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Author Topic: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment  (Read 59626 times)

Offline Kim Mortimore

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Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« on: September 28, 2013, 01:25:18 PM »
A question occurred to me in relation to Ted's famous (and very interesting to me) experiment.  If it were possible to produce a scaled-up 60-size version of Ted's Tucker in which all else is identical: balsa density, number of dope coats, proportionally higher engine weight, etc. is it likely that the same need for extra weight would occur?

In other words, would the larger control surfaces require sufficiently greater control force so that additional weight might be required, OR, would the greater absolute mass of the larger plane without ballast alone be sufficient to eliminate the problem?  Thanks in advance for replies.  
« Last Edit: September 29, 2013, 02:48:30 PM by Kim Mortimore »
Kim Mortimore
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Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #1 on: September 28, 2013, 02:12:54 PM »
A question occurred to me in relation to Ted's famous (and very interesting to me) experiment.  If it were possible to produce a scaled-up 60-size version of Ted's Tucker in which all else was identical: balsa density, number of dope coats, proportionally higher engine weight, etc. is it likely that the same need for extra weight would occur?

In other words, would the larger control surfaces require sufficiently greater control force that additional weight might be required, OR, would the greater absolute mass of the larger plane without ballast alone be sufficient to eliminate the problem?  Thanks in advance for replies. 

   Maybe not, because as you scale something, the area goes up as the square of the linear dimensions, and the weight goes up as the cube of the dimensions.

     I'd have to think about it. I have seen a few somewhat larger airplanes that suffered greatly from being built too light and too powerful which made the trimming beyond the capabilities of the pilot to diagnose and correct.

    Brett

Offline Jim Kraft

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #2 on: September 28, 2013, 05:38:54 PM »
I am far from an expert in this kind of thing, but I think there is an optimum weight for every plane. I have an old Nobler that was given to me that weighs 52 ounces and is the best cornering plane I have ever flown. It turns extremely tight corners with no bounce and comes out right on line. Even with the Fox 35 that's in it.
Jim Kraft

Offline Phil Krankowski

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #3 on: September 28, 2013, 07:26:40 PM »
When you increase the size of an airframe, unless you are building with solid wood, the final density of the skinned and finished airplane will be lower than a smaller ship.  This is a large function of built up construction containing mostly air volume. 

A large plane that is too light may benefit from ballast at the CG...although how much in CL?  I know RC gliders, particularly slope gliders, will benefit from ballast under windy conditions. 

The general rule of lighter is better probably still holds.

Phil

Offline Gerald Arana

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #4 on: September 28, 2013, 07:27:36 PM »
I am far from an expert in this kind of thing, but I think there is an optimum weight for every plane. I have an old Nobler that was given to me that weighs 52 ounces and is the best cornering plane I have ever flown. It turns extremely tight corners with no bounce and comes out right on line. Even with the Fox 35 that's in it.

BINGO! That is exactly what I was trying to express in the other (DELETED) thread.  y1

Brett, Not being an AE I like that squared & cubed thing....  I have experienced it in my past (Glider Competitons) The bigger ships fly better for that application.

Will we see you in Napa on the 6th?

Cheers, Jerry

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #5 on: September 29, 2013, 12:05:42 AM »
BINGO! That is exactly what I was trying to express in the other (DELETED) thread.  y1

Brett, Not being an AE I like that squared & cubed thing....  I have experienced it in my past (Glider Competitons) The bigger ships fly better for that application.

Will we see you in Napa on the 6th?]

    Perhaps, judging as usual, but likely not flying.

     Brett

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #6 on: September 29, 2013, 12:09:29 AM »
When you increase the size of an airframe, unless you are building with solid wood, the final density of the skinned and finished airplane will be lower than a smaller ship.  This is a large function of built up construction containing mostly air volume. 

A large plane that is too light may benefit from ballast at the CG...although how much in CL?  I know RC gliders, particularly slope gliders, will benefit from ballast under windy conditions. 

The general rule of lighter is better probably still holds.

Phil

    The fraction of "air/balsa" is constant if you scale everything up (including the wood thicknesses).

    The Tucker experiment definitively showed that lighter was not always better. That doesn't mean that heavier is always better, either. It depends on a multiplicity of things far beyond the overall mass or wing loading.

    Brett

Offline Russell Shaffer

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #7 on: September 29, 2013, 12:43:44 PM »
Is there an article on this experiment available?  I don't find anything with a Stunt Hanger search. 
Russell Shaffer
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Just North of the California border

Offline Phil Krankowski

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #8 on: September 29, 2013, 02:33:17 PM »
   The fraction of "air/balsa" is constant if you scale everything up (including the wood thicknesses).

    The Tucker experiment definitively showed that lighter was not always better. That doesn't mean that heavier is always better, either. It depends on a multiplicity of things far beyond the overall mass or wing loading.

    Brett

No.  It's not.  If you have a round hole, and increase the diameter by 2x, it has 4x the area but only 2x the perimeter.
  
If the material sizes are increased by the same percentage as the increase of overall scale the density is still going to be reduced.

Phil
« Last Edit: September 29, 2013, 03:33:01 PM by Phil Krankowski »

Offline Kim Mortimore

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #9 on: September 29, 2013, 03:13:56 PM »

A general reminder here to no one in particular---if we get into controversy, please play nice to avoid having this thread get bounced.  Thanks in advance.

......I have seen a few somewhat larger airplanes that suffered greatly from being built too light and too powerful which made the trimming beyond the capabilities of the pilot to diagnose and correct.

