Can a Solid Wood Airplane Actually Fly???

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  • Опубликовано: 29 май 2023
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Комментарии • 2,6 тыс.

  • @marshallcarter6106
    @marshallcarter6106 Год назад +3279

    The animations and explanations for aircraft stability were better than any actual private pilot curriculum I've ever seen. Well done.

    • @RWJOwnsUsAll
      @RWJOwnsUsAll Год назад +78

      I came here to say the same thing. I didn't grasp aircraft stability to this level until the day of my CFI checkride. Awesome explanation Daniel!

    • @AdrianMelia-0
      @AdrianMelia-0 Год назад +20

      I'm also here to say the same thing! Excellent choice of words and pictures.

    • @motionsic
      @motionsic Год назад +19

      This explanation is better than most (concise and technical jargon free). A great intro to everyone that wants learn how a plane flies!

    • @junkyardjimmyriversiderecy6722
      @junkyardjimmyriversiderecy6722 Год назад +9

      I agree you can now build your own plane

    • @LukasFilms
      @LukasFilms Год назад +4

      Was thinking the same thing lmao

  • @redhelmet8
    @redhelmet8 Год назад +808

    Honestly, your explanation of basic aircraft fundamentals was better and more concise than a lot of the college classes I took for my AE degree. Would recommend your video to any entry level college students or anyone just interested in the basics of flight.

    • @iteerrex8166
      @iteerrex8166 Год назад +26

      Yeah most professors are awful at teaching. They just passed the classes, got the degrees, and voila there to teach.
      People gotta be good students and teach themselves.

    • @XfromDarkHorse
      @XfromDarkHorse Год назад

      ruclips.net/video/rkm7_mjA3XY/видео.html

    • @heyitsmejm4792
      @heyitsmejm4792 Год назад +4

      @@iteerrex8166 everyone with a degree can teach, but not everyone is passionate about it...

    • @iteerrex8166
      @iteerrex8166 Год назад +9

      @@heyitsmejm4792 Id say it takes other skills besides knowledge and passion to teach well.

    • @bertkilborne6464
      @bertkilborne6464 Год назад +7

      I was checking out my dad's high school physics book from the early 40s and every one these principles were discussed .
      None of this interesting stuff was addressed in my own physics classes in the 70s

  • @Wise4HarvestTime
    @Wise4HarvestTime Год назад +110

    This was extremely educational and interesting. You gave us the fundamentals we would need to design a plane

    • @somewagyuenjoyer
      @somewagyuenjoyer 7 месяцев назад

      @@RepentandbelieveinJesusChrist5 gigachad

  • @cappytheimmortal
    @cappytheimmortal 10 месяцев назад +12

    So thats where the random plane came from in my backyard

  • @cutegamerboy
    @cutegamerboy Год назад +960

    Technically they are still paper airplanes, just pre-paper airplanes:)

    • @FilosophicalPharmer
      @FilosophicalPharmer Год назад +79

      I’m pining for a pun thread. Wood you mind if we use your comment, OP? Let’s branch out and see where this leaves us.

    • @mohammedazzan7529
      @mohammedazzan7529 Год назад +9

      thats cz he pre-ordered

    • @lukearts2954
      @lukearts2954 Год назад +15

      This channel is too well-documented for a PhD paper...

    • @RapTapTap69
      @RapTapTap69 Год назад +28

      ​@@FilosophicalPharmer just leaf it be. We don't need to root around and force a joke

    • @morgantisdale6928
      @morgantisdale6928 Год назад +19

      @@FilosophicalPharmer My dad hated puns. He would beat you to a pulp.

  • @funkstrong
    @funkstrong Год назад +235

    I could watch different iterations of these designs dropped forever, really cool to see how they all respond.

    • @mikelarin8037
      @mikelarin8037 Год назад +3

      I agree, I'd watch this weekly if he released them

    • @christopherdouglas2154
      @christopherdouglas2154 Год назад

      Until you get drunk Karen That's Trying to get Back to New Jersey Shore and she Said she Just Cannot wait And She is going to Take a Big Fat Dump Out of the Emergency Exit!! 😮 Because you know that Big Girl+Drunk+Drugs ÷Jersey Shores= OMFG.. Could you imagine those Farts after eating that cereal?
      I'll try a magic spoon without that Drunk Teenager ! BTW ; WHY would you hire people like that?

