I met some fellow pilots a few weeks ago, a Dad with his son and grandson. They were teaching the grandson on an electric trainer, and recalled his father saying he has been in RC for about 2 years, mainly in nitro. What floored me was his statement he had never crashed a plane sans the periodic engine-out belly landing. Now we all have our share of hanger stories but this one in particular has me baffled. Technically he never stated if it was pilot-caused or mechanical, and just the first impression of them leads me to believe he was not" stretching" the truth. In reviewing my first 2 years of RC flying, I could have put one of my kids through college with the amount of crashes and "incidents" I have, and consider myself having excellent hand-eye coordination being a master carpenter the past 30 years.
In that all of my rc experience is electric, except for the ubiquitous Cox .049 birds growing up, I ask those of you with both Nitro and electric experience the differences in flying quality, characteristics, ease of learning, and reliability. I am currently builing a 2100mm Legends P-38 which was specifically modified to electric for reliability purposes.
Are there any rc pilot "savant or rainman" types out there similar to this guy?
CT
In that all of my rc experience is electric, except for the ubiquitous Cox .049 birds growing up, I ask those of you with both Nitro and electric experience the differences in flying quality, characteristics, ease of learning, and reliability. I am currently builing a 2100mm Legends P-38 which was specifically modified to electric for reliability purposes.
Are there any rc pilot "savant or rainman" types out there similar to this guy?
CT






Comment