Monday, February 24, 2020

Super Pacer (Owen Kampten)

Built this in April 2012, classic pattern ship. Designed by Owen Kampten.
I converted the Nitro engine into an electric motor. First the wings ribs were cut out and stick the pieces together. Symmetrical wing foils are nasty so all the tools came in to help.







 After slotting, stick on the nylon hinge piece to the wing rib

 Making the ailerons using stock triangle but not the right gradient so more work






Cutting slots in the ailerons to receive the nylon hinges and make the bevel angle for smooth movement



According to the plans the wings have a dihedral angle so cut a  dihedral brace and test fit the brace. Everything I do must fit in tight and not too much slop, a habit from too much of helicopter building.

 Next make the aileron torque tube from 3mm carbon steel and brass bearing for again smooth movement. and solder on the threaded couplers

 Now cut the slot in the Aileron to receive the torque tube



 Don't forget to insert the brass bearing before you close the other end of the torque tube. Its a night mare to bend these 3mm carbon steel. But wait there is worse coming. Some pictures

Stick in the nylon hinges with extra reinforcement.
 Cut the 5mm hard wood which goes to the center rib. Epoxy it to have strong bond since the wing attaches to the fuse with this hard wood, no CA for this one.






 Checking for alignment and sticking the lower spar


 Planking the wing's top sheet. 


 After planking, glue in the servo bracket and get ready to cut out the servo pocket



 Cut the landing gear support square pegs, X marks the spot for precise drilling
 Sheeting the lower wing leadimg edge


The remaining servo bracket glue in place
 Glue in the square pegs to support the 5mm landing gear carbon steel wire.

 And yes the nightmare of bending a 5mm landing gear (below picture)  to the perfect right angle, pure madness and brute strength

More pics of the lower spar and the angle joint at the center of the wing

 Next the elevator connect rod and its assembly


 Cut out fuselarge and make the push rod from hard wood round peg and 3mm carbon steel

 Also the former for the wing attachment. A bit too short so CA comes in handy and make up for the length

 Next : Glue the former in place and the triangular stock piece.


 Then comes the motor mount made from 10mm ply with ventilation holes and glue it in place together with the triangular stock pieces.






 The battery tray is next
 With that done, I cut the rudder and the slots to receive the nylon hinges. Marking the rudder for taper sanding

 Planking the bottom of the fuse, cross grain.

 Next comes the wing tip. Made from balsa block. Did not want to buy as it was expensive so stick all the balance wood I have and made two blocks


 Now remove the excess material and sand to shape



 Wingtip done and servo mounted with aileron in place

 Next do the wing mounting for the fuse using ply. holes are drilled at an angle so that the plastic screw sits flush and nice. The two ply are join at an angle but right angled to the fuse, tricky part, and still needs to be aligned to the wing's mounting holes.


Next is to bend the 3mm carbon steel for the tail landing gear. Very hard to bend 90 degree bend and not in xy plane but xyz plane. Don't forget the brass bearing before the last bent, if not its damn........


Now a little mod to the tail wheels. To make the plane as light, I chose the plastic wheels. But it is not smooth so I added brass bearing in the wheel so that it rotates on the steel landing gear, get the idea? Ok a pic is worth a thousand words. Look carefully, you can see the brass tube. Add a drop of oil and its ultra smooth. The wheel has almost no weight and with this mod it will last a long time and more importantly it rolls perfectly straight so that take off is true.
 The horizontal stab with holes shed off 2 grams of weight.
Mould the aircraft's canopy. a picture is worth a thousand words. 


  Complete the build of the Super Pacer





Flies like a dream!!
With 9x 8 prop drawing 32A, plenty room for improvement. Could fit a 10 x 7 prop with 42A draw. The flight was good, rolls were axial in both directions. Model flew straight and true. Very happy! 6 minutes of flight time, landed at 3.8 V per cell (3s 2700mah).

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