    Brett

Brett,
Do these planes all tend to have the same problems, or are the problems all over the place? 
Kim Mortimore
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Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #10 on: October 01, 2013, 01:14:54 PM »
    Perhaps, judging as usual, but likely not flying.

     Brett

C'mon Brett.  You can beat me with the Ruffy again.  I added 10oz to the CG and it flies grrrrrrreat!

Ted

p.s.  Actually, I was just joking about the weight.  It's fine at 42 (the Tucker was 34 before adding the lead).  I did, however, make some changes that you'll find salubrious.

Offline Kim Mortimore

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #11 on: October 01, 2013, 09:54:26 PM »

.....salubrious.


Does wearing a bib help?
Kim Mortimore
Santa Clara, CA

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #12 on: October 01, 2013, 10:38:31 PM »
C'mon Brett.  You can beat me with the Ruffy again.  I added 10oz to the CG and it flies grrrrrrreat!

Ted

p.s.  Actually, I was just joking about the weight.  It's fine at 42 (the Tucker was 34 before adding the lead).  I did, however, make some changes that you'll find salubrious.


   I will likely not find out this weekend, seeing as how I will be at work 10PM-6AM both days. I supposed I could sleep on the drive up, but I am not sure the other people on 680 would be too happy with me.

   Brett

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #13 on: October 02, 2013, 09:36:22 PM »
C'mon Brett.  You can beat me with the Ruffy again.  I added 10oz to the CG and it flies grrrrrrreat!
Ted
p.s.  Actually, I was just joking about the weight.  It's fine at 42 (the Tucker was 34 before adding the lead).  I did, however, make some changes that you'll find salubrious.

I don't have the higher math skills that some of you have on this forum but I always thought if you took 34 and added 10 it would be 44. Is this some new math or a form of calculus?

Just poken at ya
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Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #14 on: October 02, 2013, 10:03:27 PM »
I don't have the higher math skills that some of you have on this forum but I always thought if you took 34 and added 10 it would be 44. Is this some new math or a form of calculus?

Just poken at ya

   It was 8 ounces added at least when Ted and I were doing it.  I recall different starting and ending numbers.

     Ted was referring to adding 10 OZ to the Ruffy (to "help" me, no doubt, at this weekends contest, while he flies something else). The only number 10 that I recall associated with the Ruffy was the $10 I won when Ted and I both flew it at the NWR.  Some wagering was involved. The recollection is really vague, it came out something like this:

CLASSIC STUNT (15 entries)
1. Brett Buck, 549 (no appearance points)
2. Ted Fancher, 537.5  (17 appearance points)

   I paid for it the next day in real stunt.

    Adding 10 oz to the Ruffy may possibly be less than advantageous, but I am sure my ole buddy wouldn't be steering me wrong here. Alas and alak, we won't know since I am on graves for the weekend and going to contests from 8 to 4 with 2-hour drives each way is not in the plan.

   Seriously, however, given that the Ruffy has no problem deflecting the small control surfaces with the available line tension, it does appear to suffer severely with induced drag due to the low aspect ratio. Adding 25% more induced drag (needed to overcome the weight) doesn't solve any problem the airplane has and exacerbates the one it does have, so not likely to be a good idea. You diagnose and solve the problem you have, and it's not always the same problem, so the solution is not the same every time.

     Brett

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #15 on: October 02, 2013, 10:09:55 PM »
I have thought about this for awhile now and I am wondering how you got it to balance latterly? 10 ounces in the belly I am assuming you put it below the wing didn't the out board wing fly high? As far as I know centrifugal force would raise the out board wing. How did you get that to balance? Add more wing tip weight?
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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #16 on: October 02, 2013, 10:15:56 PM »
I now have personal experience with 10 ounces of dead weight (the battery) with my electric plane. I know for a fact that 10 ounces above or below tether will make the plane roll.
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Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #17 on: October 03, 2013, 01:23:23 AM »
I have thought about this for awhile now and I am wondering how you got it to balance latterly? 10 ounces in the belly I am assuming you put it below the wing didn't the out board wing fly high? As far as I know centrifugal force would raise the out board wing. How did you get that to balance? Add more wing tip weight?

      Equally spaced strips of Prather stick-on weights top and bottom, inboard and outboard, right at the CG, and right up next to the fuse sides. I think that 4 "blocks" of weights in 4 strips was 2 ounces, so it went in 2-ounce increments. I think they are still on there, Ted could check. I know that some of them fell off at the Northwest Regionals a few weeks later, so it may be down to +7 3/4 ounces. And yes, Ted did tell on himself for dropping parts.

 In any case, when you do something like this, it is important to remove as many of the other variables as possible, and to make a big enough change that you can be sure you can tell that it did something.

    Brett

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #18 on: October 03, 2013, 03:15:43 AM »
A general reminder here to no one in particular---if we get into controversy, please play nice to avoid having this thread get bounced.  Thanks in advance.

Brett,
Do these planes all tend to have the same problems, or are the problems all over the place?  

  Not all the same. The problems with what I will suggest are "too light" airplanes tend to fall into two categories - inadequate line tension to move the controls, and/or inadequate roll and yaw restoring force. A thrid category of "too light" might also be called "too much flap" and can be solved with trim, so lets forget about that one for this discussion.

