@rctestflight so pleased you got a sail boat to play with, a bit of help for you... set your close hauled jib boom to 12 degrees from the Center Line and main boom 2 degrees from CL, and regular sailing 15 deg jib boom to cl and 5 deg main boom to cl , this will make the boat sail really well. Make your sail stick get to 15 deg max jib boom then use a switch to get the last 3 deg of inhaul so you can switch in and out between close hauled and regular. Make the rudder and sail 100% expo , it helps you you sail much smoother and faster. also tighten up your jib luff so it doesnt sag so much. i have sailed rc for a long while and these are the fist things i do on any boat before it even touches the water. the rest of the fine adjustments are left to you.. Bon Voyage.
@@BroomAtoom so many examples of such practices , I wonder what manufacturers are not party to them , half or the origin of ali express / amazon is prob the same ?
After many years racing RC sailing boats, I learned that no matter how "waterproof" and sealed anything is, especially servos and control units, moisture will ALWAYS find a way inside. I ended up using the receiver sans the plastic housing. Some of the variable potentiometers corroded off their plating, but it meant a quick spray of water displacing oil shifted the short-circuit inducing water, and the IC chip was plugged into a socket, allowing for rapid replacement at the waterside when it invariable blew up. So those failed power units were to be expected, after getting dunked a few times. On the other hand, those grease-filled servo boxes were the first ever truly waterPROOF enclosures I have seen. The immersion in grease meant that there was no route for water to get to the servo. Great idea and execution.
Seventeen miles!? That's _crazy,_ dude. That's like, an entire day of chillin' out on the water. Well, more like _flying_ out on the water. Too cool, man.
Daniel keep using whatever sponsors you want. These people complaining about temu never do anything with themselves anyway. Great vid love your projects I won't lose respect because of a silly sponsor that helps you afford your amazing projects. This project makes me want to build a hydrofoil for my kayaks for next summer.
I'm really excited to see more hydrofoil content next year! And a side effect of the Temu sponsorship seems to be HUGE engagement numbers, which I hope helps your algorithm!
I think enough people have comment on the sponsor, so here is a real comment on the content of your video: Having grease around the servo helps conduct the heat to the casing. But the case is made of plastic which is a bad heat conductor. To had to this, you have a cover over it for hydrodynamic that would isolate the servos even more. I would suggest 2 solutions: - first easy solution: to make a water channel to get water flow between the casing and the cover. But this is not optimal. - 2nd more complicated solution: machine off as much plastic as possible from the servo casing and then glue in an aluminum plate machined in the shape of the cover. The ideal solution would be to have the casing made of aluminum as well as the cover, but this would be expensive. For the seat, you could cutout a seat out of a bloc of foam and fix it to the board. This way, you would be a lot lower and more comfortable. You could even make it to fit tracks to adjust postion. For your electronics, I suggest to seal them into a box. You could have a water cooling system going through an aluminum intercooler inside the box. Water could be picked up using the mast internal channels either with a self priming pump or using a venturi effect at the outlet. Inlet and outlet could be near the foil to prevent air pickup. Your project is really nice, but it could look a lot more professional with everything neatly tucked away. Such as have the wiring incased in the board (while remaining accessible), etc.
I’ve had that same issue with inexpensive motors. The ones I had didn’t have a metal bushing to support the back end of the shaft. When the motor drew too much power it melts the plastic around the shaft. We 3d printed a new end cap for the motor with a pocket to press a little bushing into and that fixed it.
Going in reverse, and then forward, usually takes any weeds off, I think what you have achieved so far, is nothing short of Legendary Love your videos !!!
The housing boxes for the servos could have a heat sink incorporated, making direct contact with the water with some kind of rubber o-ring or gasket between the metal and the plastic. If placed correctly, would give the servos more chance to release the extra heat without letting in water.
You definitely have yaw and roll inversely affecting one another in this project. Differential thrust will only exacerbate this because of such a high center of gravity. If your vessel is rolled to the left with locked ailerons at neutral position, then you would need to apply right differential thrust to try to get counteracting lift on the left side, but doing this will move your center of gravity further off axis to the left, which is fighting the lift you are providing. The solution is likely to actively control roll and yaw, and possibly add some control surface for yaw control.
If a V-shape foil and a small center board is used instead of just a flat hydrofoil, the dihedral effects may improve the stability and side shift when doing turns. It is expected that the agility of the board and drag will be affected too. Excellent job & video. Thanks.
Daniel, great work! the only things missing are: 1) attach a bucket seat on adjustable rail. 2) attach joystick controls to the arm rests, using arduino setup to emulate the radio control PCM signals. You can also use the arm wrests to control roll.
That's actually how self driving cars work. Elon Musk has a sweat shop in Thailand, with a load of kids with remote control radios and FPV goggles driving the cars when they go in to self driving mode.
