Brent:
I have never tried the 2814 and I have a boatload of 2200 4s batteries with no real purpose in life. Ny Nobler has a 2826 in it and it is nose heavy but flies OK. Which 2814 would you recommend? I assume that it has the same fwd mounts as the 2820 and would just "pop" in.
Ken
Sorry to Steve for the thread hijack, but the info is usable.
Ken, the Cobra 2826 is way, way more motor than what is needed for a Nobler sized plane. Just dropping one size down from the 2826 to the 2820 would drop 1.16oz directly off the nose. That and a 2200/4s should yield quite the weight savings. My Gieseke Nobler was around 44-45oz as equipped above with an ounce+ of lead in the tail to get it to turn well. It would accelerate effortlessly straight up during the wingover and anything vertical.
Depending on the weight of your plane, the 2814 might be on the borderline for power, but there are very successful examples of ARF Noblers/Orientals with 2814/3536 sized motors powering them.
(Joe Daly's arf Nobler conversions weigh 43/44oz rtf with a Cobra 2814 850kv/Exceed 3015 910kv) The Cobra 2814/16 1050kv weighs 107 grams (3.77 oz.) and is rated for 450 Watts of Max Continuous Power on a 4-cell Li-Po. Good* to around a 40oz model
The Cobra 2820/12 970kv 138 grams (4.87 oz.) and is rated for 590 Watts of Max Continuous Power on a 4-cell Li-Po. Good* up to a 54oz model
The Cobra 2826/10 930kv weighs 171 grams (6.03 oz.) and is rated for 660 Watts of Max Continuous Power on a 4-cell Li-Po. Good* up to a 60oz model
*Good* Using the 11 watts per ounce rule of thumb, which is another way of stating around 175 watts per pound, for those that calculate that way.
In the RC world, they like to be 175-200 watts+ per pound for 3D flying and endless vertical performance. We don't fly at full throttle like the 3d guys, or fly out from a dead stop in those hanging on the prop maneuvers, but the watts/ounce formula at least gives us a rough range of motor capability/power selection. YMMV *