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Old 08-30-2008 | 11:53 AM
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TBPlayer
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From: Arcadia, CA
Default RE: First 3D Plane???


ORIGINAL: altavillan

A friend and local E flyer has had a typhoon for over a year now. It's his main airplane and his first succesful flying plane. It has suffered some tremendous crashes and still flies like new! However, for learning 3D nothing compares to the Charger foamies ability to fly so dang slow and precise. The learning curve will be much faster with a foamy. A little over a year ago I went to a 3D event and saw the top flyers having a ball with their Charger CR1's and 2's. I had no clue what 3D was about till then. Now I can rolling circle the CR1 or 2 in my back yard where there's about 40 feet of room. The secret is in the extra wide body of the Charger's. They do not drop when laid on their side. Which makes it a very easy way to get the hang of the tricky 3D stuff. All the foamy practice has helped a bunch towards doing the same with my large gas planes.
It will take much longer to learn 3D with the Typhoon because it needs to carry much more speed through manouvers. But if you can afford it, a couple foamy kits and a Typhoon to apply what you have learned too, would be a good way to go.
I agree with this 100%. I started out in 3D with a RC-Factory Flash and was having a heck of a time trying to learn to harrier and hover. I flew it for about 2 months, thinking I was never going to learn 3D. Then I bought, built and flew a Charger R/C CR-1. Wow, what a difference! I finally started to make progress on learning some 3D. I've been flying the CR-1 for about 9 months now and, as I said, I'm on my fourth one. Every couple of months I would go back and run a few batteries through my Flash and think "this thing sucks" and put it back on the shelf. I was seriously thinking of stripping the gear out of it and throwing it away. But then, a couple of months ago, I took it down and flew it again and changed my opinion. I kind of dig it now - it really does knife-edge well and I can now easily harrier and hover it. I think I just had to get my flying skills up to a point where I could appreciate it and the CR-1 helped me do that.


-Phil