   The Tucker is an example of the first problem  - just not enough tension to move the controls far enough. Speeding it up increased the line tension but also increased the control force necessary so it didn't help very much. Let's assume that Ted Fancher and his caddy know how to trim a stunt airplane and would have fixed any underlying trim issues. Adding weight to the airplane and changing nothing else increased the ratio of the line tension to the speed, so the control authority went up with more weight, and the control effort stayed the same, so it came out ahead. In fact, the extra weight allowed the airplane to fly more slowly because it could be slowed down and still have adequate line tension for other reasons, so the end result was much slower lap times and much better cornering. I want to say the last flight without was around 4.6 seconds, and the best flights in the same conditions were around 5.2 with the full 8 ounces. At no point was the lift inadequate to the task, to no harm came from that issue, and it had no problems making it to the top of the circle with a Rustler-Merco 40/Tornado 10-4 3b, so no harm there, either.

   The second issue is that with low line tension, there is less roll/yaw restoring force, particularly roll. Yaw get some passive stability from the aerodynamics (rudder/fin), but there's not much in roll aside from the line tension. That's why tipweight is so critical. If you have a large engine with a large prop, there's a lot of roll and yaw torque variatons, but there's not much line tension available to keep the nose pointed the right direction, nor is there a lot of tolerance for any sort of slightly-off trim condition. Speeding up the airplane does help some depending on the problem but many of the possible disturbances are speed-dependent, too. Changing the line tension at the same speed provides more restoring force and is more robust.

   An example of the latter- two airplanes, both about 585 or so square inches, both with PA65s. They aren't the same design, but not way off. One weighs 54, the other 66 ounces. The first was essentially untrimmable, because the massive amounts of torque, p-factor, etc, cannot be handled with the light line tension available. It may also have the "not enough line tension to move the controls" issue but that doesn't make any difference if it can't be put into proper trim.  The second suffers a bit from weight in hot conditions but is otherwise a solid flier. Both airplanes have stellar vertical performance, a PA65 is still just loafing in either case.

    The first airplane could benefit greatly from several changes - either put on a smaller prop and smaller venturi, and let the PA65 8-stroke at 11,000 rpm, replace the PA65 with a 40VF and run it with the small prop, same effect, or, add ballast (like maybe 6-8 ounces) to increase the line tension without the speed.

   The second airplane would likely benefit from being 4-6 ounces lighter, it would increase the sensitivity to trim errors but eliminate the cornering issues in hot weather. It has also benefitted from a different engine setup that reduces the prop diameter, and removes some of the power variation, but not nearly to the degree that would be needed to fix the first airplane.

    Brett

p.s. in the first case someone might also be tempted to "trim for more line tension". Usually, that is a loser in almost any case, because if you have to manufacture line tension with trim tricks (like lots of rudder offset or excessive tip weight) you get wild variations on the line tension as the speed changes.

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #19 on: October 03, 2013, 10:47:02 AM »
I was talking to Ron and he said they flew their 32 ounce planes at 5.8 -6 second laps with fox 35s in the wind no line tension problems. I find that interesting. My guess is one could say ENGINE OFFSET as they did when that plane was designed.
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Offline Kim Mortimore

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #20 on: October 03, 2013, 05:35:47 PM »

Brett,
Thanks kindly for your detailed response to my question.  The concept of dependence on weight for roll recovery is new to me, but seems intuitive once pointed out.  Looks like the BHE approach (Big Honkin' Engine) is not an unmixed blessing.  I find this kind of high-level trim analysis fascinating and informative. 


..... Let's assume that Ted Fancher and his caddy know how to trim a stunt airplane and would have fixed any underlying trim issues......
 

This does seems like a....uhhhhh....fairly reasonable assumption.   LL~

Kim Mortimore
Santa Clara, CA

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #21 on: October 03, 2013, 06:05:58 PM »
I was talking to Ron and he said they flew their 32 ounce planes at 5.8 -6 second laps with fox 35s in the wind no line tension problems. I find that interesting. My guess is one could say ENGINE OFFSET as they did when that plane was designed.

   Running it with a Fox presents a fundamentally different issue than running it with a RM40, mostly, that you had to make it light as possible for vertical performance. Adding significant rudder offset and engine offset (which is very ineffective at increasing line tension, but less offensive in terms of trim than rudder offset) to "manufacture" more tension may well be a good compromise if you have a Fox. It's a very poor compromise if you have much more power - say, enough power to get even a 8-ounce ballasted airplane around the corners and through the hourglass.

    I think the example 54-ounce/585 square inch/PA65 airplane suffered severely from some trim settings that were an attempt to "manufacture" line tension that just made the situation far worse, unnecessarily so. I know it had substantial rudder offset.

   I am not claiming and have never claimed that adding weight is always a good idea.  I merely note that adding weight made it far better in this and several other cases. That proves definitively that always making it lighter doesn't help.

   I will leave the 6-second-lap part to other budding physicists.

     Brett

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #22 on: October 03, 2013, 10:03:01 PM »
Thanks kindly for your detailed response to my question.  The concept of dependence on weight for roll recovery is new to me, but seems intuitive once pointed out.  Looks like the BHE approach (Big Honkin' Engine) is not an unmixed blessing. 

   It's the dependence on line tension for roll recovery, and if there were some way to make more line tension without adding weight, and without causing the roll and yaw forcing functions to go up too (like lots of rudder offset, engine offset, or tip weight), then you would be set. With very limited power, like Sparky's example, then you might be willing to live with some of the trim issues to create more line tension than you would have otherwise. With overkill power, there's no reason to have to make that compromise since adding weight causes no problems but solves the Netzeband wall and roll restoring force issues. It was not a close call in any way, it was WAY better with more weight.

