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  • Опубликовано: 23 ноя 2024

Комментарии • 5 тыс.

  • @Nighthawkinlight
    @Nighthawkinlight Год назад +11146

    Hey a tip for your air storage: people that build water rockets have perfected splicing plastic bottles together for high pressure use. The channel US Water Rockets has some good videos about bottle splicing. You could save some weight and make larger chambers fairly easily.

    • @shermantank25
      @shermantank25 Год назад +258

      Good to see you here!

    • @mirage1729
      @mirage1729 Год назад +439

      I love it when cool engineering RUclipsrs watch each other's videos!

    • @gizzta
      @gizzta Год назад +169

      Yeah I remember gluing 1.5L bottles together to make a 4.5L water rocket 12 years ago. 120psi is quite the limit though

    • @turrboenvy4612
      @turrboenvy4612 Год назад +91

      That sounds like a good idea if it can take the pressure. There's a lot of weight in the bottom of the bottles and fasteners. Also, here in the US we have 3-liter soda bottles. Fuse a couple of those together and you've got 50% more capacity in probably less weight.

    • @TheThrustProject
      @TheThrustProject Год назад +74

      Air Command Rockets from Australia helped me massive through my water rocket project in 10th grade. They evolved from spliced bottles to carbon fiber air tanks over the years 😅

  • @ElectroBOOM
    @ElectroBOOM Год назад +1175

    Dang! Love the perseverance and quality!

    • @AusterEngineer
      @AusterEngineer Год назад +17

      Don’t know why I’m surprised to see you here😂

    • @yogetupibe
      @yogetupibe Год назад +12

      i didn't expect the legend to be here

    • @JB-yu1vv
      @JB-yu1vv Год назад +5

      I love perseverance and ingenuity

    • @ct6502-c7w
      @ct6502-c7w Год назад +8

      LOL wow, this really IS a small world!

    • @PlayNowWorkLater
      @PlayNowWorkLater Год назад +2

      Yes. What he says. Perseverance

  • @smartereveryday
    @smartereveryday Год назад +1433

    I love the split second thought at 15:12 where you almost seem to think "I can save it!"... Immediately followed by what seems to be ..."But it might cut my finger off?"
    I really enjoyed this video! Well done sir.

    • @4thsemester-vr5br
      @4thsemester-vr5br Год назад

      Ye

    • @roflkopter
      @roflkopter Год назад +30

      It's your fault I haven't got smarter today

    • @Curt-0001
      @Curt-0001 Год назад +24

      @@roflkopter That's on you, bucko!

    • @IcespherePlaysGames
      @IcespherePlaysGames Год назад +68

      The classic engineer's problem. "How much bodily harm am I willing to risk to save my creation?"

    • @SuperMastermindx
      @SuperMastermindx Год назад +1

      hey Destin, suprised to see you here but im very glad for it

  • @frankdirksen9172
    @frankdirksen9172 Год назад +174

    Hi, something about your wings. Wings have the most drag at the ends because there the pressure between top and bottom is balanced and you get a whirl. For that reason the wings of a sailplane are long and get narrower to the ends.
    In your design there is a problem in the center too because the wings aren't connected and you loose pressure in the middle too. I think, it will already help if you connect the wings with some packaging tape.
    Best regards, Frank

    • @白金之星-y3u
      @白金之星-y3u Год назад

      🤩🤩

    • @guimblon
      @guimblon Год назад +5

      I'm pretty sure Tom knows about induced drag and aspect ratio, but the packing tape is an excellent idea

    • @thisaccounthasbeensuspended
      @thisaccounthasbeensuspended 11 месяцев назад

      or perhaps a lightweight fairing

    • @stevem7868-y4l
      @stevem7868-y4l 11 месяцев назад +1

      I agree Frank, make the wings a tad longer, but tapered, i would add another 30cm, 15 each side, Tail plane needs to be a built up structure, not solid, but remain a V, as that is light, perhaps fair in the front bottle to give a more aerodynamic, and less drag from the prop going backwards, and lastly, the center wing section needs fairing into the wing and Fuz, big time, you are inducing drag, and turbulence there

    • @Anvilshock
      @Anvilshock 11 месяцев назад +1

      If you "loose" pressure, better fasten it …

  • @Nerdforge
    @Nerdforge Год назад +1105

    Thats an amazing flight! Well done!

    • @108108qwerty
      @108108qwerty Год назад +3

      You should try this sort of project out! Id love to watch it

    • @terra8568
      @terra8568 Год назад +4

      Nice to see you here

    • @cesare8270
      @cesare8270 Год назад +1

      Cool

    • @bsvenss2
      @bsvenss2 Год назад

      *Kjempeflott* to see you here. 🙂

  • @Qopzeep
    @Qopzeep Год назад +353

    Can I just say that I love everything about this series? The incremental efficiency gains, Tom's persistence, the planes themselves of course, and as a bonus, the lovely noise they make. I find it amazing that Tom keeps setting new goals and reaching them. Looking forward to the next one!

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Год назад +1

      Combination of genetic and cultural history + passion = brilliance. Tom Stanton to the other 97% of all human inventions. Well done. Be proud

  • @JeffGeerling
    @JeffGeerling Год назад +973

    It's finally taking flight! Glad to see all that air engine testing coming to fruition, that's gotta feel good.

    • @nightmares100
      @nightmares100 Год назад +6

      Here so people can't say first

    • @DatFrogGuy
      @DatFrogGuy Год назад +14

      ​@@nightmares100 by saying what you just did, you inadvertently made a comment just as insignificant as 'first'...
      and so did I

    • @philipvecchio3292
      @philipvecchio3292 Год назад +16

      I find it interesting that my favorite RUclips creators consume each other's content, Even if it's not quite in their field.

    • @thowd11
      @thowd11 Год назад +5

      LOOK ITS JEFF!!!

    • @Lampe2020
      @Lampe2020 Год назад +7

      It's funny to see that the big RUclipsrs consume each other's content :)
      Nice to know you also like these air engines!

  • @jasrajsingh9674
    @jasrajsingh9674 Год назад +33

    Tom you really have outdone yourself. As an engineer I really admire the design. Hats off it really is a beautiful plane. It’s been a great journey through all the different different versions and you’ve finally done it. I love how happy you are when you see it flying. I am very happy for you. Well done !!!

  • @kptnbalu9616
    @kptnbalu9616 Год назад +731

    As an Engineer, i salute to your insane amount of passion you put in this airplane. It makes me smile uncontrollably to watch you progress on that project. This is nerdyness in its purest form. Thank you for your videos!

    • @chucklesthered2338
      @chucklesthered2338 Год назад +4

      I can't wait to get a ride in one of those... to scale of course.

