Any thoughts on the 262?
Announcement
Collapse
No announcement yet.
Freewing ME 262 thoughts?
Collapse
X
-
Which one? I have the Freewing "Yellow 7" and I like it a lot. The only thing that I've had that needed attention is the nose section is very weak. First bumpy landing and the whole think just snapped off. Re-enforcing it with popsicle sticks did the trick. Shoulda done it right out of the box. It's very powerful and flies with great presence and authority. I can do a wheel stand from a standing start if I max out the throttle. It's like a dragster without the wheelie bars.
-
Welcome to Hobby Squawk Peytonpurvis. I'll echo what xviper said. The current version is quite nice and powered very well. Reinforcing the nose area is a good idea.
The other thing to watch for is, with it's low slung motors, it will push the nose up before it's at full flying speed. So if you have this knowledge, when taking off, don't use flaps, don't push the throttle up too fast, and feed a little down elevator until the bird is at flying speed. Then just relax the down elevator and she'll take off with a smooth climb out.
There is a good thread here on Hobby Squawk that can be a good source of other owner's impressions and experience.
Comment
-
Hello and welcome Peytonpurvis.
The Me-262 V2 is one of the top 3 FW EDF's in terms of stability, performance and looks for me. Many people have added some reinforcement to the nose/battery bay area, and whilst I think its a worth while mod, in flying my V2 Me-262 for almost a year now I have not seen the need for it, but I'm also flying a light weight pack, our Admiral 5000mah 6S (one of the lightest in this class). The important thing is to simply landing on the main wheels first, then let the nose come down and this is easy to do with the 262.
Not sure if you are flying from grass, but that was a concern for many people looking at the 262 but if that's the case for you, as long as your field is relatively well kept, you'll be fine. You can see more in the flight vid I did last year below and if first gen jets are your things, I'd highly encourage you to get the 262, you will not be disappointed. Flight times are respectable too, 4+mins, just don't push it too far or you may need to go for swim as I did!
Stuart.
Comment
-
The falling leaf mottling is never easy to recreate, especially on a mass produced model painted by hand. We implemented a special training course for the paint team to airbrush the mottling pattern by hand. After painting the main areas using conformal paint molds and letting it dry, the mottling alongside the fuselage is applied by a different painter using a smaller airbrush. It adds lots of time to the production line, but I think the result is much more realistic than hard lined mottling. Our gradations and patterns are unique; no two Me-262s are identical.
Live Q&A every Tuesday and Friday at 9pm EST on my Twitch Livestream
Live chat with me and other RC Nuts on my Discord
Camp my Instagram @Alpha.Makes
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Alpha.MotionRC View PostThe falling leaf mottling is never easy to recreate, especially on a mass produced model painted by hand. We implemented a special training course for the paint team to airbrush the mottling pattern by hand. After painting the main areas using conformal paint molds and letting it dry, the mottling alongside the fuselage is applied by a different painter using a smaller airbrush. It adds lots of time to the production line, but I think the result is much more realistic than hard lined mottling. Our gradations and patterns are unique; no two Me-262s are identical.
Do it with a card for each color and doing the mottling will be quicker.
Wastes more paint and your "cards" will have to be cleaned off (thin metal) or replaced (card stock) when the buildup is thick.
But it would save time and make the pattern more alike from one plane to the next.FF gliders and rubber power since 1966, CL 1970-1990, RC since 1975.
current planes from 1/2 oz to 22 lbs
- Likes 1
Comment
-
Originally posted by Spiderman View PostJust got my Freewing me 262 ( v2 ) I don't want to pop for a 6s cell. I was planning on two, 3s in series as I have plenty of them. Any advice on amp and c rating ?
Comment
-
I don't have current telemetry on the 262 but a safe assumption would be 140A at full throttle on a fresh pack. Although you don't tend to fly this thing at full throttle all the time, unless you want a very exciting 2 minutes.
Youll need a 'true' 30C 5000mah pack, which means it probably needs to have 50C written on the label.
Comment
-
Originally posted by xviper View PostThis plane flies on a 5000mah, 6s LiPo or bigger. If you want similar flight times, you'll need the equivalent mah, so you'd need 2 x 5000mah, 3s and because it's an EDF, a "C" rating of 50C or higher should be your target.
As what mshagg said, any "C" stamped on the battery is almost always more than twice over rated. Typical 30C batteries will give you about 15C, if it's a brand name.
Comment
Comment