Dean, if I remember right you kind of found out about it on an R/C pattern plane with to long of a pipe. And you thought at the time it would work for a control line stunt plane. Is that right? Or am I not remembering right. I use to allways read your column when I was flying R/C pattern. Always got a lot of good info.
Hi Jim ... Hi All,
It's even better than that. As I said, Rich Tower and I stumbled on a nearly perfect Stunt-run as part of our late Winter development of the quiet, low-timed OPS 60 rear intake engine that I ran in '86.
We were laughing ourselves silly as I flew all the shapes at WOT with the '85 ship modified to accept the new engine ... I think Rich's exact words were, "Too bad we ain't flying Stunt these days!" The governing characteristics were that good. Now, for those of you who don't remember Rich, he wrenched for Bobby Hunt back in '78. Yeah he's good at it. Anyway, we played with our newfound toy for a second flight, packed the car and debriefed in the car on the way back to his workshop. We filed it all away to "curious" and left it at that ... About 7 or 8 months passed
Then Hungary happened. The U.S. Team did not fare so well, that year. Some of their more communicative flying buddies overseas opined that the Tigre 60 setups all three ran sounded too loud and flew too fast. Bob, Rich and I learned this in Bob's shop from Werwage, who was stopping in Jersey on his way back to Berea from landing at JFK. This intel was hot off the presses. So Billy looks at us and asks if we know what to do about the loudness problem! Rich and I stared hopping around like ADHD kids! We told Billy to plan a trip back for a long weekend in a couple of months, and to bring a ship he didn't mind cutting up. Then Hunt was informed that he was coming out of Stunt retirement as of that second. The rest as they say ...
And that's how it happened,
Dean P.