     Brett

Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #23 on: October 03, 2013, 11:39:05 PM »
I don't have the higher math skills that some of you have on this forum but I always thought if you took 34 and added 10 it would be 44. Is this some new math or a form of calculus?

Just poken at ya

Hi Sparky.  No secret math.  I was kidding about the Ruffy which has pretty much always weighed 42 oz.  Built strictly stock.  It was my Tucker Special that was built ultra light (lots of 1/32 wood and not much of a finish with a very light Rustler .40 engine) that weighed 34 oz off the bench and to which I added eight ounces on the CG, split above and below the wing.  The primary improvement came from a much more predictable control input/response output due to the increased line tension versus hinge moments (control air loads).  Wing loading continued to be a non-issue.  The resulting patterns were every bit as good as the best without the weight and something like 100% more repeatable.

I am, once again, a fan of enough lift to do the job...or put the other way, no less weight that is required to optimize the pattern and the resulting flight scores.  different strokes, etc.

Ted

Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #24 on: October 04, 2013, 12:02:23 AM »
I was talking to Ron and he said they flew their 32 ounce planes at 5.8 -6 second laps with fox 35s in the wind no line tension problems. I find that interesting. My guess is one could say ENGINE OFFSET as they did when that plane was designed.

Sparky,

One of my favorite stunt memories was flying as a junior at the 1959 Nats where watching the Tucker Specials from St Louis was one of "the" best parts.  One of the things that doesn't belong in those memories is any instance of people "timing" laps at the stunt circle.  I've heard others (George Aldrich, for instance) say they flew Fox .35 stunters at six second laps but, with all due credit for their skills, I simply don't buy the numbers.  I remember George flying his replicated Nobler at a VSC at or around six seconds a lap and being unable to complete a pattern, let alone a competitive one.  Billy Werwage won the Walker Cup that year with the Ares/Fox .35 flying smoothly but almost certainly closer to five than six seconds a lap.

In more recent times I remember Bob Gieseke flying 5.5 laps competitively with the Gieseke Nobler.  Big difference from the Tucker, however.  Very small chord flaps... and quite large with very soft corners.  The difference was most everyone was flying that way back then.  That is no longer true.

Bottom line, I've flown stunt competitively since about 1957 and never even considered buying a stop watch to do so until I started attending the Nats regularly in the mid '70s and the whole 5.5 second lap thing surfaced via the Bear.

I believe the real secret to lower lap times isn't light weight as much as it is power train (within reason).  The slowest I ever flew competitive stunt was with the original Trivial Pursuit (650-60 squares at 68 to 70 oz) at the 1992 Nats where it finished second.  It was powered by a VF .40 revving more or less 12K with a 3.25 pitch Bolly.  I still didn't time it, by the way.  Randy Smith, many years later told me he had video tapes he had timed and the lap times were 5.8...which surprised me although I knew they were slower than I flew my previous ST .46 ships with-generally-six pitch props.

Don't get me wrong.  I'm not a fan of "heavy" airplanes.  I do, however, believe that wing loadings lighter than necessary to fly competitively may be more of a problem than a solution.

Ted

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #25 on: October 07, 2013, 08:42:26 AM »
Ted - For what it's worth, I flew a Nobler with an ABC Fox 35 at 36 Ounces for a few years. I got away with it, and had reasonable line tension, and it had a great corner and flat pull outs.

I think the reason I got away because of a few unconventional trim options(for Noblers anyways). First, I ran the ABC Fox in a wet 2 cycle, second, I ran rather short lines, these were Tom Morris 19strand .015's I pulled off my Ringmaster that were 57ft eye to eye, and lastly, I sure as heck wasn't running any 5.5 lap, it was more like 5.0. This combination may be why the plane felt very competitive in it's state of trim to me. The other side benefit I believe I will attribute to the short lines, is it gave the feeling of invincibility as far as bottoms went, I never feared pulling out as low as I wanted with that combo. If I wanted to be nuts, it gave the confidence to drill 2ft bottoms on a regular basis if one was so inclined to temp fate.

Near the end of that Noblers duty, it had gained some castor oil ballast, to the tune of 41 ounces. I noted it could be flown "smoother", and wasn't as floaty on landings. The corner wasn't as good, but I think it was more to do with our hot humid florida conditions and the Fox not pulling the weight quite as easily. Looking back, a little tip of the Nitro can was probably in order.

Gave the plane away to a retread pilot who wanted to buy the motor, for just the cost of the Fox. Good thing too... because I heard the plane was so fuel soaked it didn't last very long.

At any rate, I thought the line length/lap time comparison was worth mentioning.
Later,
EricV

Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #26 on: October 10, 2013, 01:46:20 PM »
Ted - For what it's worth, I flew a Nobler with an ABC Fox 35 at 36 Ounces for a few years. I got away with it, and had reasonable line tension, and it had a great corner and flat pull outs.

I think the reason I got away because of a few unconventional trim options(for Noblers anyways). First, I ran the ABC Fox in a wet 2 cycle, second, I ran rather short lines, these were Tom Morris 19strand .015's I pulled off my Ringmaster that were 57ft eye to eye, and lastly, I sure as heck wasn't running any 5.5 lap, it was more like 5.0. This combination may be why the plane felt very competitive in it's state of trim to me. The other side benefit I believe I will attribute to the short lines, is it gave the feeling of invincibility as far as bottoms went, I never feared pulling out as low as I wanted with that combo. If I wanted to be nuts, it gave the confidence to drill 2ft bottoms on a regular basis if one was so inclined to temp fate.

