overall, it was pretty heavy and we had to add quite a bit of nose weight. I also
replace the throttle with a venturi with a long intake. As Doug said, the plane took
a long time to get into the air and then didn't have enough power to effectively
stunt. The lap times were just fine and I could fly level and climb and dive fine.
I was also able to do round loops. After awhile I decided to come out of the loops
and try some inverted flight. When I first made the transition to inverted the motor
quit. So, I began gliding it down for an inverted landing. Once I got back to level
(inverted still) the motor refired! Bob G was there and he couldn't believe it.
I think the extended intake with the venturi sitting on top of it starved the motor.
I should have left the NVA at the base of the intake before extending it. After the motor
refired and I was able to finally stop laughing I flew out the tank and landed. In an
effort to try to get more power out of the system John and I fabricated a fiberglass
extension for the fan unit. Our thinking was that the unit was so short that if we extended
it and slightly decreased the size of the exit maybe this would compress the exiting
air and give us more power. Wrong! This didn't work, and it actually had less power.
We cut the extension down to only about 2 or 3 inches in length and this helped greatly.
Still not enough power to properly stunt, though.
All in all it was a lot of fun to goof around with and was a blast to fly. The entertainment
factor alone made it worth it. As Sparky said earlier, with the proliferation of EDF units
available there just might be a way to get one (or two) working in a stunter. I think the
main problem would still be as Doug described, getting any drive out of the corners.
Later, Steve