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Official Nexa 1400mm DH.82 Tiger Moth Biplane - British Camo (Balsa ARF) Discussion Thread

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  • You did read the required accessories? Your power system is significantly lighter than the items listed. And less powerful. If it was me and I needed to add usless weight I'd go even bigger on motor, it's the most forward item.

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    Originally posted by tomsza View Post
    Looking for a little insight. I bought the Nexa DH.82 Tiger Moth British Camo 1400mm (55") Wingspan - ARF and fitted it with a RimFire 32, 60A ESC, 4S-4000 lipo. The plane is so tail heavy that even with the firewall cut to allow the 4S-4000 all the way to the front of the cowl, replacing the small standoffs with 1/4-20 screws, a 4 ounce brass prop hub, I still need about 6 to 8 ounces of lead behind the engine before it balances at the recommended CG. This ends up making the 6.5 pound plane closer to 8+ pounds. At that weight, how will this thing fly?



    I just did, and yeah, I feel like I was ambushed. This plane needs extensive rework. I'll probably strip the covering off and try lightening the tail section. They must have started using not so light, light ply in their construction and failed to care about redesigning for this flaw.

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    • What they need to do is adjust their weight and/or design and materials. This is not a 6.5 pound plane. A bigger motor in the nose (your suggested motor 10.2gr vs 7.8 gr for the RF32) just means less lead in the nose, but it will still need to be an ~8 pound plane (with the firewall hacked up to slide a 4S all the way forward) to come close to it's CG. Without hacking up the firewall to extend the battery forward, I estimated another ~4 ounces of lead needed. This is also leaving the pilot bust off. And at that flying weight, the landing gear will take a real beating. The Rimfire 32 I tested might be on the small side, but it still outputs 747w with a 12x8 on a 4S (6.3 pounds static thrust) and 1011w with a 13x10 on 4S (6.9 pounds static thrust). Easily scale power for a 6.5 pound plane like they advertise.

      That's a 1/2 pound of lead sitting on the cowl, and the motor has a 4 ounce brass prop hub and 1/4-20 standoffs that you don't see. Notice where the battery is in the cowl. And the fact that it is still slightly tail heavy at the recommended CG (laser level line).
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      • Could anyone tell me if a Satio FG 20 will work well with this plane?

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