Radford RC Mine was 2020 version, got rid of the green ( bright and horrible ) and replaced with brown, refinished the yellow, underside now beige, nose now beige, all matt finish. See pg6 item 104 in the Share your pics and videos section
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Freewing Su-35 Twin 70mm 12 blade
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Also the yellow is less vibrant and the underside of the jet should be grey, not yellow. ;)Originally posted by radfordc View Post
Though to be fair, the winter camo should have camo on top and bottom and it doesn't so... there's that too. I still prefer it aesthetically speaking :)
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I think I like this idea. My much smaller F-8 Crusader is set up with only tailerons and throttle and it flys great. With TV added the Flanker should be just as good. As Alpha said, one of the lightest and simplest ways to configure the plane. My goal is not to fly like Airguardian, but rather to have a light, agile, fun flying plane with decent flight times. Basically, the opposite of my Su-30.Originally posted by Alpha View Post
I ended up keeping TV but ditching the wing servos and rudder servos and flying tailerons. Very light, very simple, very acrobatic.
I am debating adding a gyro. If using the gyro to do the taileron mixing I assume that I would need to Y the TV servos to the taileron servos. Not sure that this would let me have separate trims for the tailerons and TV nozzles. I know Kallend said he has flown his plane for years with the servos Y'd and I guess likes it that way.
The other choice is to do all the mixing in the Tx. But then I don't know if the gyro will work with that configuration. Plane probably doesn't need a gyro anyway....but they always help, right?
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Y'ing each taileron to each VT nozzle will eliminate the ability to trim each individually. If you trim one, you trim the other. If you use a gyro and mix the VT to the taileron, the gyro will control whichever one you hook up to it and have no effect on the other. The answer would to be use 2 gyros.Originally posted by radfordc View Post
I think I like this idea. My much smaller F-8 Crusader is set up with only tailerons and throttle and it flys great. With TV added the Flanker should be just as good. As Alpha said, one of the lightest and simplest ways to configure the plane. My goal is not to fly like Airguardian, but rather to have a light, agile, fun flying plane with decent flight times. Basically, the opposite of my Su-30.
I am debating adding a gyro. If using the gyro to do the taileron mixing I assume that I would need to Y the TV servos to the taileron servos. Not sure that this would let me have separate trims for the tailerons and TV nozzles. I know Kallend said he has flown his plane for years with the servos Y'd and I guess likes it that way.
The other choice is to do all the mixing in the Tx. But then I don't know if the gyro will work with that configuration. Plane probably doesn't need a gyro anyway....but they always help, right?
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Two gyros (A3L) might work...with the right mixing. May be more than my old bald head can figure out. Will have to mull it over a bit.Originally posted by xviper View PostY'ing each taileron to each VT nozzle will eliminate the ability to trim each individually. If you trim one, you trim the other. If you use a gyro and mix the VT to the taileron, the gyro will control whichever one you hook up to it and have no effect on the other. The answer would to be use 2 gyros.
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The problem is how the Tx is configured. Either "normal wing" or "flying wing". To use the A3L gyro the Tx needs to be Normal. So, if I feed the Normal A and E channel outputs to the gyro the gyro does the mixing to make the TVs move like tailerons. But, I would still be stuck with having Normal A/E outputs to the wing and tail (no tailerons on the elevators). Also any trim changes to the A/E outputs would be applied to both control surfaces and to the TVs. With the proper mixing I could probably get around this issue. I don't know if I would be happy not having the elevators acting as tailerons.Originally posted by Airguardian View PostYep, if you want to control all the surfaces, either 2 gyros or an advanced gyro with separate outputs would be ideal.
Or just a single gyro on nozzles should do most of the work for post-stall anyway.
Two A3L's with the right mixing might do the trick.
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I haven't found this to be a problem in 4+ years of flying it. I don't think I've touched the trims in over 4 years. My gyro works on the tailerons and the TV.Originally posted by xviper View PostY'ing each taileron to each VT nozzle will eliminate the ability to trim each individually. If you trim one, you trim the other..
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The Spektrum SRLX2 receivers will stabilize any surface (or TV) designated as a control surface in the channel assignment.Originally posted by Airguardian View PostYep, if you want to control all the surfaces, either 2 gyros or an advanced gyro with separate outputs would be ideal.
Or just a single gyro on nozzles should do most of the work for post-stall anyway.
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Same here. If they (VT nozzles) "look" straight, I never touch them. I was merely answering someone's questions about it. I see a few people who, for whatever reason feel the need to separate everything and have the ability to adjust everything individually. I dunno, maybe they have an 18-ch radio and they have to use as many channels as possible to get their money's worth?Originally posted by kallend View Post
I haven't found this to be a problem in 4+ years of flying it. I don't think I've touched the trims in over 4 years. My gyro works on the tailerons and the TV.
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