Near the end of that Noblers duty, it had gained some castor oil ballast, to the tune of 41 ounces. I noted it could be flown "smoother", and wasn't as floaty on landings. The corner wasn't as good, but I think it was more to do with our hot humid florida conditions and the Fox not pulling the weight quite as easily. Looking back, a little tip of the Nitro can was probably in order.

Gave the plane away to a retread pilot who wanted to buy the motor, for just the cost of the Fox. Good thing too... because I heard the plane was so fuel soaked it didn't last very long.

At any rate, I thought the line length/lap time comparison was worth mentioning.
Later,
EricV

An excellent addition to the conversation, Eric.  I couldn't agree more.  "G" forces (another description for line tension) for a given weight and airspeed increase as the radius of rotation increases.  As you note, however, as the radius of rotation decreases so does the resulting lap time.  5.0 at ~59' handle to center is very doable and would be competitive in any game.  I expect you weren't running a 10 X 6EW at a wet two either.

I once flew a Nobler of Don McClave's with a very strong Fox running that way with a lower pitch prop.  Very positive result.

Ted

p.s.  The "nitro" thing is like magic in a bottle when it comes to the emaciating effects of altitude and temperature on air density.  Bumping pitch is often a good idea as well but "demand" the nitro be tipped first when puny thrust is the issue.

Online Howard Rush

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #27 on: October 10, 2013, 03:25:06 PM »
"G" forces (another description for line tension) for a given weight and airspeed increase as the radius of rotation increases.

I take it you mean "decreases", as evidenced by your next sentence.  Likewise, line tension increases proportional to radius for a given lap time. 
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Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #28 on: October 11, 2013, 11:10:55 PM »
I take it you mean "decreases", as evidenced by your next sentence.  Likewise, line tension increases proportional to radius for a given lap time. 

Oooops!

Thank you.

Ted

Offline Curare

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #29 on: October 16, 2013, 11:39:09 PM »
Just to add fuel to a fire, (or injury to insult) I wonder if the brains trust would give their opnion on Ron Adams Marut Jet stunter from the 60's

It was running a ST 56, and apparently wieghed in at over 100 ounces. If I recall the article on it, He said it flew better than it had any right to.

Thoughts?

I found this on SSW

http://www.clstunt.com/htdocs/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=103&topic_id=44955
Greg Kowalski
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Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #30 on: December 05, 2013, 09:32:11 PM »
Just to add fuel to a fire, (or injury to insult) I wonder if the brains trust would give their opnion on Ron Adams Marut Jet stunter from the 60's

It was running a ST 56, and apparently wieghed in at over 100 ounces. If I recall the article on it, He said it flew better than it had any right to.

Thoughts?

I found this on SSW

http://www.clstunt.com/htdocs/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=103&topic_id=44955

In, IIRC, 1977 Bob Whitley won the Walker Cup with a Derringer weighing somewhere around 82oz powered by an ST .46. The airplane would turn tight corners and settle on bottoms like it was sitting on a pillow!   Using my carefully calibrated and nurtured "design thief" eyeball I noted the leading edge shaped like a baseball bat and promptly decided a blunt leading edge was worth plagiarizing and pretending it was my idea.

Ted

p.s.  At the 1974 Nats I placed a reasonably competitive 15th in Open flying the Moby Dick...a jet styled, Nobler winged derivative that weighed 64 oz.  While I don't necessarily recommend either extreme example I did pretty much retire my triple beam balance gram scale after those experiences...except for medicinal purposes, of course.

Offline Dennis Adamisin

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #31 on: December 06, 2013, 07:21:09 AM »
Just to add fuel to a fire, (or injury to insult) I wonder if the brains trust would give their opnion on Ron Adams Marut Jet stunter from the 60's

It was running a ST 56, and apparently wieghed in at over 100 ounces. If I recall the article on it, He said it flew better than it had any right to.

Thoughts?

I found this on SSW

http://www.clstunt.com/htdocs/dc/dcboard.php?az=show_topic&forum=103&topic_id=44955


At the risk of contributing to thread drift, here's a pix of Ron Adam's Marute.  I'm pretty sure it was around 70" span and something like 850 squares. The aft fuselage was 4" in dia.  I am also pretty sure it used a Veco 45 - Ron's big Intruders used the ST56 & 60.  I remember the Marute as very attractive design (shape & color scheme) and that it flew very well.  What is notable is that it was NOT Ron's largest nor his heaviest airplane.

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Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #32 on: August 27, 2014, 09:35:02 PM »
Just reread this after a year or so.  It's a good thread that can stand an encore.

Ted

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #33 on: August 30, 2014, 12:17:40 AM »
Yup. I had forgotten (or not noticed) EricV's comment about the shorter lines...confirms what I found out, more or less by accident. A foot shorter lines may feel slower than you'd expect, simply because the increased line tension is more comforting than the quicker lap time is disconcerting.  :o Steve
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Offline Matt Colan

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #34 on: September 01, 2014, 07:10:58 AM »
Yup. I had forgotten (or not noticed) EricV's comment about the shorter lines...confirms what I found out, more or less by accident. A foot shorter lines may feel slower than you'd expect, simply because the increased line tension is more comforting than the quicker lap time is disconcerting.  :o Steve

I shortened the lines to my Thundergazer a foot and it was so much easier to fly and fly good bottoms with as opposed to flying with the longer lines.  Also, with everything else being equal, the plane will be flying the same speed with the shorter lines, but it has less distance to cover than with the longer lines, which is why the lap times go up without feeling like the plane is flying any faster.
Matt Colan

