Looking for cessna plan
I am looking for cessna plan for speed 400. I used to fly glider and I like to get into electric parkflyer with aileron that is easy to fly. Can anybody tell me where I can get such a plan? I choose cessna because I like the look of it and it has always been a trainer plan for a long time.
If I were to design my own plane like cessna what wing span should I build? I already have few battery packs of 8x600AE that I like to use. |
Cessna plan
Hi tocano
A Cessna plan seems about as elusive as a teetotaller at a Kiwi/Aussie rugby game! However I appear to have found two possibilities for you, both available from www.newcreations-rc.com. (The owner of New Creations R/C [Texas] is Kirk Massey, and he is wonderfully helpful - you can e-mail him at: [email protected]). Their catalog lists: (1) A ModelAir-Tech plan for a Cessna C-145/165 Airmaster for Sp400 (7-8-cell): Plan # MATP145 (US$14) (2) A "Pat's Custom Models Plans" (designs by Pat Tritle) for an Electric Scale Cessna Skyhawk 50.5" span, Sp400 with 2.33:1 gearbox (that's a Graupner): Plan # PCMG407 (US$16.95) Have some Fosters Bitter for me!(the green can - not the weasel p. in the blue can that you send over here to the US). Cheers, Phil |
More info
Finally managed to get on to the ModelAir Tech site - here are the details for the Airmaster plan.
P145 Cessna C-145/165 Airmaster (sport scale) Wing area: 340 sq.in. Wing span: 45.5" Weight: 24-28 oz. (7-8 500AR cells) Intended for Speed 400/480 power with H-100 belt drive. Beautiful high wing radial engined aircraft from the mid 1930's. Can be flown rudder/elevator or full house. MSRP: Plans: $14 Have another Fosters! (actually VB and Carlton Draught are better). Phil |
Cool
Thanks for the info Phil.
I'll check the sites a bit later. |
Guillows Cessna
Just another thought - I was in my Hobby Store and saw that they had a very nice Guillows kit for a 36" span Cessna ?Skymaster. Might be a bit small for adaptation to R/C with a 400 but perhaps worth a look. You'd have to build the kit a bit lighter than it would be stock, and if the wing-loading with a 400 looks too high, it might work for a 300 or small brushless (Razor). I reckon the wing area is probably about 1.5sq.ft so you wouldn't want to have a ready-to-fly weight of more than 12-15oz [i.e. 8-10oz/sq.ft wing-loading].
Cheers, Phil |
cessna
Hi Phil,
I think I am going to build another plane first (my own design). Just to difficult to get the cessna plan. I might as well design my own plane and learn few things from it. Thanks for your help. |
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