Actually I just went through and read some of the handle threads so next time I go out to fly I will use a Hot Rock. Sure seems like a safe bet. All the heavy hitters seem to prefer them so I will take their advice.
So I retract everything except the statements regarding practice and commitment. Thanks.
Hi Joe,
I've enjoyed your comments...although we, of course, have a slightly different take on the subject. One area, however, I think could stand a little elaboration from my point of view. Gallons of fuel and practice.
I am an absolute nut case on adapting a stunt ship (and all of its paraphernalia, especially the handle--the interface between the pilot and the machine) to the desires of the pilot. I believe that flying thousands of flights on a poorly refined airplane system so that you can predict the required inputs to get a good output is an inferior way of becoming a winning stunt pilot. Yes, it can be done the other way around and Jimmy was pretty much the poster boy for doing so. He flew thousands of flights on numerous ships in less than state of the art set-ups and trim and competed with the very best. Jimmy felt...and was probably correct...that flying those many gallons of gas were necessary to be competitive. I would also note that he was quite open about having to build something like thirteen airplanes over the space of only a couple of years because they "broke" on a regular basis.
Those that espouse adapting the system to the pilot can remain competitive with very little practice for the simple reason that, when they system is properly refined, flying competitive patterns isn't much more difficult than drawing the shapes on a piece of paper. Modest and repeatable inputs result in the airplane going where it needs to go without any "adaptation" by the pilot. He/she can merely point the pointy end where it needs to go and the system will do the rest. This remains largely so even in bad air...calm to windy and turbulent.
Brett is probably the poster boy for such success (although Bob Hunt's stuff allows him to always be competitive whether or not he's burned many gallons of fuel as well). Ask anyone who has flown one of Brett's airplanes and you will get universal raves about its "point and shoot" nature. Brett burns very little fuel. He had almost no practice time prior to the Team Trials because of work, yet finished a fraction of a point out of the first alternate position.
One step beyond that, last weekend we had the Meat and Meet contest in Woodland. Brett was there after the trials and I was there with my "built in 1991 Trivial Pursuit" that I hadn't flown at all since last October except at the Northwest Regionals in May. At both of those contests I failed to put in an official flight because my heretofore wonderful RoJett .61 simply wouldn't run the same way for more than about five seconds in a row. So there hadn't been a complete "pattern" on the airplane in at least a year.
Long story short, a few days before the Meat and Meet I pulled an old .46 VF off the shelf (the ship was originally built for a .40VF), rebuilt it because the bearings were shot and stuck it in the T.P. I put one flight on it the morning of the contest, found the engine up to the task and then flew it against Brett and got beat...by seven points. My practice flight on it was one of the best flights I've ever flown. The official flights in much warmer air were a bit inferior because the needle setting (part of the "system") wasn't yet "programmed".
The day before I had been helping a good friend get his new KA10 ready for the contest. I watched him fly several "OK" patterns with it but he wasn't happy with its performance and asked if I would fly it. I did so and simply stopped doing tricks after a few attempts because I didn't want to risk the beautiful airplane. The "system" was out of whack...both the airplane and the control system including the handle. The owner was "adapting" to the system instead of adapting it to suit his needs. Over the next several flights we turned the emphasis around by: changing the CG, the flap/elevator throw ratio and dialing in some up or down elevator (forget which...vice flap), added a tab to the outboard flap, tweaked the flap, added some tip weight, opened the spacing on his hard point handle about 1/4" at both ends and a handful of other things.
I then flew the airplane again and, although not yet perfect, was perfectly comfortable flying it through a decent pattern. The next day the young man finished a very competitive third...and had a big smile on his face because his difficult to fly airplane now flew patterns without scaring him periodically.
I know this sounds like a personal puff piece, but the point is to demonstrate how valuable it is to set up the system properly so you don't have to flying thousands of flights to remain competitive. Among the most important parts of the system is that interface between the pilot and the rest of the system...the handle. A stunt pilot limits himself if he doesn't at least investigate the merits/demerits of available alternatives
You are absolutely right, however, about the need to commit to being competitive and I would never suggest that guys like Brett haven't done so. IMHO, however, their commitment to optimizing the system rather than committing to thousands of dedicated hours at the field adapting themselves to a flawed system is a superior approach to a happy stunt "career".
Glad to see you're going to give a shot at a Hot Rock style handle. I look forward to your assessment...and won't be a bit offended if you decide we "upright, unbiased, hardpoint, vertical neutral" troglodytes are full of hot air. Have fun.
Ted
p.s. the combination of an optimized system and burned fuel, however, is tough to beat. Mssrs Walker, Werwage and Fitzgerald are the poster boys for total commitment!