Offline phil c

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #35 on: September 01, 2014, 07:02:02 PM »
"I think the reason I got away because of a few unconventional trim options(for Noblers anyways). First, I ran the ABC Fox in a wet 2 cycle, second, I ran rather short lines, these were Tom Morris 19strand .015's I pulled off my Ringmaster that were 57ft eye to eye, and lastly, I sure as heck wasn't running any 5.5 lap, it was more like 5.0.    Eric V."

that puts it almost exactly 60 ft radius.  At 5 sec it is flying ~52 mph, a perfect speed for a Nobler using .o15 lines.  I've seen any number of people do well with a 36-38 oz. Nobler trimmed like that.  It probably won't handle winds of 12-15mph(flag standing out, but not whipping) as well as you'd want though.  People routinely went as high as 20% nitro in a Fox to fly heavier planes, but that is probably the limit for stunt size props.

Phil C
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Offline Ted Fancher

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #36 on: July 07, 2023, 01:31:04 PM »

At the risk of contributing to thread drift, here's a pix of Ron Adam's Marute.  I'm pretty sure it was around 70" span and something like 850 squares. The aft fuselage was 4" in dia.  I am also pretty sure it used a Veco 45 - Ron's big Intruders used the ST56 & 60.  I remember the Marute as very attractive design (shape & color scheme) and that it flew very well.  What is notable is that it was NOT Ron's largest nor his heaviest airplane.

Also worth noting from that picture is the narrow chord  way less than full span flaps!!  Another topic for another day inasmuch as probably nobody is going to read this length "OOOOOLD" thread far enough to read it!

Ted

Offline Scientifiction .

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #37 on: July 07, 2023, 07:27:24 PM »
Quote
A question occurred to me in relation to Ted's famous (and very interesting to me) experiment.  If it were possible to produce a scaled-up 60-size version of Ted's Tucker in which all else is identical: balsa density, number of dope coats, proportionally higher engine weight, etc. is it likely that the same need for extra weight would occur?

NO ,

The thing would weigh a Ton in the first place .  >:(   VD~



 >:( Going 1.15 x -> from 57 to 66 span , = 1.35 the area !

But the VOLUME or DISPLACEMENT -> If you lay in the bath , filled it to the brim , then got the aeroplane & got somebody to stand on it untill it was submerged ( bung all the holes first )
You could pretend you were gGaleleo , or Was it Archimedes ? . EUREKA was the word , as it was .

If you catch all the water thats spilt , thats how much aeroplane you have .  ;D

 >:( Then theres the TIMBER , the olde Square rule , or is it Cube .  >:(

If you stuck to the Original Timber Size - DIDNT Enlarge any thickness - you might just get away with it .

The big dunger , Er Folkerts , when we threw some Horsepower in it , It Started to GO . As did the elbow & shoulder .
I think it was 57 Ounce - to something around / over 80 . The Windage when it was blowing mayve required a anchor for the Pilot .

Threw a prop blade & Self demolished the fuse in 1/4 lap . Rear snapped then nose flew off . Luckilly the first junk to depart was the tank & cowl , So engine was dead when it departed .
So Some Thought is Required . The NOSE needs some of this carbon stuff and sufficent glue , so likey wants to be a nudge shorter for correct C. G.

If reassembled the Fuse Remains & patched , to use as a plug / mould  . BUT HAVELS Fuse is Way Lighter ( Half the wood ) or a P. M. ish Goon Fuse would be a Box Section - ish heavy weight replacement .
The SIDE AREA in it , for WIND FLYING has me undecided so far . So Throw it in the Photocopier ( A3 ) enlarged . Tape together . Ink in outlines with Felt , Hang on wall afar . Observe upright inverted downward etc.
                                                                                              =============================================================================================
Probably simpler to move ' cut out ' that to stand on the head and lay sideways etc .  VD~   S?P   ;D

Id go for it - Cut out a True Size  cardboard profile & stand off , up to line length , and start pondering ramifications .
========================================================================

( The Big Mewgull at first , you thought you were on 35 foot lines , Took a few flights to adjust to the proportions . I think over 2 Kilo is OUT , over Six Foot Span is a bit off too .  2 metre is Just Workable .
but youll want Real Power , not a ' soft ' engine . How was Windy after a early Sweeeper ( the Blue One F. M . ) flight . )

« Last Edit: July 07, 2023, 07:55:20 PM by Air Ministry . »

Offline Scientifiction .

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #38 on: July 07, 2023, 08:08:14 PM »


The Olde Girle Has a BIT OF SIDE AREA . Id be thinking IF you Enlarged it . Say the figure was 120 % , If voiticly it was 110% , Due to Mr Renolds Number & somesuch , and longitudeinally & crossways 120 %  :-\

AS IN , Say FUSE is 120 % longer 11% deeper . WING is say 120 % more Span but only 110% on the Chord , Tailplanes 120 straight , and flap chord maybe .  Like it was SPREAD .

The P S S Slope Soarer things often get the cross between what was & a  High A R trip . Stretched n Slimmed . That Fuselage looks near porky , ON THE PLAN .


Get the Picture . Cut out a Cardboard or Foam Sheet one , to access practicality . This is 76 od PSS Foljkerts .

