Someone tell me I'm nuts before I run off and start building another bespoke creation.
A friend of mine gave me an old Sterling Cirrus kit. Most of you would already know this, but if you are not familiar, it's a die cut kit from the 60's which is all built up balsa with an 87" span. The original kit was meant to be a towline glider, or single channel RC. Not sure many people got these things to fly very well mainly because of their somewhat fragile construction, large airframe but light weight contributing to the fragility, and lack of small RC equipment back when these things were popular. Link added to one that is partially built if you are not familiar.
My reasoning for building one of these probably started when I was about 8 years old and dreamed one day of building everything in the Sterling catalogue. Maybe I'm living with 8 year old rose colored glasses on, maybe not, but I've got to believe that by leveraging micro- RC equipment and more modern materials and build techniques that one of these airframes could fly pretty well. And that got me thinking that the best configuration may be to build it either with a motor in the nose or in aero tow configuration. Given the size and lightweight nature of one of these, I thought aero tow made a lot of sense. And then considering this thing could probably be towed up with a 1/6 scale electric Piper Cub or something similar, it becomes even more interesting.
Thoughts? Good idea or should I just build it and hang it from the ceiling?
A friend of mine gave me an old Sterling Cirrus kit. Most of you would already know this, but if you are not familiar, it's a die cut kit from the 60's which is all built up balsa with an 87" span. The original kit was meant to be a towline glider, or single channel RC. Not sure many people got these things to fly very well mainly because of their somewhat fragile construction, large airframe but light weight contributing to the fragility, and lack of small RC equipment back when these things were popular. Link added to one that is partially built if you are not familiar.
My reasoning for building one of these probably started when I was about 8 years old and dreamed one day of building everything in the Sterling catalogue. Maybe I'm living with 8 year old rose colored glasses on, maybe not, but I've got to believe that by leveraging micro- RC equipment and more modern materials and build techniques that one of these airframes could fly pretty well. And that got me thinking that the best configuration may be to build it either with a motor in the nose or in aero tow configuration. Given the size and lightweight nature of one of these, I thought aero tow made a lot of sense. And then considering this thing could probably be towed up with a 1/6 scale electric Piper Cub or something similar, it becomes even more interesting.
Thoughts? Good idea or should I just build it and hang it from the ceiling?
Comment