Yeah Doc, I'm with you. I always went zero-zero. However my flying buddy has a ARF Vector 40 and watching it fly it seems to fly level laps with a nose high, tail low attitude. I know that a symmetrical wing has to have a slight positive angle of attack to develop lift, and wondered if it was aligned in the fuselage with that slight positive angle, then the wing would be positive but the profile of the fuselage would seem to be level flying by as you watch it go around the circle in level laps. I thought perhaps the ARF had the wing at a slight negative angle which makes the wing needing to fly at a positive angle, the visual cue of the fuselage being nose high and tail low. I have observed other stunters with this fuselage nose high, tail low flying style and wondered what caused it. Maybe smarter guys than me can comment.