    • @aarondavis8943
      @aarondavis8943 Год назад

      The space shuttle design was epic. I was surprised how well it flew.

  • @Eserin_rain
    @Eserin_rain Год назад +81

    even though I have not studied flight physics, (as I am still young) the hours I spent on designing and testing paper airplanes proved itself to help me understand this video, your explanations were straight to the point and easy to understand. Thank you for this video and the amount of effort you put in. (18:52 Look closely at those horses, they are reacting and you can see a small blob presumably your aerodynamical space shuttle fall into there haha)

  • @gregatkinson4039
    @gregatkinson4039 18 дней назад +1

    I haven’t even gotten to making the airplane yet - that explanation of the factors involved in flight was amazing!

  • @sharedknowledge6640
    @sharedknowledge6640 Год назад +654

    As an engineer It’s fun to watch you share your theories, iterate prototypes, and then test, test, test.

    • @idkname
      @idkname Год назад +2

      hey

    • @idkname
      @idkname Год назад +3

      glad to see your comment. have a nice time. i am searching job. but i also want to work on some projects.
      wish you good.

    • @Slavov_Ukraini
      @Slavov_Ukraini Год назад +2

      And what kind of engineering do you do?

    • @christo930
      @christo930 7 месяцев назад +2

      I'm sure the FAA loves it too. Dropping lawndarts from hundreds of feet in the air.
      He lost many of the planes. Who knows how many houses or cars and other property were damaged.

    • @foju9365
      @foju9365 7 месяцев назад

      Exactly what I was thinking too. I used to make cambered paper wings and rolled up paper for fuselages, and build my own gliders. Much like these but not 3D printed. This was 30 years ago. Gosh, I feel really old. Anyway I may have built some 200+ of these - all kinds of designs. I loved building them. They taught me everything about gliders and flying machines

  • @anselme9636
    @anselme9636 Год назад +280

    You just made flight physics something understandable by everyone in a cool and concrete manner. Incredible video, I remember asking myself this same question. And you answered to it, you showed that anything no matter the wing loading can fly as long as you give it enough speed !

    • @gimmeaford9454
      @gimmeaford9454 Год назад +4

      until you have to do the math associated with it. then it gets more fun.

    • @Jila_Tana
      @Jila_Tana Год назад +4

      I tried it out with an ashtray, it worked !
      Could also use that ashtray as a 'remote control' for the TV (to turn it off), just give it enough speed.

    • @coriscotupi
      @coriscotupi Год назад

      @@Jila_Tana Aim right at the center of the screen.

    • @aarondavis8943
      @aarondavis8943 Год назад

      Yeah you can pretty much make planes after watching this. Sweet.

    • @QuantumRift
      @QuantumRift Год назад +1

      If you strap a big enough engine to it, a BRICK can fly and break the sound barrier.

  • @scullyy
    @scullyy 4 месяца назад +99

    My father died in a wooden airplane crash. Crashed right into his head.

  • @MrBlob04
    @MrBlob04 11 месяцев назад +18

    I wanted to say that the way you explained the way the wings are tilted etc and how it helps it lift off and stay stable was so much better than anything I’ve heard, absolutely amazing!! Thank you for expanding my knowledge 😅

  • @terrafimeira
    @terrafimeira Год назад +312

    For practical non-littering, maybe a slight roll bias to keep them in the field is desired. :|

    • @ccccc1171
      @ccccc1171 Год назад +52

      Maybe use steel over lead just in case you leave it

    • @peterlustig8021
      @peterlustig8021 Год назад +19

      i always add brightly colored paracord sleeves. it doenst only look cool but also helps me find my shit

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Год назад

      Do we now need a leftfield and rightfield wing option... (Left and Right wing don"t define the deviance adequately)

    • @snuffying
      @snuffying Год назад +15

      @@peterlustig8021 i fill them with TNT and iron nails so they self destruct exploding when they land somewhere and the nails flying away make whooshing sounds to better find the source of where it fell. it also helps if there are people around because you will hear screaming. nice little side bonus

    • @RegularBiscuit
      @RegularBiscuit Год назад +3

      @@snuffying i would add exposed lead and aim them at water sources

  • @medivalone
    @medivalone Год назад +94

    PrusaSlicer 2.6 has the ability to add pegs and holes to aid in aligning and glueing models that are printed in multiple pieces. This might help you with aligning the two halves of your models.