    • @Yhoeffi
      @Yhoeffi Год назад +2

      Engineers👋✌️

    • @haydengrows
      @haydengrows Год назад +3

      Agreed. I absolutely love this series. For that reason, I hope he never stops improving his design 🙏🏼 lol

    • @cjraghul4045
      @cjraghul4045 Год назад +1

      hi sir i am need of project ideas in engineering physics with practical application . i am studying 1st year and with minimal or no electronics , could you suggest some if possible

    • @jaleemasangma2820
      @jaleemasangma2820 11 месяцев назад +1

      Wow amazing.

  • @iansalmon6327
    @iansalmon6327 Год назад +418

    Hi Tom, epic project!
    I'm sure you've had lots of suggestions but I'll throw in mine anyway:
    1. Replace the MG90S servos with standard SG90 servos, you don't need metal gears and this will save about 4g. You could also go smaller (GH-S37D) for a total saving of 15g and reduced size of the supporting structure.
    2. Smaller LiPo pack.
    3. Build up the tail surfaces from 3mm square balsa rather than sheet.
    4. Taper the wings - better lift distribution and structural efficiency. Taper the spars to reflect the reduced bending moment as you move towards the tips. For tubular carbon you could glue increasingly smaller sections together, telescope style. You may need to add a few degrees of washout at the tips but this is easily done by twisting the wing to the desired angle and re-shrinking the film.
    5. Lose the gap in the wing centre section and make the wing continuous. This is a big source of drag and is effectively halving your aspect ratio.
    6. Add some rounded or tapered wing tips
    7. Test some different props to find an optimum for this engine / airframe combination. This can make a big difference.
    8. Higher pressure of course.
    9. Don't use paint, it's heavier than you'd think and not needed under the film.
    10. Use an iron rather than a heat gun to shrink the film. You'll have much better control and won't melt holes in it.
    On your comparison to CO2 canisters, I'm not sure that's valid as the CO2 is compressed to liquid phase so it's not just a comparison of ideal gas volumes.
    Great work though, I look forward to the next iteration.

    • @TVGUY333
      @TVGUY333 Год назад +34

      NASA showed up!

    • @trashtrash2169
      @trashtrash2169 Год назад +2

      Seriously.

    • @kardRatzinger
      @kardRatzinger Год назад +24

      I'm thinking tapering the wings may not help here. This plane flies super slowly, and is probably nearing the unfavourable range of Reynolds numbers, where the air starts becoming really sticky, and shortening the wing chord would exacerbate that. Perhaps adding a turbulator would help, you can try that on one wing first, which will let you easily gauge if it's improving performance (if it does, the plane will have a tendency to turn to the side with no turbulator).

    • @NGC1433
      @NGC1433 Год назад

      CO2 transitioning a phase would make it way worse by cooling it down significantly, so if Tom's calculation is incorrect - it is incorrect in favor of air, not CO2.
      Also, Tom, please make a prop saver - a small modification that fastens the prop with a small rubber band instead of screws. You will easily find it on the internets by googling "propsaver"

    • @samuelmellars7855
      @samuelmellars7855 Год назад +12

      With regards to the CO2 cartridges:
      A quick google says a 12 gram cartride (12 grams CO2, not considering weight of cartidge, I assume) has about 6L of CO2 at atmospheric pressure.
      I think it might not be worth it.
      It's slightly more weight, it's a part that has to be purchased *and* more strength needs to be added to the design to hold the higher pressure. Unless a larger CO2 bottle can be got easily and cheaply. Better CO2/bottle weight ratio.
      Thinking about the rest of the design:
      I think I would add a sleeve around the join of the two tanks to reduce drag.
      Could also have two double-tanks side-by-side (4 total), have any less aerodynamic components between them and wrap the whole thing in the film. Add a few shapers and make it into a lifting body fuselage, while we're at it.

  • @integza
    @integza Год назад +721

    That’s just amazing Tom !

  • @microusb42069
    @microusb42069 10 месяцев назад +3

    My little brother had the same air higs. We used to have so much fun with it. I was just randomly reminiscing about it to myself last night, remembering all the fun we used to have together. Crazy I come across this video the next day.

  • @1kreature
    @1kreature Год назад +227

    Do not use paint, it adds about as much weight as your balsa! Instead buy colored Oracover. It has same weight as clear!
    Also: Look into using a folding propeller to avoid damage during landing. I am assuming power is low enough to let it fold on landing or that at least the blades will fold away upon hitting ground to avoid the snapping of motor.
    The rpm of motor sounds like it speeds up as the plane reaches level flight which could mean pitch is too low. It shouldn't take much thrust to keep such a sleek wing in the air, and too low load on motor in flight will just use up air.

    • @GoldenCroc
      @GoldenCroc Год назад +10

      Seems like great points, at least to me.

    • @squidwardo7074
      @squidwardo7074 Год назад +1

      Yeah thats why the space shuttle was orange

    • @dundeedideley1773
      @dundeedideley1773 Год назад

      @@squidwardo7074 it... wasn't though?

    • @tylerworksalot
      @tylerworksalot Год назад +9

      ​@@dundeedideley1773they did paint it white at first but then realized it weighted a lot and would flake off and potentially impact the orbiter

    • @Puukiuuki
      @Puukiuuki Год назад +7

      ​@@dundeedideley1773They are talking about the big external tank holding the liquid oxygen & hydrogen for the main engines.

  • @mgreenesco9955
    @mgreenesco9955 Год назад +146

    Love it. You could probably reduce drag significantly if you make a small fairing to cover the gap between the wing roots and allow the air to flow around the centre piece.

    • @marknapier2236
      @marknapier2236 Год назад +8

      Agree. Packing tape would seal the gap just fine.

    • @cooperised
      @cooperised Год назад +1

      This is an excellent idea. There'll be all sorts of vortex stuff going on at the wing roots as it is.

    • @simond6610
      @simond6610 Год назад

      +1 for this. Efficient airfoils are great, but whole aircraft L/D is the real-world answer.

  • @IdRatherBeMaking
    @IdRatherBeMaking Год назад +199

    Two tips. 1) I have been recycling PET diet coke bottles into printer filament for some time. My first step is to smooth out the iconic shape by pressurizing it to 70psi with a little water and heating it slowly in an oven. I've successfully shrunk, elongated in a form, and reformed the bottoms into a smooth dome. You may want to consider doing the same, giving you more volume at the same weight. Coca Cola published that their 2 liter bottles are rated for 150 psi, so if you only need 70 some experimentation might be warranted. I would love to see what you come up with. 2) Secondly, you could replace the tail rod with a pressurized fluorescent tube protector and make the plane a flying air tank. The water rocket people use them as pressure tanks as well, so there is a lot of data and technique to start with!

