
20
FLYING YOUR SUKHOI
If you have carefully followed this assembly manual, you should have no real problems in test flying your SUKHOI. Try to choose a calm
day for the first flight. Good conditions will help in correctly evaluating the flight performance of the model. Begin your test flight by
making sure the engine is properly set with a reliable idle, a strong top end, and smooth transition performance. Set your engine’s high
speed needle valve a little on the rich side, so that when the airplane noses up the engine will not be overlean and sag.
elevator servos and securing the weights on the inside. With the
elevator servos back in place, the weights are hidden.
Finally, the aerobatic performance of your SUKHOI will benefit
greatly if you balance the airplane laterally as well as fore and aft.
In other words, eliminate the "heavy wingtip" syndrome. Lateral
balancing requires that the model be suspended upside down by
two lines (use substantial size chord or fishing line). Loop one line
over the engine propeller shaft and the other line over the tailwheel
bracket. Hang the model from the ceiling or a rafter, leveling it in
side view. With the model secured in this way, observe the wings.
Ideally they should be level, without one wing lower than the other.
If one wing panel is lower, it means that it is somewhat heavier
than the other. When flying the model, this imbalance can cause
the model to "pull" to the heavy side, especially in loops and up
line maneuvers. To make the airplane track true, the light wing
panel needs weight at the tip to balance it level with the other
panel. Again, this can be done with stick-on weights, which could
later be hidden inside the wingtip.
If you need to move your balance point fore or aft slightly, the first
method you should try is to relocate your receiver battery pack.
Often times, moving your battery pack fore or aft is all you need to
do to achieve the desired balance point. If you have a super heavy
gas engine, it’s not unheard of for the battery pack to end up
behind the cockpit area. Wherever the battery pack ends up, be
sure it is adaquetly secured to the model structure so it will not
move around in flight. If relocating your battery pack is not enough
to achieve the desired balance point, and more weight is needed,
consider using a larger (and therefore heavier) battery pack. Try
to avoid adding useless weight.
If you need more weight in
the nose, try a heavier spinner or replace the light wheels with
heavier after-market wheels. If your model is nose heavy and
battery shifting does not work, you can make significant changes
in balance with stick-on lead weights.
These can be used
temporarily on the outside of the model until you've flown the
airplane sufficiently to know exactly where you like the CG and
how much weight it takes to get it there. Once that's done, the lead
weights can be placed inside the fuselage by simply removing the
Содержание SUKHOI SU-31 ARF
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