I had an interesting idea. I understand as an armchair engineer my opinion doesn't mean much but i thought the 7foot wingspan with so much surface area is really holding you back because it is likely creating so much drag under the water line. One thing to consider that you are trying to make a hydrofoil boat but are attempting to use Hydrofoil boards as a start point. Perhaps looking at Hydrofoil Sailboats or other boats could be beneficial. Typically those use two "T" or "Slight Y" shaped hydrofoils on either side of the boat to create lift and using a "T" shaped foil on the rear to act as a rudder / possibly even an elevator. This separated design could allow you to have the desired lift while reducing the underwater drag associated with all parts being connected to each other. take a look at the "america's cup" sailboats they have a very strong an different hydrofoil design that could inspire your next design. Thanks for all the videos!
Looks like the board needed a set of handle bars so you could stand up and allow your weight to be tilted over without falling off....... awesome series.... stay safe..... greetings from down under
I think the main problem, why you have no roll control is, that your Wing is straight. You need a bit of a V-shape to get roll control. It's the same on airplanes. The wings of an airplane are designed with a slight upward angle, a V-shape, to ensure stability. The V-shape allows the rudder to also influence the roll axis of the aircraft. When the rudder is used to yaw the plane, the V-shaped wings create a rolling effect, helping the aircraft return to level flight. This effect increases overall stability, especially in turbulent conditions, by enabling coordinated control between yaw and roll. Without the V-Shape the ruder only effects Yaw. Greetings from Germany Fabian
It looks like you have a couple of issues that you could fix on the current design relatively simply: - A bit too much wing for your power/weight - What you mentioned about control surfaces being too large and curved - No restoring moment for the roll - No Roll/yaw coupling If you trim the ends of your wings off and re-print them a bit shorter, with a little bit of dihedral and smaller ailerons that should a lot less stress on your servos, and the dihedral will help the roll stability. The lack of a rudder is ultimately the main issue with yaw - you are ending up in a sideslip situation like an uncoordinated turn in an aircraft. The vertical element might help, but you'd have to match the size of the surface to the moment of inertia about the yaw axis. I wonder if for the next iteration, instead of a tail for pitch authority, perhaps a leading element would help to couple the two movements (the banked leading element is ahead of the CG leading to a yaw moment in the same direction).
Fantastic,,, I hope you make another video on upgrades to your board , I'm new so I'm going to have to go watch you make the project from the beginning 😊
My thoughts: 1.) Model some balance tabs forward of the hinge line on those control surfaces, offset the load a bit. Might need more testing to see how big to make them. Smaller, neutral surfaces are also a good idea. 2.) I'd be tempted to make it a canard since you want the vertical stabilizers at the back anyway, better yet if the canard is elevated relative to the main wing it'll breach first even at shallow angles and give you that famous canard stall resistance. 3.) Heading hold gyros on the pitch and roll, use the sonars during takeoff then set the gyros for cruising through chop.
Super awesome project ! So much fun and totally looking forward to what ever you get up to next ! Im wandering who's the worst influence....... You or Tailheavy ? Great job Daniel ♥️😉🙃😎 NZ
Great video! That thing works well, I also got offered a Temu sponsorship but turned it down I know a lot of people don’t like it including me haha. Keep up the good work you are an inspiration!
Couple thoughts: 1) sensor fuse the distance sensors with an imu to keep you level and at solid altitude. 2) vertical thrusters to maintain apparent buoyancy with heavy friends. Essentially an aqua vtol!
Can you switch to a single support in the middle instead of 2 on the outside? Could you add adjustable "winglets" under the water to help compensate for the roll? what about vectored thrust for the motors themselves or allow the motors to gimbal and put them each on the far corners instead of near the middle?
Hey, Daniel To reduce aileron torq you can use very simple solution - so called horned aileron (no idea correct name in english) Just look carefully at Yak-52 tail and his rudder, you`ll notice that rudder has small part forward to it axis, this part significantly reduce applied force to it. Hope this helps Also to increase roll selfstability you can add positive V angle to wing, just look at any passenger airliner in front - wingtips are higher than wing root
you can make the foils slightly into a u or v shape to counter the inverted pendulum problem. Leaning to the side would make the interior wing have a more horizontal angle than the exterior one which will create more lift on the inside thus stabilizing
Dude. Beaver. Ever flown in one? If you haven't, do it. Somehow. A beaver on floats is like freedom in the sky to go wherever you want. When that 9 cylinder radial engine hits takeoff power, you feel it as much as you hear it. 450 horsepower. Wheels, floats and skis. Tipping the plane left to right to remove each float separately or doing a curved water taxi to take off from sketchy places. The beaver can do it carrying a bunch of cargo or humans. As the Rolling Stones say, "Do it, do it, do it, dooo it." If you can, sit in the second front seat. Pay extra if necessary. In terms of leverage, look into hiking straps for sailing. Allows you to throw your weight around more effectively. You may be able to apply that to manual control while sitting without falling off the board.