    • @JordansDroid
      @JordansDroid Год назад +5

      Best comment in this section

    • @reezlaw
      @reezlaw Год назад +1

      Awesome stuff, including recycling the bottles, what a great idea!

    • @marc_frank
      @marc_frank Год назад

      if the bottle was full of water before you put it in the oven and still completely filled afterwards, there would be no increase in volume
      maybe the sides contracted a little?

    • @brentdallyn8459
      @brentdallyn8459 Год назад

      Forming the air chamber into a lifting body, the wings can be shorter saving weight that way

    • @IdRatherBeMaking
      @IdRatherBeMaking Год назад

      @@marc_frank - Agreed, You can't fill it up, you just need a little water to protect bottle features from overheating. You could do the same with a wet cloth on the outside. For instance, if you get the threads of the bottle too hot the deform. Not a good thing if the bottle is at 70psi. The PET recycled filament people put a small amount of water in to use steam to expand the bottle if they don't have access to a compressor.

  • @AlwinMao
    @AlwinMao Год назад +224

    I imagine you feel the same way the Wright Brothers felt achieving their first 12-second flight. Very different problems for very different times, but you both breathe rare air.

    • @GustavoAraujo_18
      @GustavoAraujo_18 Год назад

      the Wright brothers created something that was launched by a slingshot. The real inventor of the plane was Santos Dumont.

    • @Afterbang77
      @Afterbang77 Год назад +6

      Or even 10 years before them Clement Ader

    • @nicewhenearnedrudemostlyel489
      @nicewhenearnedrudemostlyel489 Год назад

      It took him six years to get this far. Without looking at the timeframe for the Wright brothers, i bet it's pretty sad considering the education and raw information available to this propped up wannabe.

    • @nicewhenearnedrudemostlyel489
      @nicewhenearnedrudemostlyel489 Год назад

      And yes, i shit on him in that video too

    • @theshuman100
      @theshuman100 Год назад +1

      pressurised

  • @MedlifeCrisis
    @MedlifeCrisis Год назад +70

    What a glorious sight! Proper long flight! It also sounds great, real old school prop noise.

    • @j100j
      @j100j Год назад +8

      Surprised to see you here.

    • @ophly8993
      @ophly8993 Год назад +2

      @@j100j Two glorious youtubers

    • @robocombo
      @robocombo Год назад +1

      When are we getting the x-over episode 😊

  • @agtbbd7267
    @agtbbd7267 Год назад +232

    CO2 cartridges are actually almost an order of magnitude better than that because they are full of liquid CO2 and not gas. A 16 gram cartridge actually contains 9liters of gas instead of 1liter. 6:30
    MassGas/density@1atm=(16g)/(1.77g/l)=9l
    Easy to miss if you don't work with things like that often. Thanks for all the interesting videos and please keep them coming!

    • @MossMar343
      @MossMar343 Год назад +14

      Yes! I was about to comment this. His comparison wasn't exactly fair.

    • @JMMC1005
      @JMMC1005 Год назад +32

      It's also not just the volume of gas, but the starting pressure. Even if there was less gas, you need to calculate the energy released when expanding to atmospheric pressure.
      A weather balloon stores even more air, but the pressure is so low that it can't do much useful work.

    • @JC-XL
      @JC-XL Год назад +25

      I just wrote the same as well.
      And there are also 20g, 38g, 45g, 74g cartridges that will have much better ratio of the useful CO2 weight to the metal canister weight. And you're getting much more constant pressure, compared to that air bottle that drops from 8 atm to 1 atm.
      There are problems with CO2 as well though - it will need a strong/heavy valve and you have to maintain the cartridge orientation, so you're not directly losing liquid through the valve.

    • @JMMC1005
      @JMMC1005 Год назад +21

      @@JC-XL You also can't use the bottle as the fuselage due to the higher density - though this may be counteracted by the smaller cross section with respect to drag.
      Ultimately CO2 engines might perform better but they don't really meet the intent of this challenge, given the whole point is to replicate the old Air Hogs toys.
      I'd be interested to see a direct comparison between the Air Hogs and Tom's model. From my memory as a kid, they performed pretty well considering the small tank, stubby wings and blunt propeller.

    • @JMMC1005
      @JMMC1005 Год назад +11

      @@JC-XL
      It would be interesting to see propane used as the working gas. It has a vapour pressure low enough to be liquified in a soda bottle, and also be directly compatible with Tom's engines. I believe some paintball guns use it as a CO2 alternative.
      While it is flammable, this shouldn't be too risky provided no ignition sources exist.

  • @giovannipiccioli
    @giovannipiccioli Год назад +87

    Great video as always! Here's a tip to decrease the drag and increase the lift. At the moment you have two half wings joined together at the fuselage. This design generates some vortices (exactly like the wingtip vortices) in the inner part of the wing due to the gap between the two half wings. The vortices increase the drag and decrease the lift. Joining the wing in the middle would eliminate the vortices

    • @martinbrandmuller8272
      @martinbrandmuller8272 Год назад +17

      in general the drag of the fuselage IMO hast the biggest potential for improvement. Add a streamlined nose, cover the part where the 2 bottles are joined together, cover the center wing section and add a tail fairing to the end of the rear bottle.

    • @giovannipiccioli
      @giovannipiccioli Год назад +2

      @@martinbrandmuller8272 Agree! There's a lot of possible improvement in the shape of the fuselage

    • @miniac60
      @miniac60 Год назад +1

      You were so much more diplomatic than I would have been!

    • @NotOneToFly
      @NotOneToFly Год назад +2

      I hope Tom finds this thread. This is exactly what I wanted to comment as well. At the start of the video, he made a nod to aerodynamics and did do a really good job on the wings themselves, but at the end of the video he's back to talking about weight savings. A nice, clean bulbous nose and a smooth wing root area would absolutely do wonders.

    • @TheBelrick
      @TheBelrick Год назад

      yep, single wing over the top of the air tank using flaps would be even better.

  • @anandsharma7430
    @anandsharma7430 Год назад +3

    As a lowly software developer this is absolutely brilliant content. Happy to have youtube recommend this channel to me.

