2010
04.18

My Squall, post 3 flights/1 minor incident

I have been thinking about one of these for a long time, and when Hobbypeople dropped the price a few bucks on the complete setup including vectored thrust, I jumped.

I built the kit using trusty old HXT-900 servos, and the build was mostly unremarkable.  The ARF and associated parts are all of good quality, and the manual is written in a way that I found easy to understand and use.  We used Rhino 2250 4S batteries, but you could probably use anything – the battery tray is wide, long, and accomodating.

Cutting out the decals is about as labor-intensive as building the kit, but there is good news – The provided decals look awesome, and provide needed orientation when in the air.

This is a very interesting airplane to fly.  If you just throw and go, that’s exactly what you get, and we clocked it at 82mph in straight and level flight.  It looks good, feels good, and slows down just fine for landing. 

If you decide to set your TX for high rates, and start slowing down and using them, you can do things like hover, flat spins, and all sorts of other stuff that I’m not really skilled enough to be doing at this stage of the game.  At one point, I got a little low after some of this, and had a low-speed impact with the field – this foam breaks cleanly and repairs cleanly.

As long as you keep it on low rates, this airplane is really quite easy to fly.  If you decide to start mucking around with low speed maneuvers using the vectored thrust, just remember to stay up at altitude and use power as your salvation if you get into trouble.  Flying an EDF like a 3D airplane is weird, and they do not recover from 3D space back to flying as gracefully as the prop jobs do. 

More news as my skills improve,

- Eli

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