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Год назад +1

      It is ultra convenient that this is automated, I and any other adequate designer have been doing this in large prints or assemblies for years (I tend to use small steel pins (we have basically unlimited supplies of -surplus- machined 1.5mm "dowels ) inserted into matching holes, they are incredible strong providing early alignment support at the bonding layer (better than printed dowels for fine detail)

    • @JoseRodriguez-ey7ju
      @JoseRodriguez-ey7ju Год назад +1

      exactly, the whole time i was wondering: why doesn't he just add some pegs on the inside to help with the alignment process

  • @gabriellynch2764
    @gabriellynch2764 8 месяцев назад +3

    That was one of the best explained videos i have ever watched on any subject. I haven't studied fluid dynamics, I don't know much about aircraft engineering and i certainly am not involved in the flying community. This video taught me ALOT. And I was enthralled the whole time. I think it mostly just comes down to how well the video was made. I give you my thanks.

  • @endonde2007
    @endonde2007 6 месяцев назад +5

    1940s Japanese engineers at 16:50 be like: congratulations, you made a successful plane.

  • @aaronredbaron
    @aaronredbaron Год назад +85

    Solid wood slope sailplanes built for high wind are a thing. They fly fantastic!

    • @marc_frank
      @marc_frank Год назад +3

      i'll search for some

    • @SharphandXeno
      @SharphandXeno Год назад +2

      Yeah! Like the Thorn!

    • @steve_beatty
      @steve_beatty Год назад +4

      I have a all wood 1.5m slope glider I bought years ago called The Thorn......made out of poplar I think ? ..flew fine...still have it..

    • @SharphandXeno
      @SharphandXeno Год назад +3

      @@steve_beatty yeah! it was even made the same way these wooden planes in the video were made. My boss has one in his office.

    • @notanotherrcchannel
      @notanotherrcchannel Год назад +3

      They're out of production now, unfortunately! Super cool though. I'd love to get my hands on one. If you have a spare, lmk!

  • @aqimjulayhi8798
    @aqimjulayhi8798 Год назад +49

    I haven’t gone past 4:42 but I just want to applaud how understandable the explanation for passive aircraft stability is. I fly model airplanes myself, I ‘know’ the things like dihedral, but I can never really understand why they work until I found this video. The visuals and the ‘pretend like we’re the oncoming wind’ really helped better understand the concept.

  • @RobloxmitJAROmehr-ok9ei
    @RobloxmitJAROmehr-ok9ei 4 месяца назад +8

    My brain: AIRSPEED LOW AIRSPEED LOW

    • @Mas_Avgeek
      @Mas_Avgeek 7 дней назад

      Whoop whoop pull up! Windshear ahead!
      Stall stall!
      Bank angle bank angle!

  • @goddamn_i_love_flying
    @goddamn_i_love_flying 11 месяцев назад +5

    "I gotta pick up some random trash to offset my litter!" 😂😂😂 19:00

  • @nathanielnoodles4260
    @nathanielnoodles4260 Год назад +274

    Got to admit that this type of content at this level is hard to find, good job man I'm proud of you.

    • @GunsAndAmmo3
      @GunsAndAmmo3 Год назад +3

      I'm pining for a pun thread. Wood you mind if we used your comment, OP? Let's try branching out and seeing where it leaves us.

    • @jonathanchisholm3319
      @jonathanchisholm3319 11 месяцев назад +3

      ​@GunsAndAmmo3 just make sure it's nothing plane

    • @frisovandevijver8893
      @frisovandevijver8893 11 месяцев назад

      ​@@GunsAndAmmo3I saw some great puns in the logs of this video

    • @MemesFromDucky
      @MemesFromDucky 11 месяцев назад

      Thank zou soooo much for the fyziks at the begging of video ❤🙂🙂

  • @mikebergman1817
    @mikebergman1817 Год назад +130

    Dude I could watch hours and hours of these. This would make killer "fan showdown" type of content.. Where people send in crazy/well thought out designs that are printed off and drop tested. Super cool content to watch!!