  • @NonJohns
    @NonJohns Год назад +143

    I can't get over how it sounds like a proper engine
    I'm glad you documented it all because i couldn't stomach all this effort myself

  • @jameshoward4514
    @jameshoward4514 Год назад +197

    This series is my absolute favourite on RUclips! Love your work Tom

  • @feelincrispy7053
    @feelincrispy7053 Год назад +214

    I never get over seeing the joy of a man who has built something that works but has little to no real purpose. All creator RUclipsrs get it, you can always see the point it happens, right when they look at the camera and get that little smile. You know in their head they are like “it works! It actually fricken works!! I can’t believe it!”
    Destin got it when he split a bullet, hawinglight got when he did his perfect Japanese sparklers, integza gets it all the time lol, styropyro got it with his recent car battery monstrosity and the list goes on and on

    • @Mrkillshots
      @Mrkillshots Год назад +2

      It might just have one good use never know

    • @chillaxter13
      @chillaxter13 Год назад +9

      It's that Dr Frankenstein "It's alive!" moment... So satisfying to see.

    • @katigroszek
      @katigroszek Год назад +3

      It has little use now but it well may lead to something useful.
      I would not mind travelling to work one day in a CompAir car, on the fuel that my fotovolt panels made during a previous day with a electric powered compressor... or a moped or something.
      Start with a little thing having a bigger goal in mind, at the back of your head.

    • @syrus3k
      @syrus3k Год назад +1

      The styropyro car battery plasma cutter.. that was special lol

    • @MustangsCanTurnToo
      @MustangsCanTurnToo Год назад

      Yup. No one asked for the world’s fastest nikko dictator, but my god I was so happy to build it and drive it🤣

  • @emilyrln
    @emilyrln Год назад +23

    This is so cool! You might want to implement a preflight checklist so excitement doesn't make you forget important details 😊

  • @DutchHollandLowz
    @DutchHollandLowz Год назад +70

    Use an electric air compressor with a WATER SEPERATOR on the line going into the Plane tank. less water in the air will reduce the weight at the end of the flight and will make your air engine run ever so slightly better. The wings seem to be a bit overkill on strength. but man this had been awesome keep this going. I know you can do 2min for sure. Great Job.

    • @luckylmj
      @luckylmj Год назад +2

      there was no water in the tank in the flight tests, that was just for a pressure test

    • @cans456
      @cans456 Год назад +26

      @@luckylmj I think they mean the humidity in the air

    • @mattblack6736
      @mattblack6736 Год назад +3

      now I'm wondering is it possible to use a gas that is lighter than air, or would it turn into liquid under high pressure...and then would that even make much difference

    • @Yrocsrelles
      @Yrocsrelles Год назад +1

      ​@@mattblack6736a helium or hydrogen version would be pretty cool. I'm not sure how much weight you would save but it would be cool to see

    • @DutchHollandLowz
      @DutchHollandLowz Год назад +1

      @@luckylmj there was condensation in the air.

  • @komitadjie
    @komitadjie Год назад +328

    Tom, I'm sure someone else has mentioned this before - but the CO2 canister is not actually full of gas. It's full of liquified CO2, held under that pressure. The pressure is maintained until all of the liquid has boiled off, which gives an effective storage quite a lot larger than you might think looking at it as a simple compressed gas. :)

    • @themonkeyman2547
      @themonkeyman2547 Год назад +84

      Yep, Tom said 21 mL expands to 1 L, but they are really 21 grams. 21 grams of CO2 at room temperature is more like 10 liters! Now, it would actually be quite cold, so that will decrease performance, and the cold itself will pose design challenges

    • @MKVideoful
      @MKVideoful Год назад +2

      @@themonkeyman2547 Maybe then add some "heating" elements :D

    • @grigorbrowning
      @grigorbrowning Год назад +28

      I hope he's seeing these comments about CO2 canisters. There's easily an interesting video discussing phase change and testing how the consistent pressure affects the air-engine's performance when actually flying (in terms of control). Not to mention tuning a suitable jet to meter the flow to the engine (and the cooling effect, which might not be that bad given the likely flow-rates). And, the cylinders come in a range of sizes (including much larger ones).

    • @darrylpang3903
      @darrylpang3903 Год назад +35

      As I recall, Integza used a CO2 canister system, where an onboard Arduino controlled the release of CO2, using a bottle as the expansion chamber and maintaining a roughly consistent pressure inside the bottle.

    • @finndemoncat9379
      @finndemoncat9379 Год назад +6

      Isn't it easier to use a deodorany bottle? Lmao I can imagine the plane leaving a perfume trail.

  • @Mrcheesebumble
    @Mrcheesebumble Год назад +231

    This is exactly what 3D printers were made for. WELL DONE!

    • @lamarw7757
      @lamarw7757 Год назад +7

      3D Printing was first used for medical purposes as dental implants and custom prosthetics in the 1990s.

    • @Mrcheesebumble
      @Mrcheesebumble Год назад +30

      @lamarw7757 I mean miracle medical advances are great but plane go brrrr

    • @lavachemist
      @lavachemist Год назад +9

      wait. I thought 3D printers were made for printing 3D Benchys. Have I been doing this wrong?

    • @Mrcheesebumble
      @Mrcheesebumble Год назад

      @@lavachemist Keep printing those lil buddies

    • @yeetyfreety6938
      @yeetyfreety6938 Год назад +4

      @@Mrcheesebumble What about printing glocks?

  • @BlueSquatchproductions
    @BlueSquatchproductions Год назад +2

    Congratulations love how excited you get when it worked

  • @pablo98798
    @pablo98798 Год назад +399

    a crazy idea would be to make the wings pressurized to gain more air volume, maybe some internal tube like chamber along the wing to avoid pressurizing the actual film skin

    • @weresonic11
      @weresonic11 Год назад +84

      Maybe the wings filled with helium to decrease the lift needed from the engine?

    • @pocarski
      @pocarski Год назад +75

      storing fuel in the wings is something actual airliners do, this isn't as crazy as you think

    • @fdhgsdfdssdf
      @fdhgsdfdssdf Год назад +50

      I know it's arbitrary but since it's a plane it wouldn't make sense to use lighter-than-air gases to generate lift, otherwise you could just make a blimp and easily beat the flight length record

    • @Sandux930
      @Sandux930 Год назад +3

      I love this idea

    • @ulwur
      @ulwur Год назад +37

      Wouldnt it be better to replace the tail boom with a third bottle? Like Teslas "structural" battery pack.

  • @emiliogomez4705
    @emiliogomez4705 Год назад +68

    I FELT AS EXITED AS IF I WAS THE ONE ENGINEERING THE PLANE. I've been following your air powered engine progress since the second version and when i saw this tumbnail I audiabply gasped. I can tell how much work you put into it and it reflects on the performance. I must be honest when I started watching your videos i thought they were kind of slow and a lower form of lame, but following your ups and downs made me love and appreciate the PROCESS. You're and amazing engineer and I feel lucky to celebrate your wins!!!! THANKS FOR THESE VIDEOS, PLEASE KEEP MAKUING US GASP WITH YOUR ACHIEVEMENTS

    • @bickle8911
      @bickle8911 Год назад +4

      COMPLETELY agree with this comment, seeing that plane fly made me so damn happy

    • @colinjohnson5515
      @colinjohnson5515 Год назад

      Same. It’s been a long time coming!

