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What was the worst CRASH you ever had? Let us see your photo.

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  • Ahhhh.... sorry to hear that.

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    • Dear Todd , this photo has upset me ... even a beautiful dog is astonished...:(

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      • Oh, no, Lon! That's terrible! I'm really sorry to hear it.
        ---
        Warbirder

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        • Man o Man Lon............that just sux :(
          Back in the earlier days of getting back into this addiction with my Dx6i, I had an incident occur similar to yours but without the catastrophic effect and the lesson learned was the use of a neck strap adapter to get the strap connection up and away from the power switch.
          This adapter does work with my DX9. ;)
          The Spektrum Neck Strap Adapter: DX7 from Spektrum, the leader in spread spectrum radio control.


          Click image for larger version

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          Warbird Charlie
          HSD Skyraider FlightLine OV-10 FMS 1400: P-40B, P-51, F4U, F6F, T-28, P-40E, Pitts, 1700 F4U & F7F, FOX glider Freewing A-6, T-33, P-51 Dynam ME-262, Waco TF Giant P-47; ESM F7F-3 LX PBJ-1 EFL CZ T-28, C-150, 1500 P-51 & FW-190

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          • Thanks for the info CB. I'm going to get an adapter. Sigh. .what a way to lose a plane. .
            Lon

            EFlite F-16 80mm, EFite DRACO, EFlite Night Radian, E-Flite P51 1.5m
            Freewing A-10 80mm, F-86 80mm, F-15 90mm, Avanti. FMS DHC-2 Beaver, Fliteline P-38L ,HSD HME-262, HSD F86.

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            • Oh Lon! :( :Angry: :Sick2: :Scared: :Vomit: :Crying2:
              My YouTube RC videos:
              https://www.youtube.com/@toddbreda

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              • I hear you Lon, but then, I haven't heard of a good way to lose a plane.
                Sorry for the loss, I'm down one this year as well. So the next question is where to go from here, replace or move into something else.

                Grossman56
                Team Gross!

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                • I think the "twin" spirits want him to get a Tiger ;)
                  Warbird Charlie
                  HSD Skyraider FlightLine OV-10 FMS 1400: P-40B, P-51, F4U, F6F, T-28, P-40E, Pitts, 1700 F4U & F7F, FOX glider Freewing A-6, T-33, P-51 Dynam ME-262, Waco TF Giant P-47; ESM F7F-3 LX PBJ-1 EFL CZ T-28, C-150, 1500 P-51 & FW-190

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                  • The A-10 will be the replacement. ....
                    Lon

                    EFlite F-16 80mm, EFite DRACO, EFlite Night Radian, E-Flite P51 1.5m
                    Freewing A-10 80mm, F-86 80mm, F-15 90mm, Avanti. FMS DHC-2 Beaver, Fliteline P-38L ,HSD HME-262, HSD F86.

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                    • You Go Lon. Good replacement Bird. Sorry for the loss though. We all hate to lose good planes.
                      Dewey l

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                      • Originally posted by Lon View Post
                        The A-10 will be the replacement. ....
                        Good call too........:Cool:just gotta hit the cash cow for 6S now :P ask me how I know LOL
                        Warbird Charlie
                        HSD Skyraider FlightLine OV-10 FMS 1400: P-40B, P-51, F4U, F6F, T-28, P-40E, Pitts, 1700 F4U & F7F, FOX glider Freewing A-6, T-33, P-51 Dynam ME-262, Waco TF Giant P-47; ESM F7F-3 LX PBJ-1 EFL CZ T-28, C-150, 1500 P-51 & FW-190

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                        • Originally posted by dkalwishky View Post
                          I'm on my third Freewing F-86. I lost the first one due to dumb thumbs, the second was a loss of signal event. So far my third one is intact, she is a nice flying plane and one I would replace again if I loose it.

                          Both crashes were straight in at full power and looked pretty much the same.
                          Ah, dang it. I love my F-86 it fly's fantastic and looks very real in the gray skies. I'm sorry to see your loss. Hopefully you will consider replacing it. Cheers!