    • @paradiselost9946
      @paradiselost9946 11 месяцев назад

      yeah, i wanna see some smoke n wind tunnel tests...
      about the only bit of aforementioned channel i can stand watching ;)

  • @darcos7535
    @darcos7535 22 часа назад

    You are a very gifted presenter. I could watch these videos all day. I'm very impressed how you take one concept and just keep working with it. At no time did I feel the desire to fast forward. Thanks

  • @1freedlander
    @1freedlander Год назад +2

    I greatly appreciate the tremendous effort and work you put into this project. It was both educational and fun to watch, but took a lot of dedication on your part. Good job! Rudolph

  • @hinglemccringle5897
    @hinglemccringle5897 Год назад +26

    i love how you make your videos. they're informative and genuinely entertaining with how you actually craft projects to show real-world effects on the things you talk about.

  • @rallekralle11
    @rallekralle11 Год назад +40

    i'd quite like to see the shuttle design milled

    • @Ritefita
      @Ritefita Год назад +1

      few small light shuttles from one piece.
      omg. they wood be more than brothers

    • @kevintieman3616
      @kevintieman3616 Год назад +2

      Or just made into an RC airplane. I might actually do this.

    • @2552legoboy
      @2552legoboy Год назад

      hes made alot of videos on shuttle like craft w delta wings and lifting bodies and such

  • @pa_maj.MARTINI-van-MAN
    @pa_maj.MARTINI-van-MAN 11 месяцев назад +1

    Wow! This video is almost 28 minutes long yet felt like it was around half of that, the immersion was very satisfying. Well done rctestflight.

  • @joeldobbs7396
    @joeldobbs7396 11 месяцев назад

    Thank you very much for the succinct and comprehensive explanation of passive glide aerodynamics! I have been making planes from foam insulation for a few months, using weights and adjusting the rear stabilizer to get a flat glide path. I will be using what I just learned to refine my builds and get better results.

  • @Atanar89
    @Atanar89 Год назад +16

    27:20 That's not flying, that's just falling with style.

  • @ddddddddddd5354
    @ddddddddddd5354 Год назад +63

    I was curious if Revell Models were able to fly, so I bought a few and tested them with a large rubber just like you did. They flew suprisingly well and very far, and I never expected how stable they flew considering how small they were. Maybe you could try that in a video too, it was a lot of fun.
    I had the most success with a 727, Buccanner and suprisingly a Su35

    • @motionsic
      @motionsic Год назад +5

      I would like to see that in a video!

    • @robinbennett5994
      @robinbennett5994 Год назад +11

      It's interesting that those were all jets, which are designed with the heavy engines in the middle, so the model probably has a fairly accurate CG. Prop planes are mostly designed for a heavy engine in the nose, and (as most kids discover) don't balance when you try to hang them from the ceiling by looping thread over the wings.

    • @ddddddddddd5354
      @ddddddddddd5354 Год назад +7

      Actually the CG was still very far in the back. I had to add quite a bit of weight. If you built them as a Kid and left the weight out they would always tip backwards with the gear out.
      Jets are still better since they have a longer nose and larger rudders and elevators compared to props. And I feel like the sweeped wings add flight stability aswell.
      Sth like a 190A or Biplane would likely be not possible to fly at that size due to all this, especially as a glider.

    • @jojo-._.
      @jojo-._. Год назад +3

      did they survive?

    • @ddddddddddd5354
      @ddddddddddd5354 Год назад +3

      Yes, still have them, tho the noses are very scratched. They can take a suprising Amount of damage.

  • @mark6302
    @mark6302 10 месяцев назад +1

    the drop from the copter is awesome

  • @ptichica7025
    @ptichica7025 16 часов назад

    Great video! Explanation for dihedral effect is the best that I have ever seen.