  • @samik83
    @samik83 Год назад +117

    Best engineering channel on YT. The fact that everything is made from scratch and even the engine is more or less your design makes these videos so good. I have that tinkerer in me but don't have the patience and perseverance to keep at it. It awesome to see how you just keep iterating year after year on the same thing.

    • @LeoStaley
      @LeoStaley Год назад

      You should enjoy James Bruton

    • @bermchasin
      @bermchasin Год назад

      he bought the propeller. I mean, your point still stands, but not "everything" was made from scratch.

    • @nicewhenearnedrudemostlyel489
      @nicewhenearnedrudemostlyel489 Год назад

      No, and no. This guy is an idiot relative to most. You probably are just stuck on the child-pandering tactics he's better at than anything resembling engineering.

  • @BariBariRaida
    @BariBariRaida 3 месяца назад

    My favourite part of the clip was honestly 14:20-14:31, the fact that Tom is so excited like a kid again is just so wholesome.

  • @chrisperrywv
    @chrisperrywv Год назад +90

    The fact that not all his videos end in success can be infuriating, but what I love about it is that it also shows the true nature of engineering. Once he finally gets to the goal it is so satisfying!

  • @VitoFur
    @VitoFur Год назад +101

    Not only does it fly very well, it even sounds like a real single prop plane! Awesome project!

    • @ghostwhite1648
      @ghostwhite1648 Год назад +3

      imagine the technology the government actually has but pretends we need to pay for fuel...

    • @theairaccumulator7144
      @theairaccumulator7144 Год назад +16

      ​@@ghostwhite1648bro the government isn't taking energy out of thin air, thermodynamics exists. This guy is expending tons of energy to get that air under pressure and then wasting even more to convert it back to mechanical power. He isn't taking anything out of thin air.

    • @ghostwhite1648
      @ghostwhite1648 Год назад

      @@theairaccumulator7144 he’s not 30000 feet up.

    • @ghostwhite1648
      @ghostwhite1648 Год назад

      @@theairaccumulator7144 we literally got people in outhouses fueling generators with wood gas and poop gas mang. Open ya fuggin eyes

    • @alexrobertson557
      @alexrobertson557 Год назад +7

      @@ghostwhite1648 why would fuel be free? it takes a lot of resources to extract, refine and deliver. Please take your tin hat off.

  • @theballoondr
    @theballoondr Год назад +97

    Hi Tom ! I was following your updates for a while.
    As an Air Hogs lover, I got into your journey to build your own air powered plane.
    Just let me say that I'm really proud of you !!
    1.22 minutes is more than a sucsess !! it is MARVELOUS !! UNBELIBABLE !!! BRILLIANT !!!
    Your determination and your amzing skills are really impresive !!!
    Congratulations from Buenos Aires, Argentina !!
    And of course I'll be tuned to see the next flight !!
    Many thanks Tom !! YOU DID IT 💪💪💪!!!
    Hugs dude !!

  • @Bmlscipio
    @Bmlscipio Год назад +7

    You should look into lasercutting balsa for the flat parts (e.g. the 3d printed wing profiles and the tail flaps). It's often faster/cheaper than 3d printing, refuces plastic usage and could lead to lighter parts (though potentially also more brittle).

  • @Klud987
    @Klud987 Год назад +101

    I'm so impressed by the level you reached after all those years, it's so satisfying to watch the evolution of your designs !
    Keep going mate ! 💪

  • @OliWarner
    @OliWarner Год назад +12

    Just echoing everyone else: it feels I've been watching you build these since forever ago and it's amazing to see how far you've brought it. Superb work.

  • @geekymgee
    @geekymgee Год назад +60

    One potential improvement I can think of is recycling some of the air from the expansion stroke of the motor to give the return stroke a small boost. It might even smooth out the impulse and lead to less rattling.

    • @Javii96
      @Javii96 Год назад

      Great idea

    • @VyantQuijt
      @VyantQuijt Год назад +7

      I was thinking this will cause the piston to move back up above the exhaust hole before the pressure has dropped enough for the seal to retract.
      But then I realized the seal responds to differential pressure...
      So if anything you'd want to create a chamber below the piston where you dump gas to hasten pressure equalization which will break the seal, and then expediate the exhaust extraction, without actually introducing pumping losses on the powerstroke.
      I think overall you'll have more benefits from larger exhaust port area,
      and maybe you can harness some efficiency by nozzling the gas backwards for direct propulsion, or directing it at the crankshaft to accelerate it through bottom dead center. But then you're going to have to consult Alex from 2stroke stuffing about how to tune exhaust pulses I think 😅

    • @thegregdavieschannel
      @thegregdavieschannel Год назад +1

      I was also thinking along these lines. If the high pressure air was applied to the underside of the piston where the surface area was a little less and then using the spent air on the conventional side of the piston it could help balance the pressure losses.

    • @VyantQuijt
      @VyantQuijt Год назад +1

      @@thegregdavieschannel but if you're injecting pressurized air on the crank side you have a larger volume to fill and will probably have airleaks around the crankshaft or need seals to minimize losses. I think both will likely hurt the overall efficiency more than you'll be able to harness with recycled gas

    • @thegregdavieschannel
      @thegregdavieschannel Год назад +1

      @@VyantQuijt some steam engines used a larger secondary compounding cylinder to harness some of the residual energy.
      It would be really neat to try and make that work in a single cylinder engine, but alternatively a twin cylinder engine might be the way forward.

  • @rogerwest3278
    @rogerwest3278 Год назад

    I've followed a few of your builds over the years. When you build a wing like this it is a good idea to add some washout. This is a slight twist in the wing so the the leading edge at the tip is at a slightly lower incidence than at thee root. What this does is make the wing more stable at stall speeds or higher angles of attack. When the wing root is at a stall angle, the tip will still be flying, so does not drop one wing tip and loose a lot of height etc. The nose will drop of course, but it makes for a more stable plane. With the airfoil, the centre of lift will change with the flying speed, shifting further back the faster you go, designing your motor to run at lower speeds with a bigger prop will be more efficient too. Until the prop stops at least...