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                          • Originally posted by Kloverzero View Post
                            The worst crash that I ever had barely damaged the airplane. How can it be the worst then you ask? Let me tell you!! It was late January, and the spot where I was flying had a sizeable water feature. I was flying the old balsa Lanier F-20 that I had built several months before, and had many flights on. The temperature outside was about 36 degrees, and I was dressed for it. I was doing some aerobatics with the plane, and it wound up in an inverted flat spin, and it would not recover. SPLASH!!! Right in the middle of the pond!! So, determined to retrieve my plane, I took off my coat, and went to dive into the pond to get it. I took three steps in and dove....into 6 inches of water!!!! Turns out, the pond was only a foot deep at its deepest point. So, soaking wet and covered in mud, I walked out and retrieved my plane, that only had a broken fin. You may proceed to laugh until you wet yourselves now, thank you.
                            I know its an old reply to the above, but have seen plenty of drownings when the owner jumps into the water to retrieve their rc. The ones I have seen on the news are from rc boats, not airplanes...

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                            • G'day gang,
                              I do not have any photos of this as I was too disgusted to even think about getting any photos at the time.
                              I was one of the first in Australia to get my hands on the FMS V7 1400mm P-51D Mustang, Big Beautiful Doll. I carefully took my time in putting her together and double checked everything twice. [quadruple check?]
                              Two weeks later I took her out to the field to do some ground testing just to see how she handled on the deck. I was not going to fly her. Can you all see where this story is heading? Yes?.......wait for it!!
                              Getting her ready, I asked another pilot to double check me again and we decided to add a couple of grams to get her slightly nose heavy. This is on top of what I had already put in.
                              Out to the flight line and I had asked for a bit of solo time on the runway for testing. It was granted.
                              Waiting for the aircraft that was in the air to land and I had BBD about five metres back from the edge of the runway and she was minding her own business and looking good in the morning light.
                              A couple of other pilots were looking her over and making very positive comments about the model and asking about pricing and the like.
                              I was casually looking out for the other model as he made his approach. It was a two metre Ugly Stik swinging a fair sized prop. If I had of even guessed what was to happen next, I would have goosed the throttle on BBD and saved her life.
                              The Ugly stik pilot made a mess of his landing and swung towards the flight line and was in lots of trouble. He did, in fact get behind the flight line and sort of regained control but, realizing that he was heading at legs, he went full throttle in an attempt to get in the air. I have always wondered why he thought heads were better to hit then legs.
                              He ploughed right through BBD. Cut her not so cleanly in half. The Stik managed to get airborne again and, thankfully, missed everyone. Trailing control rods and servos from BBD, the Stik managed a successful landing the next time around. He actually had to fly through the snow storm of foam that was still coming down.
                              My poor BBD had not even got her wheels dirty and here was a dirty great big sixteen inch gap in her belly, wings and most of her innards were hanging off the Stik. She had been mangled so badly, that it would have taken an act of God to fix. The impact had even broken the CF spar and had put a fair sized chop in the aluminium spar. The Stik did not even break the propeller.
                              Guess what the other pilot told me....'ah, well mate, you can put that down to experience.'
                              EXPERIENCE? I was too new at the club to really go off at him but he knew not to cross my path too soon and I do not find that three hundred dollars down the drain is experience..
                              To this day I refuse to go anywhere near the flight line when he flies and I will land if he comes out to play and make him wait while I do so.
                              There are some blokes that you just can not trust. Now, do not get me wrong, I like the man. I just will not fly with him.
                              There in lies the challenge, gentlemen. Has anyone else lost an aircraft before it has actually flown?
                              I can sort of smile about it now as a rather unique way of 'crashing' a model. And I can honestly say it was not my fault.
                              Regards and respect
                              Daryl

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                              • I had an 'almost'. Not my first flight or anything. I was a visitor at another club. I had my FlightLine P-38 and a couple other planes on the ground in the pits. An older guy fires up his gasser in the pits and starts taxiing. His plane is arcing around toward my P-38. He's continuing to fiddle with his rudder as the swinging prop is coming closer and closer to my P-38. I finally yell at him and he looks up to see what was happening. He kicked the tail of his plane and the prop clipped the wingtip of my swap-meet-find, beat-up Visionaire. I took the $20 that he'd offered for damaging my wingtip, which was just $5 less than I'd paid for the NVA. I wudda been pissed off beyond belief if he wudda cut up my prized P-38. Luckily, that tragedy was narrowly averted. Close call. Too dang close.
                                ---
                                Warbirder

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                                • One thing recommended at the RC flight club is to never be on the left side of the take off as usually the prop rotation forces will push the plane to the left, and most likely on dragging tail planes.