The Stingy Englishmen ( somebody took all there lolly ) whack em outta foam , and throw butchers paper on with watered down PVA .
( please sir , can I have more gruel )

Amazingly Durable in fact .

https://www.pssaonline.co.uk/2005/04/15/power-scale-soaring-part-3/ likum thisum .
« Last Edit: July 07, 2023, 08:41:38 PM by Air Ministry . »

Offline Scientifiction .

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #39 on: July 08, 2023, 11:23:17 PM »
Dug out the Havel Folkerts drawing & the ruler . 300% what ive got it ( randomly enlarged ) gets 120 % of the true plan . Whick is a Gross ! 144 % the AREA .

But apparently it might be 173 % of the Volume - or Displacement . AND TIMBER , unless you did something about it . BRINING THIS UP as its a V similar concept .

54 x 120 is 2 x 5.4 + 54  = um , 65 span , if you round it off . As the TIP is 50 % of the Root ( like a BERINGER ! ) and its not bulkey , it may well be a GOOD .60 Ship .
My Thoughts .
So Therefore , if  ' one ' ( or two  ;D ) looked at THAT , and did a  " Is a Tucker gunna doit Like this thing does , they might get It to Go As Well .  S?P as it might .

You can see it here , in all its scrawnyness .


 S?P


Hard to find a Tucker at the same angle ,





But you can see , if you wernt a light builder , or wanted it more elongated , you could elongate it a bit .



A klot easier just to put the squeeze on the best Balsa Supplier in the country , get a scale to 1/10th gramme , and lock yourself away till youve built it a 10 Oz Sq Ft .  :!


Offline Dennis Toth

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #40 on: December 30, 2023, 05:11:41 PM »
Very interesting stuff. It is also interesting that in the original article published in April 1962 American Modeler, Tucker states that a weight of 40oz is what the final version weight in at, very close to what Ted & Brett found.

https://outerzone.co.uk/plan_details.asp?ID=1528

Maybe there is a wing load somewhere around 11- 12oz/ft^2 that for the normal design numbers (basically, Nobler moments and ratios with some tweaking but around those) that gives good performance and line tension.

Best,   DennisT

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #41 on: December 30, 2023, 05:24:13 PM »
Very interesting stuff. It is also interesting that in the original article published in April 1962 American Modeler, Tucker states that a weight of 40oz is what the final version weight in at, very close to what Ted & Brett found.

https://outerzone.co.uk/plan_details.asp?ID=1528

Best,   DennisT

   It was actually a lot more than 40. I want to say 46 or so. But it doesn't matter what the original article said, they didn't have the same engine, Ted's had much more effective power. So, making it light to enhance vertical performance was not as important as giving more margin over the Netzeband wall. It may have been completely different on the original, with something like a Fox, you are going to need it to be as light as you can make it, so it can make it to the top of the circle.

     Brett

Offline Scott Richlen

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #42 on: November 13, 2024, 07:00:03 PM »
Considering all of this, would a partial solution be to use a 4" belcrank to increase leverage to the surfaces (assuming that Ted's plane was built using a 3 inch belcrank)?  While the forces on the control surfaces would be the same, and the line tension would be the same, the extra inch of belcrank would provide a 30% increase of handle leverage (arm length going from 1.5 inch to 2 inches.)

Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #43 on: November 14, 2024, 12:38:14 AM »
Considering all of this, would a partial solution be to use a 4" belcrank to increase leverage to the surfaces (assuming that Ted's plane was built using a 3 inch belcrank)?  While the forces on the control surfaces would be the same, and the line tension would be the same, the extra inch of belcrank would provide a 30% increase of handle leverage (arm length going from 1.5 inch to 2 inches.)

Of course. This would have addressed the Netzeband Wall issue directly. But the airplane was built. And the flaps were still more appropriate for a heavier airplane with much less speed control. That could have been corrected by slowing down the flaps WRT the elevator- but that wasn’t adjustable, nor could the flaps be cut down because it was for Classic, no design changes allowed. So even with a larger bellcrank it may still have benefitted from additional weight.


As before, you solve the problems you have using the options you have, those are not always the same.

Brett

Offline Scott Richlen

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #44 on: November 14, 2024, 06:08:57 AM »
Quote
That could have been corrected by slowing down the flaps WRT the elevator

Since the Tucker Special is on my bucket list (and I'm having to get more serious about that list as time passes...) and I have the kit, it sounds like there are only a few things to be done:
- use a 4" belcrank
- shoot for 40 ounces (or was it 44?)
- use a 3/4 to 1 flap to elevator ratio (does that sound about right?)

So, would an OS-35S be the right engine for this or should I go to an LA-46?  The 35 would be a bit weak, wouldn't it?

Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #45 on: November 14, 2024, 06:43:26 AM »
Since the Tucker Special is on my bucket list (and I'm having to get more serious about that list as time passes...) and I have the kit, it sounds like there are only a few things to be done:
- use a 4" belcrank
- shoot for 40 ounces (or was it 44?)
- use a 3/4 to 1 flap to elevator ratio (does that sound about right?)

So, would an OS-35S be the right engine for this or should I go to an LA-46?  The 35 would be a bit weak, wouldn't it?
Scott, the value of my my 2cents might be due to inflation but I would stick with the 35s if you have a good one.  In the 40oz range the LA46 is going to be too heavy to avoid tail weight and frankly too powerful.  Don't forget ground clearance. The 35 will handle a whole range of 10" props and the 46's are not very comfortable under 11", at least mine wasn't.  Maybe a 3 blade 10" could work.  Normally I would recommend the 46 but how many do you see in planes  as small as the Tucker and under 45oz?
Ken

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Offline Scott Richlen

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #46 on: November 14, 2024, 07:25:03 AM »
Quote
In the 40oz range the LA46 is going to be too heavy to avoid tail weight and frankly too powerful.