  • @kalash_fox7049
    @kalash_fox7049 Год назад +34

    This may be a crazy idea, but what if you had two bottle fuselages each with their own engine? kinda like a P38. Or maybe you could get four bottles together and fly it with the twin cylinder engines, which while less efficient should let you climb better and then you could glide for longer. Also the increased weight would make it handle wind better.

    • @calebs4887
      @calebs4887 Год назад +8

      Yes, now that we have done the efficient stuff, lets have some fun and do some ridiculous stuff.

  • @ironic2468
    @ironic2468 Год назад +69

    This has been such a fascinating and well made series. Multi-engine plane soon?

  • @kildogery
    @kildogery Год назад +6

    I've literally just paused at you pumping up the bottles "for the first time" I love your attention to detail and how much you cover each iteration.
    This feels like the culmination of a real journey. Hope it goes miles
    Excellent work.

  • @GadgetAddict
    @GadgetAddict Год назад +4

    The way you bolted the bottles together was pretty genius.

  • @TechplantChannel
    @TechplantChannel Год назад +58

    I wish you could find some light yet strong tubes that could be used inside the wings to give it its rigidness but could also be pressurized so you have additional air capacity

    • @jim_condit
      @jim_condit Год назад +3

      Perhaps reforming the drink bottle into the shape of the wing?

    • @index7787
      @index7787 Год назад +4

      In wing air is def the move here, all internal volume must be air storage.

    • @TechplantChannel
      @TechplantChannel Год назад +1

      @@jim_condit yeah im not sure how to do it where it can maintain a wing shape under pressure but it would be pretty cool to store air in the wings

    • @TechplantChannel
      @TechplantChannel Год назад

      @@index7787 yeah seems like the next move to get more air time

    • @loddude5706
      @loddude5706 Год назад +1

      Build a wing of linked bottles? - sized to form the aerofoil? - "We'll need a bigger pump!" : )

  • @Teh-Penguin
    @Teh-Penguin Год назад +11

    Engineers are just children playing with the world.
    I love watching your progress over the years!

  • @TopDedCenter1
    @TopDedCenter1 Год назад +14

    If the tail feathers were stick-built like a typical (now considered old-school I suppose) balsa model, it would be lighter than a slab of balsa with lightening holes drilled in it. Love watching you develop this project, Tom!

    • @hisokaf6793
      @hisokaf6793 Год назад +1

      My thoughts exactly. Same with the wings, and no need for the leaving edge sheeting at this type of plane. Nothing beats stick balsa when it comes to stiffness to weight ratio, maybe carbon fiber but not by much.

  • @pro_gemer
    @pro_gemer Год назад +2

    everything about this is awesome but what stands out to me is how satisfying it sounds 😩😩😩😩

  • @rlp1905
    @rlp1905 Год назад +41

    Great evolution, Tom.
    A few suggestions to add to what other people already said:
    1 - splice multiple bottles together for added air volume while shaving some weight.
    2 - As you add more bottles, you might want to consider using the bottles as a structural piece to hold the tail. It will save a bit in terms of size of the aircraft and might end up saving some weight too.
    3 - For the balsa wood parts, you can probably make some more holes into it without affecting the structure too much. And since we are talking about shaving some grams, you might want check the weight the paint is adding.
    Looking forward to the next video of the series. =)

  • @jostromp7380
    @jostromp7380 Год назад +25

    So glad to see the accumulation of your research unfold into this marvelous flying machine! Great work!

  • @2jzplusboost
    @2jzplusboost Год назад +23

    LETS GO TOM ive followed this series for years and always excited the moment i see a video. i’ve been following the engine series and knew something big was coming for some time
    great work again

  • @hilltop4847
    @hilltop4847 Год назад +5

    HUGE congrats on the flight, this has been such a cool project!

  • @muhammetyigitozz
    @muhammetyigitozz Год назад +11

    Its feeling really good to see the development on this project. From one video to another you worked really really hard and finally made it. Congrats man.

  • @HarmLess7
    @HarmLess7 Год назад +4

    If this doesn't become a kit you can buy I'll be so upset! Amazing work Tom as always!!

  • @burgundyknight6826
    @burgundyknight6826 Год назад +15

    Watching you tackle each issue that comes up and continuing to improving it at the same time so satisfying. The finished product looks so cool and seeing it successfully fly for that long was impressive.

  • @somebody4865
    @somebody4865 3 месяца назад

    Assuming that your seals can take the extra pressure, or that you are able to create seals that can, if you wrap your bottles with some wire or tape, you could increase the maximum pressure that the bottles can withstand while not adding much weight.

  • @okkolanpoko3432
    @okkolanpoko3432 Год назад +27

    I have always thought that those 12 g CO2 capsules have 12 g of liquid CO2. In that case one 12 g CO2 capsule would have something like 6-7 liters of gas depending of air temperature and pressure.

    • @leocurious9919
      @leocurious9919 Год назад +1

      You were thinking correct. He, for some reason, assumes it is just pressurized CO2 gas. At which would they could just as well have used air. The whole point of CO2 is that it is a liquid.

  • @MADelectriCITY
    @MADelectriCITY Год назад +7

    Through many life changes and moving across the country I have stopped making models as well as stopped flying. Videos like this make me wish I prioritized the hobby more as it brings me so much joy. You have devised some incredible solutions for this project and I am so glad to live vicariously through these videos! Very well done!!

    • @k1ortia
      @k1ortia Год назад

      Why did you stop your passion?

  • @AHSEN.
    @AHSEN. Год назад +4

    Not only is this plane amazing, but it looks extremely cool. The fact that that is because of design requirements, and not aesthetic reasons makes it even better. Amazing video as always!

  • @dallynsr
    @dallynsr Год назад +2

    Congratulations, Tom!
    It really is fun when something works and works well.

  • @halliwedge
    @halliwedge Год назад +14

    I honestly love how these sound. Nice job!

  • @ginj4ninj4180
    @ginj4ninj4180 Год назад +10

    Amazing seeing the continual progress you're making on these planes!

  • @LouiHandwerker
    @LouiHandwerker Год назад +15

    I just wanna say huge congrats to such a long flight time! You put in so much time and effort optimizing every part of this plane and it definitely paid off!

  • @gutocracker
    @gutocracker 2 месяца назад

    Thx a lot for the video, I'm from Brazil and 25 years ago I had this toy and I couldn't help but laugh out loud when I heard you've never seen you plane again after sending it into the air cause that almost happened to me. I was playing in a big football field near my home until got dark and I couldn't find the plane after the last trow. However on the next day I woke up really early and went to the place to wait for the sunrise and finally be able to find the plane. One of the weirdest sunrise I saw in my life.

  • @m.streicher8286
    @m.streicher8286 Год назад +6

    Watching you slowly improve your engine design has been the most interesting part to me.