  • @SteezyKyung
    @SteezyKyung Год назад +99

    My dad was a commercial 747 pilot for about 30 years, I feel like I’m back in childhood having people explain YAW to me again😂

    • @user-wq3lw3xn4c
      @user-wq3lw3xn4c 2 месяца назад +1

      Thats sick

    • @Spux1
      @Spux1 Месяц назад +1

      Dude I wish I was ur dad 747 is my favorite plane

    • @eamonnroblox
      @eamonnroblox 6 дней назад

      Nice

  • @deliziosetiefkuhlkost2463
    @deliziosetiefkuhlkost2463 Год назад +40

    I think a video where everyone can submit a custom design in on shape and you pick the most interesting ones and print them would be fun

    • @mikebergman1817
      @mikebergman1817 Год назад +3

      I was thinking that the whole time. Like the 3d printed fan showdowns!

    • @coriscotupi
      @coriscotupi Год назад +1

      @@mikebergman1817 A 21st century version of the high school paper airplane contest. As cool as it gets.

  • @m.junaidmahmood4209
    @m.junaidmahmood4209 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great content. It was learning with experimentation. Excellent stuff.

  • @mytube001
    @mytube001 Год назад +24

    Given enough thrust, anything can fly! :D

    • @outandabout259
      @outandabout259 Год назад +2

      yep, at some point even wings are unnecessary!

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Год назад

      @@outandabout259 - below critical airspeeds wings are pointless. Lol..

  • @Kozzado
    @Kozzado Год назад +17

    the explanations of passive stability on all axis are amazing

  • @ryansta
    @ryansta Год назад

    Excellent descriptions and explanations throughout.

  • @ICU10
    @ICU10 Месяц назад

    Just nice to see and hear blokes having real constructive fun.

  • @acraigwest
    @acraigwest Год назад +14

    you need to use alignment holes and pegs to ensure that the two halves are properly aligned. I actually use spring loaded pins that I 3D print to hold the two halves together, if you use enough of them you don't need glue. The pins are originally from a fairly well-known 3D print, the gear cube

  • @KF99
    @KF99 Год назад +10

    That reminds me my own experience with 3D printed shuttle glider. Stalls, lawn darts and flyaway.

  • @meep1l246
    @meep1l246 10 месяцев назад

    really learnt a lot from this, thank you man

  • @swagatrout3075
    @swagatrout3075 Год назад +1

    That was a lot and thank you for your effort.

  • @no-name8553
    @no-name8553 Год назад +11

    Have to say; been secretly creeping around your channel This last year without contributing to your comment sections. Have to say ‘thanks’ for all the entertainment plus education value you’ve produced for the world. I’m pretty lame in book smart section of life. Been real fun to watch someone so passionate for their craft. Great job on *everything* you’ve accomplished so far. 👍

  • @gogotrololo
    @gogotrololo Год назад +11

    Man... I put this on for 30 mins of background noise, and now I'm 30 mins behind on my work! You explained some concepts I've never heard about, and I've been a casual flight theory observer for my whole life, well done! Makes me want to get a 3d printer

  • @BirdGuy1928
    @BirdGuy1928 6 месяцев назад +1

    22:32 OOOOAAAAAUUUUOOOOH Had me dying 🤣
    Nice video though!

  • @jeremiahknopf1054
    @jeremiahknopf1054 Год назад

    Omg the way you explained dihedral effect was amazing

  • @RegisChapman
    @RegisChapman Год назад +11

    It's so interesting to me how small creators have found ways to explain and test basic principles of almost everything these days, and this made me understand more about flight than I had previously known. Well done.

    • @pharoah334
      @pharoah334 Год назад

      Im the first person to like and reply to this comment

  • @KaminKevCrew
    @KaminKevCrew Год назад +8

    To avoid issues with misalignment in the glue up, you could put two or three holes for pins in both halves, and then print dowels that will fit snugly in the hole on both sides, to lock the halves in place in a similar way to the pins you used to hold the block of wood in place.

  • @Rossv2motion
    @Rossv2motion 8 месяцев назад

    The animations and explanations regarding aircraft stability surpassed any private pilot curriculum I've come across. Great job!

  • @allanturmaine5496
    @allanturmaine5496 10 месяцев назад

    This was an entertaining primer on gliders. Really cool work!

