ORIGINAL: astropuppy
I feel obligated to share my first year (this year) story. After entering three contests as a sportsman I am happy about my airplane choice because the airplane really doesn't matter in sportsman. What I did was buy a 2M (ARF) Sword from E-Bay for about $200 NIB and convert it to electric because I decided to fly electric from the get go instead of learning to run big glow. The new improved Sword goes by another name and sells for $300 dollars now days,
http://texasrcplanes.com/forcpaai.html , I will guarantee it will do anything in the Sportsman pattern. As a newbie, the precision of the airplane has been the least of my worries. I've been beaten by Aviastar trainers. Just because I have flown Sportsman in a couple contests doesn't make me a pattern pilot. Sportsman is about learning to fly a straight and level line, which I thought was easy until I stood in front of judges and called takeoff. Buy a Sword or whatever else or just use whatever you have, go fly some straight lines with turn arounds. It was a lot harder than I ever imagined.
I agree but what attracted you to pattern to begin with? I'll bet it wasn't watching a pilot do a really good job flying sportsman with an Avistar. Guys are visual. We like cool looking toys. We also like to feel like we fit in. Pattern planes look like the Corvette of RC planes to me, so they have the cool factor nailed. Now just offer them up an affordable plane in a size that lets people feel like they fit in with the big boys.... even if they (the planes) really don't measure up to the top level stuff. BTW, I flew an Avistar in a local IMAC competition many, years ago and I didn't finish last either.