  • @PlaneAwesome
    @PlaneAwesome Год назад +35

    This is fantastic! As a fellow AirHogs-era kid, I'm so happy to see you succeed to such an amazing degree! Next up: 5 minutes!

  • @pigeonpigeon7973
    @pigeonpigeon7973 Год назад +225

    Id love to see if you could somehow use the wings as extra air tanks

    • @brlamb5
      @brlamb5 Год назад +8

      I was thinking the same thing. Maybe there is some lightweight tubing that he could route through the holes... as long as it could hold pressure.

    • @Zaros262
      @Zaros262 Год назад +22

      You probably need as round a shape as possible to maximize volume per unit surface area, since the surface needs to be strong and therefore heavy

    • @gracefool
      @gracefool Год назад +5

      ​@@brlamb5tubing would be heavy, very high surface area per volume.

    • @BiggestHottestGuy
      @BiggestHottestGuy Год назад +2

      airplanes today store fuel in their wings so it's cool to see this same idea pop up for this air powered plane! :D

    • @SmilingDevil
      @SmilingDevil Год назад +7

      I‘m guessing high pressure air tanks will make this unnecessarily complicated or would require molds and industrial equipment only a mass product could make cost efficient use of.

  • @bulletproofpepper2
    @bulletproofpepper2 Год назад

    Brilliant! A friend of mine flies RC gliders, he uses surgical tubing and sting to launch the gliders. He uses natural thermal up drafts to lift the gliders to extend the flight times.

  • @claudiusraphael9423
    @claudiusraphael9423 Год назад +52

    Duuudeee, now imagine letting these parts produce as a universal kit for all the usual bottles out there and then .. kitefests and GIGANTIC AIRSHIPS MADE OF BOTTLES, PLEAZE!!

    • @Dartoras
      @Dartoras Год назад +1

      imagine (DON'T PUSH HIM HE IS GETTING OLD)

    • @Briaaanz
      @Briaaanz Год назад +1

      What about an air powered model war? RC planes, water rockets, etc

    • @claudiusraphael9423
      @claudiusraphael9423 Год назад

      @@Briaaanz absolutely lov it!!

  • @jamesmnguyen
    @jamesmnguyen Год назад +11

    That was very impressive. You've come a long way since your first air powered RC place!

  • @macklog1
    @macklog1 Год назад +5

    On the co2 point. I think 12 grams of co2 at standard atm conditions should take up ~6 liters. The co2 is liquid not a gas in those cartridges. Considering the drag difference between the 2 liter bottles you *may* be better off looking at the co2 idea again. Assuming you can regulate the pressure to something reasonable and give enough surface area to boil the co2 into gas.

  • @limyrob1383
    @limyrob1383 Год назад

    Always do the control surface check before every flight, its saves a lot of disasters. Try a folding prop and try more prop pitch so that you get thrust at lower revs. May or may not lead to a longer flight but worth a try. In flight the airflow allows a coarser prop than on the bench.

  • @d1ngd0
    @d1ngd0 Год назад +4

    Congrats! It has been fun to watch the progress on this work. Can’t wait for the trans Atlantic flight in 16 years :)

  • @alfredpetersbourg3324
    @alfredpetersbourg3324 Год назад +26

    To pressurise the entire wing might be worth a try, molding a "winglike plastic bottle" sort of. Maibe the "winglike plastic bottles" could be bigger and actually replace the bottles. Quite a job to test the weight/power ratio, but with 2 meters wingspan its a decent amount of volume that might be worth testing anyway. Nice work btw its really cool

    • @MrScorpianwarrior
      @MrScorpianwarrior Год назад +3

      Wow, the idea of using the wings _as_ bottles is quite interesting

    • @carlgeorgbiermann2915
      @carlgeorgbiermann2915 Год назад +6

      In the wings, the surface to volume ratio is very high. Now consider it needs to be strong enough to withstand >100 psi and it will likely be not worth the extra added weight. Sorry to say

    • @szkoclaw
      @szkoclaw Год назад +4

      You can't keep a desired shape across wildly changing internal pressure unless it's made from very rigid (and very heavy) material.
      There could be a tubular inlay in the thick part of the wing, but it's volume to surface ratio and thus energy to weight ratio will be low.

  • @jghanson25
    @jghanson25 Год назад +9

    Dude!! Congratulations! I’ve been watching over the years as you sharpen your knowledge and craftsmanship with this project. I’m literally at my house in Nome Alaska cheering you on. What an amazing success. That’s got to feel so great. I feel great and I’m just watching! Excited to see how far you end up taking this. You’ve really pushed this platform to levels I don’t know it’s ever been taken to. Keep on leading the charge Tom! Great work!

  • @Cessnapilotintraining
    @Cessnapilotintraining Год назад +1

    I love videos where somebody has an idea and makes it work without given up! Especially this one because I am an aviation enthusiast!

  • @salmiakki5638
    @salmiakki5638 Год назад +9

    If you manage to splice together more bottles you could have the tank be a structural component holding the tail.
    Also, some smooth fairings for the engine and/or pusher configuration would help a lot with drag I think. The former expectantly vince you are 3d printing I think it's a worthwhile investment of little additional weight

  • @gRuHa89
    @gRuHa89 Год назад +9

    Hey Tom, I've been watching your progress with air powered planes for quite some time, and I have to say THIS IS TREMENDOUS! CONGRATULATIONS!

  • @awood12345
    @awood12345 Год назад +5

    Superb work, that is a brilliant flight time! At the speed you are flying I'd suggest the next wing has an aerofoil with a little bit of undercamber.

  • @rrs_13
    @rrs_13 Год назад

    I reckon the added weight of having pressure-capable and air tight wings doubling down as reservoirs would be negated by the air capacity, and thus run time, those wings would provide.
    One of the reasons it struggles so much with wind it's because it is so light for its dimensions and drag, so adding weight for run time also has another benefit.

  • @Squeaky_Ben
    @Squeaky_Ben Год назад +6

    This is so damn awesome...
    Could you potentially increase the flight time a tiny bit by using the exhaust of the engine as a tiny bit of thrust? As in, print the engine in such a way that the exhaust is redirected backwards?

  • @archivist17
    @archivist17 Год назад +8

    Great work, Tom, and congratulations on your achievement. Here's to longer times and more adventurous flights!

  • @francoisrivard893
    @francoisrivard893 11 месяцев назад

    Very cool plane! Here's a bit of a cheat if super long time aloft is what you're after: Fly it on a hot / windless day and focus on climbing as high as possible, you might catch a thermal current. One you're in the thermal you circle around and the plane will go up as if it's in an elevator. It could even potentially go higher / stay up longer than you want (Why some R/C gliders feature spoilers to "de-thermalize" and avoid loosing the craft altogether). With a little bit of luck and some practice you could keep it up for a very long time.

