I have recovered my SIG Primary Force with MonoKote in the same colors as the original. Did it in stages with the fuselage first because all the Chinacote covering was coming apart and falling off the tail and nose of the fuselage and the tail feathers. After recovering, the model was a couple of ounces heavier, and tail heavy. And it didn't fly worth a crap!

I added necessary nose weight, and went through several trimming sessions, but the model still flew like crap. The best way to describe it is it looked like it was really banging a wing on inside corners, and yawing terribly. Didn't look that way to me on the outside corners. Part of the process was removing the 3/4 ounce tip weight and taping it to the inboard wing!! And the outboard wing was still heavy!!! I made some progress, but then suddenly the covering on the outboard wing started to come apart like the fuselage did, so I relented and recovered the outboard wing. Suddenly the airplane was more in balance laterally. I recovered the inboard wing, added all the trim and new kit decals. Before I started this whole process, the airplane weighed 45 ounces, and I had a tape label on the inboard wing with that written on it. After the fuse recover job, and adding 1 1/2 ounces of nose weight it weight 47 ounces. I checked this several times using the same scale. Now, after a recover of the wings, the weight is back at 45 ounces, with the additional nose weight!!!??? BUT the model flies just like id did before and I even put the 3/4 ounce tip weight back in. Might take 1/4 ounce back out, and open up the line spacing, but the bottom line is I got my good old P-Force back!
This little story lead me to wonder, what is the average life of an ARF? Not any one design or brand in particular, but ARFs in general flown by you guys out there. I don't want to get into a discussion about what to change on what airplane and such, just mainly the longevity related to use. I think the P-Force came on the market in January of 2006 and I got one of the first ones that I know of through the hobby shop I work at and built it right away, and flew it in our February "Ice-O-Lated" contest and took second with it after only three or four trim flights. I have flown mine QUITE a bit and have been through three sets of lines, and three engines, ending up with the OS .32F Randy Smith rework that is in it now. While I had it stripped down, I checked over the structure carefully to fix any hidden cracks or breaks, and really didn't find anything out of the ordinary. Control system from the bell crank on back is still the original stock components. So if I counted my fingers correctly. I have been flying this particular model for 7 years.
Has anybody else had an ARF in continuous service that long, or longer? Again, just curious about the age of the airplanes and not a "which is best" discussion. I already have my opinion on that.
Type at you later,
Dan McEntee