  • @TheRogueBro
    @TheRogueBro Год назад +8

    Should have used Kerbal Space Program 2 to do the demonstration at the beginning. You can live move the wings and it will show you the center of lift and center of gravity.

  • @marshmellow377
    @marshmellow377 Год назад +7

    I have been a professional pilot for many years, and you have just reminded me how fascinating aerodynamics actually are. The small things we take for granted on a day-to-day basis!

  • @khmisc
    @khmisc Год назад

    Very cool to see your drive to experiment and refine. Thanks for sharing!

  • @zdarthlork6732
    @zdarthlork6732 8 месяцев назад +2

    I’m about to cry 💀26:02

  • @jannepeltonen2036
    @jannepeltonen2036 Год назад +13

    That was cool! Also, I think a wooden plane resembling a DC3 is way cooler than a shuttle-shaped one :D

  • @beaconofwierd1883
    @beaconofwierd1883 Год назад +17

    You should print in PHA plastic, it's supposed to be biodegradable in nature (unlike PLA which is "biodegradable" at high temperatures in basically an industrial setting.
    Collorfab has a filament called AllPHA, which I've tried and it works very well, kind of prone to warping though.

    • @jumpvelocity3953
      @jumpvelocity3953 7 месяцев назад

      I’d wager that PLA miniature airplanes make for pretty good rocks, definitely better than say, a garbage bag.

    • @beaconofwierd1883
      @beaconofwierd1883 7 месяцев назад +3

      @@jumpvelocity3953 sure, they don’t run the risk of entangling animals or anything like that, but they will still be worn down into micro plastics and end up in the bodies of animals.

  • @akinejat
    @akinejat 28 дней назад

    Good effort. It was really educational. Thank you very much.

  • @orion.903
    @orion.903 8 месяцев назад

    The explanations at the start of the video caught my attention. I make airplanes regularly but seeing the explanation behind it caught my curiosity. Made one using the directions and it flies perfectly. I did a bit more research on the topic and it may be my career choice in the end. Thanks mate!

  • @timch5227
    @timch5227 Год назад +81

    So interesting!
    But i was constantly afraid that someone was gonna get hit by a plane.
    I think its quite dangerous since the planes randomly fly somewhere.

    • @AHN1444
      @AHN1444 Год назад +7

      Yeah I hope no one got hit by a flying wooden plane.

    • @skussy69
      @skussy69 11 месяцев назад +1

      ​@@AHN1444 can tell if that comment came from genuine concern or if you're referencing the Chilean air disaster back in '83 😮

    • @AHN1444
      @AHN1444 11 месяцев назад +1

      @@skussy69 which chilean air disaster? It was genuine consern

    • @3333927
      @3333927 11 месяцев назад +9

      If such a plane hits someone, it would cause severe injuries, because it's so heavy, solid and fast. It even may kill people. Just look how deep it's going into the ground. You don't want this going into your stomach.

    • @joshuahedges4882
      @joshuahedges4882 10 месяцев назад +2

      Karen

  • @RobertHollander
    @RobertHollander Год назад +6

    I'm a licensed pilot and even I learned more than I knew before about aerodynamics and stability. Great job. Also, a lot of great toys to play with.

  • @catkook543
    @catkook543 8 месяцев назад

    to reduce litter production, it might be worth looking into a way to add some kind of tracking device on the plan.
    or maybe a high viability material to make it easier to spot, like reflective tape or painting it orange

  • @gordonquickstad
    @gordonquickstad 8 месяцев назад

    Thanks for doing what I always wanted to do!

  • @whidzee
    @whidzee Год назад +12

    i'd love to see a much larger RC version of that shuttle design. it looked awesome!

    • @EversonBernardes
      @EversonBernardes Год назад

      Came here to say this. A larger, powered RC version of the shuttle looks like it would be a delight to pilot.

  • @zachcombs6271
    @zachcombs6271 Год назад +21

    The CRAZY amount of work that goes into these videos is insane. Great vids! Keep it up! 😊

  • @flxdrv5020
    @flxdrv5020 Год назад

    Extremely intresting and easy to follow along

  • @andraslibal
    @andraslibal 8 месяцев назад

    You clearly put in a lot of effort with many many trials.
    The explanations were also spot on I learned a lot.