I think those are valid points Ken.  But Brett and Ted have noted that often the addition of weight can make a stuntship fly better.  In that case I figure that a Tucker Special built to around 44 to 46 ounces might fit the bill.  But in my experience that seems a bit much for the 35S.  Recent experience seems to show that horsepower trumps about everything else (as long as we keep within reason, another subjective....)

Part of my concern is that there seem to be fewer and fewer opportunities to fly Classic and I don't want to build a plane that spends almost all of its time "in the hangar."  I'd be flying it in PA at Brodaks and other contests.  I don't think the 35S would cut it, but the LA-46 would (to a greater extent.)  And at Brodaks my LA-46 powered Uber has come in higher in Expert PA than my PA-61 powered SL-2.  For my flying ability a well-designed LA-46 powered airplane can be equivalent to a PA-61 powered plane.  It won't win the Walker Cup, but that wasn't going to happen anyway... ;D
« Last Edit: November 14, 2024, 11:28:53 AM by Scott Richlen »

Offline Trostle

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #47 on: November 14, 2024, 09:36:45 AM »

 things to be done:

- use a 3/4 to 1 flap to elevator ratio (does that sound about right?)


Recommend putting a slider on the elevator horn so that the flap/elevator ration can be changed.  3/4 to 1 ration is a good place to start, but changing that slider even 1/32" up or down can make a big difference on how well the airplane will turn in a corner.

Keith

Online Ken Culbertson

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #48 on: November 14, 2024, 10:09:52 AM »
I think those are valid points Ken.  But Brett and Ted are recommending a build of around 44 to 46 ounces and in my experience that seems a bit much for the 35S.  Recent experience seems to show that horsepower trumps about everything else (as long as we keep within reason, another subjective....)

Part of my concern is that there seem to be fewer and fewer opportunities to fly Classic and I don't want to build a plane that spends almost all of its time "in the hangar."  I'd be flying it in PA at Brodaks and other contests.  I don't think the 35S would cut it, but the LA-46 would (to a greater extent.)  And at Brodaks my LA-46 powered Uber has come in higher in Expert PA than my PA-61 powered SL-2.  For my flying ability a well-designed LA-46 powered airplane can be equivalent to a PA-61 powered plane.  It won't win the Walker Cup, but that wasn't going to happen anyway... ;D

That changes things a little.  I agree that 46oz is a tad heavy for the 35s but one flew my Nobler ARF quite well at 52oz.  If the CG is not an issue, in that you can add tail weight (or strength, my preference), then the 46 is a much friendlier motor to deal with.

Ken
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Online Brett Buck

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Re: Ted's Tucker Special Ballast Experiment
« Reply #49 on: November 14, 2024, 10:45:11 AM »
I think those are valid points Ken.  But Brett and Ted are recommending a build of around 44 to 46 ounces and in my experience that seems a bit much for the 35S.  Recent experience seems to show that horsepower trumps about everything else (as long as we keep within reason, another subjective....)


  Hold on - WHAT!!!??? "Brett and Ted" are not and have not "recommended" anything like that. We related our experience with adding weight to a particular airplane,  and what we think the issues associated with it might be. In no thread on the topic of anything either of us had on the topic did we "recommend" ANYTHING, and in particularly did not "recommend" ignoring what sort of engine we used and make it a universal standard. In fact, in every single thread I have posted on this topic, of any one of the dozenish emails, the words "you solve the problems you have".

    We most certainly made it very clear that you might have a different result if you had a different engine, in fact that is a critical factor. Ted's Tucker used a modern-ish high performance ABC engine using a high-rev/low pitch prop.  It had no problem dragging a 46 ounce airplane to the top of the circle, so you didn't have to worry about vertical performance. Use an ancient low performance engine from the era, you might well find that making it lighter helps despite the other issues. At least part of the point was to recognize how modern performance engines affect other factors.

Use a OS-35S and the inevitable 10-6, you probably should build it as light as you can, because you have to get acceptable vertical performance, and you are just stuck with the other issues. Possibly you

    This is exactly why we can never have sensible discussions, no one reads the posts, they see a trigger word or two and then build a world of arguments around it, stories get told over and over about "so and so said this, can you believe it!" for years, the stories morph into unrecognizable "interpretations", and get turned into a completely different and completely strange different ideas. It's hopeless, why should we even bother. We never gave a blanket recommendation for anything, just that you should considered all factors and they aren't necessarily the same as they were in 1968.

   The experiment does prove, beyond a shadow of a doubt, that building airplane lighter is not always going to make it better. It absolutely does not tell you that they should all get 8 ounces added to them or that a Tucker Special should always be built to 46 ounces, in fact, you use a Fox or OS-35 and it is almost certainly not a good idea.

  Everything said on this topic can be read here and was stated very clearly, I will go through later and find the posts and point out exactly where we said things and how we said them. I am just to irritated to do it right now.

     Brett

p.s. in you post immediately above, where I responded to your post (less that *12 hours ago*!)

Quote
As before, you solve the problems you have using the options you have, those are not always the same.
  Ted's airplane has a Rustler-Merco 40 "Metamorph" spinning a 10-4, at least at the time of the experiment, you want to use a OS-35s from 1965, that is the baseline defintion of solving a different problem.

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