                                  Have seen it a few times on no rear wheel planes that the airplane takes off to the left. There is a section of a fence that was recently reconstructed just because of many airplanes hitting it.

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                                  • G'day crankestein,
                                    While I get what you are saying and totally agree with you from a safety point of view, the one thing we can not control is the mind set of individuals.:)
                                    As an instructor, I am always trying to tell my students to get in front of their models from a flying point of view. It just takes a little bit of fore thought.
                                    I encourage my students to have a flight plan in their heads and not to go out and bore holes in the sky. And the flight plan starts before the take off phase.
                                    As ox recounts, his near miss was because the other pilot had his head down fixated on his own model and not of his surrounds. Situation awareness is as important on the ground as it is in the air.
                                    Most insurance claims from model aircraft happen because of a ground based accident. In fact, it is as high as 90% here in Australia.
                                    I think the flight line fence should be erected at every field.
                                    I have one model that I will not fly if I have to take off right to left. Just in case.;)
                                    Have you ever found yourself thinking, 'I can save this' ?
                                    Especially when a landing is going wrong?
                                    If you are in the right mindset, you abort and try again, if not in the right mindset [and I have been there] you bore on in and usually make a goose of yourself.
                                    This is why it is important to have a plan.
                                    I picked up two new students today and they seem to have a grasp on what I am telling them.
                                    Now I am not just writing this to be aimed at you, but as a general appraisal of the over all manners of other pilots and it seems to be the same all over the world.
                                    My pet hate?
                                    A pilot who has landed and taxied back to the shut down area, walking in front of the pilots box and blocking the line of sight. GGGGGGRRRRRRRRRR.
                                    It is one thing that I do chirp up at another pilot for doing and most of them do not realize that they have blocked your vision. It is often easier and much more polite to walk behind pilots who are flying.
                                    Sorry for the rant. I am over it now!!:Whew:
                                    Regards and respect
                                    Daryl

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                                    • No rant kust the truth. My pet peve at our field is that some of the guys even taxi there giant 3d planes all the back to the pits rather than the burns we have in the place of a fence along the runway. I can just see one of those big 30 inch props cutting one of my foam planes in half our worst yet someone getting hit. :Sleepy:
                                      Dewey l

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                                      • G'day Dewey,
                                        Safety is one thing I do bang on about at my club. [I am a safety officer] While I am pretty easy going, I get very frustrated when I see things that can injure someone and it can be avoided.
                                        Look at old mate who took his head off in New York with a helicopter. I read in our newspapers how shocked first responders were to the fact a 'toy' helicopter had done this much damage to a human being. And he was considered to be tops at what he was doing.
                                        This becomes the point. Model aircraft are not toys!
                                        There have been several people killed by model planes around the world and, mostly, they are onlookers and not the pilot.
                                        I have been to a couple of other clubs where 3D pilots have been given their own day to fly and a not allowed to fly with the general population of the club because they tend to not think of others.
                                        Taxiing back into or along the pits makes me shudder.
                                        I had to stop one pilot, at our number two field, one day when he was taxiing at high speed in the pits because he had 'steering problems' and was trying to sort it out. Steering problems...high speed.... in the pits....?????
                                        I asked him what part of that, did he not consider dangerous. He blinked at me and asked, in reply, 'what do you mean?' As I said before, the mind set of some people!
                                        As I rarely visited our number two field, the safety culture had gone out the window and it had become every man for himself. It was so bad we had to close the field before someone did get hurt.
                                        If you do the numbers on a FMS P-51D 1400mm Mustang with a 14" prop. That is 1.1 metres [roughly] in circumference At 10,000 RPM, if it were a wheel [and all other variables not counted], that wheel would be over ten kilometres away in one minute.With a four blade prop, that is 666 bites per second if I have done the math correctly.
                                        That is going to hurt if it hits you.
                                        Perhaps I see things differently to others due to my background of competing in dangerous sports. My first job was a jockey and I have seen many friends killed and maimed. Then I raced cars, with pretty much the same thing. My brother was killed by a drink driver 33 years ago. Some of these things could not be avoided but the ones that could have been make me angry. Especially the last one.
                                        The big thing is being safe is often easier then doing it wrong!
                                        Thanks for letting me vent.
                                        Regards and respect
                                        Daryl

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                                        • Its all good, I dont take it personal.

                                          Your input is genuine and is for the safety of all who enjoy watching and do rc flights.

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