Toronto Electric Model Aviation Club Forum

Toronto Electric Model Aviation Club (TEMAC) => General Discussion => Topic started by: octagon on July 18, 2017, 08:24:30 PM

Title: My submission for Crash of the year
Post by: octagon on July 18, 2017, 08:24:30 PM
Sorry to report the TF Spit I built last winter is no longer. Too much up elevator on the top of a loop caused a tip stall. Too little experience in how to get out of it caused the crash. 
Title: Re: My submission for Crash of the year
Post by: sihinch on July 18, 2017, 08:30:00 PM
Oh no Rob. I'm sorry. We all enjoyed seeing it fly.
Title: Re: My submission for Crash of the year
Post by: Frank v B on July 18, 2017, 09:39:52 PM
Rob, Oh no!!!!   :(
It looked great when it was flying.

Subject for this fall's repair class??? ;)

Frank
Title: Re: My submission for Crash of the year
Post by: BJROB on July 19, 2017, 03:54:23 AM
Oh Rob
So sorry, that was a beautiful plane.
I know you can make it beautiful again
Title: Re: My submission for Crash of the year
Post by: battlestu on July 19, 2017, 08:46:08 AM
ouch sorry to see that but give it to Cadez with some hot glue he'll have it flying in no time ;)

Title: Re: My submission for Crash of the year
Post by: octagon on July 19, 2017, 02:02:10 PM
I took a close look at the remains this morning, and in my opinion it is beyond saving. I even managed to impale the battery on the motor mount screws, we had to literally pry it off. About the only thing intact is the tail. I think it would be harder to rebuild it than just to build a whole new plane, and building it taught me a lot. I have a TF P47 kit of the same size that will be next winter's project. I have to say, it did fly very nicely. If it was a tip stall, it caught me out completely, and even with the amount of height I had, I could do nothing but watch it auger in. I should have closed the throttle and applied opposite rudder, but you always know what you should have done after a thing happens.