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General control line discussion => Open Forum => Topic started by: ringmaster on January 22, 2015, 04:45:00 PM
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Hello, does anyone have any photos how to mount a belcrank in foam wing core.
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I think Bob Hunt has a whole booklet on how to do it...Mayabe he'll chime in!
I have photos of just about anything else but can't seem to find any on that!
Randy Cuberly
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Go to the Electric Forum and look at The Legacy 40 build by Crist Regotti, at the bottom of the first page you'll see his B/C assembly. Send him a Personnel Message he might have pics of the install. If not he can explain it. I know how just describing it..
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Yup, contact me if you need to. I have lots of pictures and know how on foam wings.
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Solid or hollow core? Internal or external bell crank?
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Ringmaster,
Watch your email.
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I would also be interested in learning about some of the ways to install the bellcrank assembly inside of the foam wing panel.
I have built a few foam wing planes with external leadouts and the bellcrank mounted on a pinned tab. I haven't ventured any further down the building skill path and installed the bellcrank/leadouts inside the wing panel yet. I'm very interested in learning from all you seasoned experts about what methods have been successful and which methods were unsuccessful in your foam wing designs.
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Thank you very much for your nice photos of the belcrank in foam wing makes things a lot clearer Bob Hunt you are very kind , Bob how much for a set of foam wings for a Sig Twister and Sig Banshee cost plus shipping and do you take US money orders for payment, I live in Canada Thanks
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Hi! I know I may be a bit late but this is how I've done it on a number of my foam wings and haven't had a failure yet that can be attributed to a failure of the bellcrank ot the mount .... lousey piloting ..... well that's a whole 'nutha' story! All of my foam wings have just been from the inexpensive beaded foam that I sheet over usually with an application of Sig Bond glue. Basically, I epoxy the two halves together, cutout the center section so the plywood bellcrank mounting plate will sit just below the top surface of the wing, cutout the channel and epoxy in place the plastic housing for the .018 leadout wires, apply the wing sheeting, make the cutout for then install the elevator pushrod and "bingo" that's how I do it!! Hope it helps.
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Thank you my friend showing your Sig Banshee foam wing belcrank mounting with sigment glue.
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You're almost as funny as Howard!
Derek
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Do as Bobby H says and you will have no problems. I still remember my first kit of the SIG Mustang Stunter. I did the bell crank mount like the instructions. Can't remember how many flights I had on it when all of a sudden controls were locked and no more Mustang. The second one has ply plates top and bottom in the foam core. Now I do it like Bobby and the other pros.
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Any pics of the profile installation.
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Hey Bob,
Could you elaborate on the bellcrank mount method used on this neat profile plane, the "Joe Nall Cadet"?
Actually, could you elaborate on that plane a bit also?
(http://stunthanger.com/smf/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=19749.0;attach=138332;image)
(http://stunthanger.com/smf/index.php?action=dlattach;topic=30361.0;attach=127032;image)
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That is sure a nice looking plane Joe Nalls Cadet. Where you get the plans for that nice plane and who cut the foam wings for it for electrics, sure looks neat I think, I sure love it. Thanks for letting me look at it.
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I would contact Bobby Hunt his self.
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So in essence the bell crank is mounted to the fuselage and it just so happens that the wing gets in the way - foam or not. :D
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Lots of nice construction features which makes this a fast and easy build for beginners..
Couple of questions
What material is fuse nose section, or is it a lamination ?
The solid wire leadout terminations at the bellcrank, was the twist done with any special tooling or just holding the loop with pliers and wrapping by hand. What size wire you using there ?
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As his post shows , Bob has another great way to mount a bellcrank in the foam wing,
I flew one of Bob's Joe Nall Cadet models at Joe Nall, although designed as a trainer, the model performs well doing the full ama pattern, it is a great transition model to help anyone to progress to intermediate class and in the right hands can be very competitive in most profile events .
Good solid design, innovative building materials, lightweight , simple , all makes this a very impressive model ,
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Hello Bob, That is cool looking twin electric powered plane. I bet she will really move fast. That is real sweet I like that Thanks for showing me that.
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I have 20 total inches of disk span on this ship.
I know this belongs in the engineering forum, but -- I suspect it's disk area that matters, in which case you have around 157 square inches of total disk area, which is pretty close to the disk area of a single 14 inch diameter prop.
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Hmm. I was latching onto your "airbrakes" comment, which I think is going to go with disk area.
But yes, having a wider swath of air blowing over the flaps and elevators should make a difference. And you can probably lay a valid claim to being more of a pilot than me, and certainly have infinitely more experience than I do with CL twins.
Hmm again.
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Hmm. I was latching onto your "airbrakes" comment, which I think is going to go with disk area.
But yes, having a wider swath of air blowing over the flaps and elevators should make a difference. And you can probably lay a valid claim to being more of a pilot than me, and certainly have infinitely more experience than I do with CL twins.
Hmm again.
UUUhhhhhhh...Yeah Tim, Bob is a better pilot than about 98% of us and about as good as the other 2%. LL~ LL~
Randy Cuberly
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Thanks so much for these diagrams. I have found them to be very helpful.
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I'll dig through my pictures but until I find one:
The simplest way is to use a half inch hard balsa center rib. Mount the bellcrank on a 1.25in. strip of 5ply hard plywood. The bellcrank should be half an inch from the end. Make the strip over long, about 3in. long for trimming.
Locate the mount so the bellcrank bolt is behind the spar and install it so the bellcrank is more or less centered between the spars and the bellcrank is aimed for the push rod(s) to hit the flap horn(if used) and the elevator horn.
Lead out holes, if the wing is not hollow, can be done with a 1/8in. drop wire jig. Make a couple of guides, mount then on a 4-5ft piece of ply wood near one end and screw it to a wall. Make sure the two guide tubes line up vertically from the board and let the 1/8 wire drop freely, and parallel to the board. Mark the location the wire will follow with a line to the end of the board.
Make another jig assembly to hold the wing panel in place. That usually is a piece of foam left over from the sheet the panel is cut from. It may need some foam backing and a piece of plywood to stiffen it.
Cut the leadout holes from the tip to the root. Take some care, and do some tests to make sure you can line everything up properly and the wire will drop smoothly. Heat the end of the rod red hot. Drop it into a scrap strip of foam and see how it tracks. It will probably take 2-3 reheatings of the drop wire to make it through a 24-30in. panel.
The leadout hole maker can be made as sophisticated as you want. I was able to melt leadouts into 24in. panels just by marking the path lightly on the panel, heat the end of the wire, and doing the melting by eyeball. Just take care not to burn yourself.
Or you can a go hole hog with a motor driven table-slide for the foam, an electrically heated tip, and even a stepper driver run by a Raspberyy Pi or other mini-micro processor.