  • @d_ho__
    @d_ho__ Год назад +29

    It would be awesome to put a little board computer or microcontroller with some accelerometers in the hollow body of those 3D printed gliders and see what the actual flight profiles looked like. But then I guess having them explode on impact with the ground or getting lost would be much more expensive.

    • @florianvahl5494
      @florianvahl5494 Год назад +3

      A simple accelerometer and microcontroller are really cheap these days and they can be operated using really tiny batteries. It should be significantly below 10 bucks as long as you don't include Telemetry, GPS, a proper flight controller, etc.. but you probably need to do some simple coding, soldering etc..

    • @MrJdsenior
      @MrJdsenior Год назад +2

      @@florianvahl5494 With a decent 6 total DOF accelerometer/gyro platform you can do a pretty good job of having it fly a path to a destination, and maintaining controlled flight, as long as the accuracy of the two are good and the gyros don't drift too much over the flight duration, meaning not much at all. I guess you would need a compass and an airspeed sensor to really have all the data to make it simple to do with a controller.

    • @edpalomino3876
      @edpalomino3876 Год назад +3

      Pretty much all the necessary components would be mostly solid state I believe so even if your plane met a tragic end as long as you can recover it most of your electronic components should be reusable I would think

    • @kadmow
      @kadmow Год назад +1

      That is the origin of this channel basically - any ardupilot-compatible flight control board simply does this in their log file or telemetry link (when they appeared on the market multiaxis (even hyper dimensional) telemetry became affordable for any application).

  • @918Kustomz
    @918Kustomz Год назад +19

    I'm normally a very big visual learner and your animations and explanations were so easy to understand! I actually understood everything you showed and said, I love it, please keep adding small sections like this in future vids!

  • @phantomsrage6523
    @phantomsrage6523 11 месяцев назад

    the explaination of the aircraft and stuff at the start was really easy to understand good job.

  • @medad5413
    @medad5413 7 месяцев назад

    Amusing, educational and alot of effort put hear thanks ❤

  • @25nacesanleedaltrez58
    @25nacesanleedaltrez58 Год назад +9

    on 20:25 it was gliding so smoothly he thought it was a bird 😂😂😂

  • @ArabianShark
    @ArabianShark Год назад +3

    7:12 I was looking for those strange patterns in the acrylic and couldn't "see" them because I honestly thought they were a deliberately applied wall treatment seen through the acrylic until I realised what I was looking at. Those are so cool!

  • @g1393
    @g1393 11 месяцев назад

    this taught me a lot about aero dynamics and i’ve never even looked into it before

  • @user-dp1io4pb9o
    @user-dp1io4pb9o 10 месяцев назад

    thanks for the experiment

  • @christianblanco9311
    @christianblanco9311 Год назад +5

    27:05 The wood plane wanted to go back to being what it used to be 😂

  • @leonardobonanno5115
    @leonardobonanno5115 Год назад +31

    Your content is a goldmine because you clearly enjoy experimenting with your models and you explain very easily how aerodynamics work in real life, keep it up !!

  • @britishbulldog8966
    @britishbulldog8966 Год назад +1

    The wood plane at 25:48 reminds me of an AirTransat plane I once flew on.

  • @kylobear7991
    @kylobear7991 4 месяца назад

    All the vocabulary is very confusing but proves its importance very obviously. Thanks for sharing this and hopefully you enjoyed your time making and experimenting with the planes as much as I enjoyed watching and learning about flight vocabulary

  • @123spleege
    @123spleege 8 месяцев назад

    this is my first time on your channel. I really enjoyed all the info and the 3d printing used in the making of these planes. What a great video!!!! thanks

  • @ShockeWulf190
    @ShockeWulf190 Год назад +3

    At 12:06, I believe that was just a simple accelerated stall. The way the aircraft tumbled likewise to its prior AOA makes it appear like just a stall.
    One of the things I noticed was the reaction of Adverse Yaw, in this case it appeared to be the affect of one of the wings at an abnormal AOA compared to the other wing, causing the other wing to have more airspeed, and the right wing holding the fuselage back, thus yanking the aircraft to the right. That, of course, seemed to be the result of an Accelerated stall.

