RC Heli's

Author
Discussion

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Wednesday 31st January 2007
quotequote all
Just bought myself a starter electric heli - Twister V2. Finding it hard, but so far enjoyable. Anyone recommend any good RC Heli forums?

Many thanks.

G

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Wednesday 31st January 2007
quotequote all
www.rchelispot.com/ is good.



one to avoid is runryder - all the info on there is basically vetted as to it's commercial interest to the site owner, so you get no real info at all, only biased and intentionally false.

lambochick

1,462 posts

225 months

Wednesday 31st January 2007
quotequote all
My other half looks in on this one from time to time.

www.rcheliaddict.co.uk/forums.php

KUB3

1,015 posts

215 months

Wednesday 31st January 2007
quotequote all
For all rc related:

rcuniverse.com

anonymous-user

61 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
www.rcgroups.com/forums

www.rcuniverse.com/forum

Both have loads of good heli stuff.

Edited by stovey on Thursday 1st February 07:50

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
Thanks peeps. I'll hopefully be moving onto a Raptor 90 by the end of the month, NOT! hehe

G

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
If you master the twister, you'll find a Raptor of any description an absolute piece of pee. The smaller the heli, the less stable, the harder to learn and master.

You'll find there are many "experts" on larger heli's that can't fly a micro for toffee, but I've yet to find anyone who can fly a micro can't handle a larger heli with 1/2 the effort!!

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
So I'm told, but the little twister is driving me nuts! Trying to teach yourself something when you don't know what you're doing wrong nor knowing what to do to learn it right is quite hard. Small steps me thinks............

I'm using a very small area in the dining room with lots of solid furniture to keep me focused, but progession is slow..

Wating for the battery packs to charge before round 2 today!

G

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
Right - bear with me before you try again, I'm going to hunt down a link to a list of lessons a friend of mine did. Despite how daft it sounds, you DONT need to take off to learn how to fly these things, and you will learn a lot quicker (with zero breakages) if you keep it on the floor.

The lessons are... somewhat differently written... shall we say (he's american, and a bit of an oddball laugh )

Basic idea is to keep it on the floor and within a 2ft box while making it skate about with various inputs - you master what ONE input is going to do at a time, then add them all together, before you ever get off the floor.

I learnt using his technique after a shakey start, and the first time I took off after doing his lessons, I hovered out almost an entire pack without any major hassles. I flew my raptor (that I had been too scared to try previously) the following weekend without ANY problems at all.

There are tons of us that learnt using this technique - same result every time.

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
www.dream-models.com/eco/flying-index.html

there ya go. that's the introductory page, lessons are linked down right hand side.

As I say, the slightly bizarre theme is down to the author, but behind it all the lessons really do work.

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
Thanks davi will give it a try. Back to basics!

Its the smooth floor I'm hav ing trouble with, can't find one! Carpet is sticky and I'm sure is not helping learn the inputs.

I have got the think airborne (briefly) but its keeping it where you want it thats the hard part.

I think I'm on my 10th pack already but not mear the master radd seems to think for the stage of progress!!!

G


Edited by triple7 on Thursday 1st February 14:07

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
nip down to the nearest hardware store and get a large sheet of hardboard - it makes a perfect skid pan for these micro's It's also not very hard so quite giving when you have... a spill (though if you don't leave the floor, you obviously haven't got far to spill anyway!)

Carpet will severely hinder you picking it up from scooting about - the inputs needed are minute in the air, and reasonably well reflected on a shiny surface, on carpet you could be putting in 10 times too much movement to get no where near the same reaction. Biggest problem at your stage is over-control. Stick it one way, panic, stick full tilt the other. In a hover you will hardly see the stick inputs if you watch someone else, really, really small.

oh - and when you do finally go for the big take off, don't forget to keep at a reasonable height - too high and you'll create a vacuum above the blades, which will pull the heli into the ceiling before you can blink... it's tricky getting the blade marks off the ceiling, believe me

Edited by Davi on Thursday 1st February 14:13

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
HA HA, made larf the last bit. I've since moved some furniture and bow have a good sized area to play in. Yup, better forget all I have done to date and go by a board of plastic or wood!

Me off to the shops................................

So you got a Raptor 30 or 50?

G

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
triple7 said:
HA HA, made larf the last bit. I've since moved some furniture and bow have a good sized area to play in. Yup, better forget all I have done to date and go by a board of plastic or wood!

Me off to the shops................................

So you got a Raptor 30 or 50?

G


that's the ticket - you'll know when you've got it *just* right because your better half will walk in and ask WTF you think you are doing hehe

Got a Raptor 30 (well was originally) and a large box of bits that will be Airwolf based around a 50. Got a few other electrics as well from a sub-micro I made (8" span) up to eco 8 - they get most use as I can sling them around the garden without having to get all the starter gear out!!!

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
Got a huge bit of MDF, don't ask me how I got in the X-type!

Batteries charged, here goes..................gotta stop for deal or no deal mind you!

Thanks again, I'll keep y'all posted.

G

roop

6,012 posts

291 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
Good luck man, should be fun. The Twister's quite a nice little heli. Be careful though because it's addictive. Give it 12 months and you'll end up like me : www.raptorv2.co.uk rolleyes

Davi

17,153 posts

227 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
roop said:
Good luck man, should be fun. The Twister's quite a nice little heli. Be careful though because it's addictive. Give it 12 months and you'll end up like me : www.raptorv2.co.uk rolleyes

12 months? what were you doing for the other 6 then

'tis a tad addictive isn't it.

triple7

Original Poster:

4,015 posts

244 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
Thanx Roop, the Raptor has always been my goal, never really heard about these micro-electric heli's till v recently. Seems a better place to start before shelling out £600!

Yes, really love it, so much better to learn of the MDF, that tail is so twitchy!!!

G

apache

39,731 posts

291 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
roop said:
Good luck man, should be fun. The Twister's quite a nice little heli. Be careful though because it's addictive. Give it 12 months and you'll end up like me : www.raptorv2.co.uk rolleyes



My daughters bf just bought a Raptor V2 with Sanyo rc gear and 3.6 engine, all in for £300. I've just built it for him and he is having it checked out by a local rc shop. They said they'll train us both to hover in 2 hours. Is this realistic? and how hard are they to fly?

roop

6,012 posts

291 months

Thursday 1st February 2007
quotequote all
The Raptor is a a great training helicopter. Hovering in 2 hours is entirely feasible. Hovering at 90 degrees, nose-in or inverted is another matter. That's the thing with helicopters, you never really stop learning. They are a really great challenge. Good luck and if you have any queries, just shout...!