Hey Bjorn i have decided that I would like to IC with this model, I purchased an RCGF 15cc gas motor, it runs very well and should fit in the cowl ok. I am a big fan of thegas engines because they are clean and are very reliable. The 15cc is equal to a .91 and the smallest gas I have seen . Any thoughts or conerns.
Very impressive, I just started researching this bird for a future build and yours is definatlly inspiration. What did you cover and how did that change the weight. I was planning on electric but the sound of yours make me rethink. Great job flying, love the thumbs up at the end.
Very nice Bjørn! A great achievement! We missed you at British Wings and Wheels. Your Lanc would have been the star of the show. Trond was there with his Bf-110, I was there with the Corsair. And there was about 10 form the Trønder Battallion with 2-3 warbirds each. Maybe next time!
@wikeroy Thanks a lot :-) Reason for not attending BWW was that I had not had the time to testfly and make final adjustments to the lady, but next year for shure :-)
@smithsfallsbirdguy Thanks a lot :-) The major difference between electric and IC is thicker wing skins and ply firewalls. I planked mine with 2,5mm balsa wing skins and 25g/square meter fiberglass with Zpoxy finishing resin. Epoxy primer and then paint. It weighs around 14Kg dry. I did some modifications on the plans as well, added flaps, bomb bay, frise ailerons and scale elevator. I also put a lot of work into hiding all the control linkages
wonderful flight. I loved. I am building my lancaster in 1/10 scale but I am not sure how many degrees of incidence it should give to each engine. Could you tell me how you built yours? Thank you
@@rcBjorn I'm building the lanc in 1/12th with 4 OS 40 Surpass motors for control line. It is 102" and should weigh around 13 pounds. Am making some home made retracts now. What is the scale of your model?
You are one with that airplane brotha!
Is it still flying😊?
Yes it is, but with a second set of Winge
the moustache gives his transmitter a signal boost and makes him a better pilot! legend
nice one bud
Hey Bjorn
i have decided that I would like to IC with this model, I purchased an RCGF 15cc gas motor, it runs very well and should fit in the cowl ok. I am a big fan of thegas engines because they are clean and are very reliable. The 15cc is equal to a .91 and the smallest gas I have seen . Any thoughts or conerns.
Very impressive, I just started researching this bird for a future build and yours is definatlly inspiration. What did you cover and how did that change the weight. I was planning on electric but the sound of yours make me rethink. Great job flying, love the thumbs up at the end.
Very nice Bjørn! A great achievement! We missed you at British Wings and Wheels. Your Lanc would have been the star of the show. Trond was there with his Bf-110, I was there with the Corsair. And there was about 10 form the Trønder Battallion with 2-3 warbirds each. Maybe next time!
@wikeroy
Thanks a lot :-)
Reason for not attending BWW was that I had not had the time to testfly and make final adjustments to the lady, but next year for shure :-)
@smithsfallsbirdguy
Thanks a lot :-)
The major difference between electric and IC is thicker wing skins and ply firewalls. I planked mine with 2,5mm balsa wing skins and 25g/square meter fiberglass with Zpoxy finishing resin. Epoxy primer and then paint. It weighs around 14Kg dry. I did some modifications on the plans as well, added flaps, bomb bay, frise ailerons and scale elevator. I also put a lot of work into hiding all the control linkages
wonderful flight. I loved. I am building my lancaster in 1/10 scale but I am not sure how many degrees of incidence it should give to each engine. Could you tell me how you built yours? Thank you
Amazing!
What is the weight and the motors?
Hi
The auw is ca 14 Kg and motors are O.S .56 fourstrokes
@@rcBjorn I'm building the lanc in 1/12th with 4 OS 40 Surpass motors for control line. It is 102" and should weigh around 13 pounds. Am making some home made retracts now. What is the scale of your model?
@@earlyhemibill The scale on this one is 1:9 :-)