  • @ebikecnx7239
    @ebikecnx7239 Год назад +4

    26:42 that's what she said

  • @zipppiz
    @zipppiz Год назад

    Im on youtube for hours every week sometimes every day... Love RC and cool stuff, can not belive this is my first time finding this cannel.
    It is awesome, thank you and keep up the good work! 🙏🌞

  • @snakehandler87
    @snakehandler87 6 месяцев назад

    Love this video it reminded me of whenever I was a kid and got into aerodynamics with paper airplanes and discovered one specific design that I got an over 20 second flight time from the ground.

  • @stevec7596
    @stevec7596 Год назад +3

    There was a 1.5m slope glider called Thorn than was milled from solid poplar. They produced and sold them.

  • @TheZombieSaints
    @TheZombieSaints Год назад +3

    I really think you're in my top 3 creators to watch. I really look forward to watching your great ideas come to life.👍👍

  • @SteampunkSammy
    @SteampunkSammy 7 месяцев назад

    Iv never seen dihedral explained so well before..
    Great video!

  • @terrencefoley509
    @terrencefoley509 Год назад

    Again I say, an outstanding video. I have nothing but respect for people who do the actual R&D to test out their curiosity. BTW, I'm pretty sure stall spins are impossible for an uncontrolled plane to recover from. No matter how balanced, straight & level it flies, once one wing stalls, it's over. Really great video. Also, one thing I've known from Day One: With enough power, a brick will fly. At least you littered the countryside with enough toys that the children of the squirrels & raccoons will have something to play with!!!

  • @macsound
    @macsound Год назад +4

    Could try using AirTags to affect your CG, and then it'll help with finding the plane when it flies off.

    • @nic.h
      @nic.h Год назад +1

      Or something like a simple tone generator with small battery.

  • @jamesturncliff5960
    @jamesturncliff5960 Год назад +4

    I had metal airplanes as a kid that I used to fly in the local swimming pool. It would go from the shallow and all the way to the deep end

  • @assetstacker
    @assetstacker 10 месяцев назад

    This explanation seems like something I should of had to pay for. Amazing.

  • @capncrunchdorf
    @capncrunchdorf 7 месяцев назад +1

    The aircraft yaws about the center of pressure, not the center of gravity. Wing sweep also contributes to yaw stability.

  • @mikeag
    @mikeag Год назад +21

    Hey, idea for this series: what about a golfball dimpled airplane? Since you have the CNC, put a ball nose end mill on it and mill the dimples to see if you can reduce drag by creating mini vortices along the fuselage.

    • @lhpl
      @lhpl 8 месяцев назад

      This comment reminds me: wasn't it the front/back split double delta that flew so well? Could the presence of the very slight layer lines on the surface in different directions do weirds things to the airflow?

  • @kentslocum
    @kentslocum Год назад +6

    I think the real success here was the 3D printed shuttle. That was incredible!

    • @johndoe920
      @johndoe920 Год назад +2

      I think the real succes was not having a chunk of wood go through anyones window :D

    • @mickmuzzmkmz1628
      @mickmuzzmkmz1628 Год назад

      ​@@johndoe920lmao, or kill someone!😂

  • @Zeroscifer
    @Zeroscifer 7 месяцев назад +1

    To deal with the slight glue shift, I would recommend adding pins to make sure you get the alignment and it should not shift while gluing.

  • @kirbyjoe7484
    @kirbyjoe7484 2 месяца назад

    Very nicely explained.

  • @davidcarr2649
    @davidcarr2649 Год назад +2

    Thanks for showing us how you landed the drone. I would have spent too much time wondering if you had a spare channel to jettison the guide pole. Actually, until I saw you land it, that's what I was thinking.

  • @TheRogueBro
    @TheRogueBro Год назад +3

    "That's not flying, that's just falling with style!"

  • @timminter4434
    @timminter4434 6 месяцев назад

    Clicked on the video and did not expect a whole new perspective on airplanes. Im subscribing

  • @AvgeekRPLL
    @AvgeekRPLL Год назад

    Your explanation of physics is really good with other aviation related videos i could learn a bit of physics in a week and in 1 video you doubled my knowledge