  • @sypialnia_studio
    @sypialnia_studio Год назад +5

    Another video in this series, and it really was a great watch. Your engineering journey is so well presented and the satisfaction after achieving each optimisation is very contagious. Love your channel mate, keep on being awesome!

  • @jamesgordon589
    @jamesgordon589 Год назад +13

    The CO2 you typically find in cartridges/paintball tanks is generally stored as a liquid, therefore stored at a ~700x higher density than gas. It pulls heat from the atmosphere as it is used/expands, which is why you often see CO2 tanks (and propane tanks, for that matter) "frost up" when in heavy use.
    You'll likely find that you'd have greatly increased range if you were to run from a CO2 bottle.

    • @videocruncher
      @videocruncher Год назад +1

      Yes, even Google indicates that it is about 6 litres of CO2 at 1 atm and 0C for a 12-gram 21-ml cartridge. However, it will not surpass the bottle solution in terms of range.

    • @TheUnPlayable
      @TheUnPlayable Год назад

      I guess it would need a complete change of philosophy as the weight would be orders of magnitude higher. He would then need a way bigger and heavier motor, a larger frame and wings, etc...

  • @OptimiSkeptic
    @OptimiSkeptic Год назад +6

    Tom's kid-like joy and laughter are seriously contagious! They made this one my favourite air-powered plane video so far.

  • @jeffreyohler2599
    @jeffreyohler2599 4 месяца назад

    *Try ditching the bottle for a Single Body & Wing Mold that's hollow!* This will allow the whole inside to be a chamber. You would have to mold you Rutters to fit the backend of the wings but it could work.
    With some intelligent design you could keep it 'expandable' by allowing for Body/Wing Extension Applications!

  • @Cor-tex
    @Cor-tex Год назад +74

    This suggestion may sound unconventional, but have you considered utilizing the wings as an air-tank?

    • @darinpringle5611
      @darinpringle5611 Год назад +14

      In fact it sounds very conventional. Basically all passenger planes store their power source (fuel) in the wings.

    • @mbmurphy777
      @mbmurphy777 Год назад +16

      You would have to completely change the design of the wings and they would have to be much heavier and stronger to hold 120 psi and hold their shape.

    • @mifphilip
      @mifphilip Год назад +2

      With a full Carbon fibre wing, he could do it.

    • @haphazard1342
      @haphazard1342 Год назад +9

      The shape is not conducive. To make an airfoil pressure vessel would require too much weight. To enclose a cylinder in the airfoil would probably be a waste of space.
      Instead, replacing the carbon tail spar with extended bottles for larger capacity and longer runtime would be easy and efficient.

    • @martynridley3671
      @martynridley3671 Год назад +1

      A pressure vessel needs to have the smallest surface area possible to maximise it's efficiency and the wing shape would be one of the worst possible designs for that purpose. That's 120 lbs force on every square inch of the wings surface, don't forget and that looks like a lot of square inches to me and relatively not much volume! Imagine how much force there would be at the wing edges, trying to rip it apart! Curiosity may even tempt you to work it out, if you have the inclination. Actually, thinking about it, it would be equivalent to a teenager standing on every square inch inside the wing!

  • @Warmbrak
    @Warmbrak Год назад +4

    Congrats Tom! It has been very enjoyable watching you incrementally improve your air powered craft over the past few years. Well done mate!

  • @egebezboli
    @egebezboli Год назад +7

    I've been watching this project since around 2020 and it's such a pleasure to see how far have you gotten! I'm genuinely glad for you!

  • @JubiTheVille
    @JubiTheVille Год назад

    yep, as a kid i had a couple of these. After tossing my last one off a mountain in British Columbia my parents didn't get another. Awesome memories during its lifetime. by the time i could buy myself one i could not find them or justify the cost they became

  • @dayjust9974
    @dayjust9974 Год назад +5

    can u imagine if its possible using the wing itself as air chamber? great project keep going

  • @gavdawiziscool
    @gavdawiziscool Год назад +4

    I might speak for every single one of us that have filled your journey Tom, but damn I am so proud! Well done mate!

  • @kaylor87
    @kaylor87 Год назад +22

    Imagine if Tom Stanton, Integza, and Peter Sripol all got together to build an airplane...

    • @wilfriedklaebe
      @wilfriedklaebe Год назад +5

      Air pressure powered jet plane!

    • @ajbp95
      @ajbp95 Год назад +4

      No tomatoes in the world would any longer be safe!

    • @Śiśna3633
      @Śiśna3633 Год назад +3

      Also, I would add the other two YT aeronautical guys NicholasRehm and Rctestflight. Tom uses NicholasRehm's controller.

  • @rexschimmer7394
    @rexschimmer7394 Год назад

    Tom,
    I am always impressed by the way you approach your projects and how you go about fabricating them. The latest air powered airplane is a great example of your thinking and fabrication skills. I look forward to all of your latest projects.

  • @AdamOoze
    @AdamOoze Год назад +6

    Man, using pressurized air to conquer air itself. Even for a hobby project, it's been a wild ride. I'm glad you had fun designing all this and thank you for documenting all of it. ❤

  • @eror57
    @eror57 Год назад +11

    Can't believe I've been watching you build air powered planes for 6 years. It's been a blast!!

  • @xcvbnm98765
    @xcvbnm98765 Год назад +130

    Opera one of the best browsers

    • @UnlockedOrSmth
      @UnlockedOrSmth 6 месяцев назад

      It's SpyWare Time!

    • @PilotMonkeVR
      @PilotMonkeVR 6 месяцев назад +1

      It steals your information

    • @xcvbnm98765
      @xcvbnm98765 6 месяцев назад

      @@PilotMonkeVR nope😎

    • @xanderplayz3446
      @xanderplayz3446 3 месяца назад

      @@xcvbnm98765Maybe look up the whole Opera scandal. And, it’s owned by a chinese company.

  • @owenrichmond1696
    @owenrichmond1696 Год назад +1

    You continue to inspire me with every video! Not even my discipline of engineering but there's just something so satisfying about seeing you have these big and small breakthroughs. Counted the seconds it was flying like a bull rider on a bull. Awesome work Tom keep going!!!

  • @Diamonddrake
    @Diamonddrake Год назад +5

    Paint is pretty but is often heavy, I'd be interested in a weight difference between painted and not painted!

    • @mstreich
      @mstreich Год назад

      This is why the Space Shuttle ended up orange instead of white as on early flights.