Flipsky has a long solid history of doing bad waterproofing. True for their remotes, ESCs and some of the motors. So pretty normal. Most builders are using a waterproof housing around those "waterproof" ESCs. Concerning efoil efficiency: should be between 50-70 Wh/km @25km/h depending on wing, raider weight and prop used. And no more temu ads please.
You might be able to counter the wave/sonar interference by adding a third sonar at the bow/stern and averaging those inputs to generate the altitude value. Still use the port/starboard to control roll.
> 16:40 some thermal compounds are non-conductive and could be pressurized in the same way to form that watertight housing. that would help with thermal transfer (obviously). you can usually get fairly cheap tubes of thermal compound if you don't need them to be high performance, which in this case i don't think you do. maybe something to test?
Now let's talk him into making a larger hydrofoil from 2 people maybe a 2 person kayak or canoe. Something you can actually enjoy with someone with a larger battery bank
Really amazing. It needs some control logic like quads have. The cmbination of pitch and roll, depending on a gyro. That can't be so difficult.... tiny model airplanes have such stability control. You just need different channels.
I wonder if the biggest problem with balancing is the lack of handlebars. If you had a stationary vertical bar to brace against, you could move your weight more quickly and accurately in relation to the board's attitude, and would also have something to hold onto when you're leaning way over. Anyway. Can't wait to see version 2.
Since standing without servo control seems to be a no-go anyway, I think you're going to get much better results with a conventional stick and rudder setup with cables and pulleys rigged to the control surfaces. This has the added benefit of the possibility of rigging up an autopilot to drive the cables with fewer servos, with the servos located above the waterline on the fuselage. This would also solve the aileron asymmetry problem because the ailerons would be physically linked together. At that point, you should also fit trim tabs to the elevator so you can adjust for CG deviations. You've gone far enough out of the conventional RC world (since you're carrying a person) that you really ought to be playing by the rules of the conventional aviation/hydrofoil world. EDIT: Also, one word: dihedral.
as a fellow RC pilot I laughed at his temu ad because it was genius. He literally paired up every "you have to read this scripted text" audio with the most ludicrous "this is bullshit, do not buy it" video. "It has real servos for gyro stabilization" while showing it flopping aimlessly in the wind. "I'll be using this to clear leaves" while showing a timelapse of it being utterly useless. Y'all, this man is explicitly showing us DO NOT BUY THESE THINGS. this is a video not a podcast for a reason.
Suggestion for the next version of the grease filled 3D print would be to add a screw cap at the bottom center or two of them at about the 1/3 center marker of the servo so you can unscrew it and use a cylinder push it out instead of pulling. Good stuff tho mate.
Daniel. I don't know the proper names of things but I do know of something that could help with the servos for the control surfaces. On a normal aircraft the rudder and elevators are just flapping around behind their hinges, but on sport and stunt aircraft there's part of the rudder and elevators that is Infront of the hinge, this makes it easier to control because the leading part acts against the surface. There's also the spade, could be useful. On video that shows what I'm on about is by Kevin Talbot "Idiot buys world's most extreme stunt airplane" and from about 15 minutes in you'll see a walk around the plane. You'll see the added part on the end of the Aileron and the spade underneath. Now to wait for all the corrections. 🤔 Hope this is useful.
@weatheranddarkness It's a very small wing that's positioned in front of the control surface on a bracket, it's in the video i mentioned. I know it's not rocket science but I couldn't find the video I was actually looking for, I'm doing my best. 🤣
A trim tab would be on the trailing edge to trim a control. What you are talking about is a spade. It is designed to balance the controls. So if he had a profile that didn't have the camber on the trailing edge that would reduce the load on the servos as it offsets some of the forces the water puts on the controls when they aren't in the neutral position. The problem is that the camber on the trailing edge that he has is acting as a trim tab. It wants to push the control surface up while the servo is constantly forcing it back into the "neutral" position which isn't the hydrodynamic neutral position. In aircraft terms the trim tab basically aerodynamically forces the control surface to have a different neutral position. Spades aerodynamically balance the controls surface so it takes less force to hold any given position. In other words, Balancing out the aerodynamic forces on the control surface.
Daniel. Build an RC plane that can land and ride on a hydrofoil. This project was sweet. I would love it if you made the biggest foam RC plane in the world. One that looks like it can take a human up. Put a life-like Mannequin in it. Collaborate with Tail Heavy Productions. lol
@rctestflight so pleased you got a sail boat to play with, a bit of help for you... set your close hauled jib boom to 12 degrees from the Center Line and main boom 2 degrees from CL, and regular sailing 15 deg jib boom to cl and 5 deg main boom to cl , this will make the boat sail really well. Make your sail stick get to 15 deg max jib boom then use a switch to get the last 3 deg of inhaul so you can switch in and out between close hauled and regular. Make the rudder and sail 100% expo , it helps you you sail much smoother and faster. also tighten up your jib luff so it doesnt sag so much. i have sailed rc for a long while and these are the fist things i do on any boat before it even touches the water. the rest of the fine adjustments are left to you.. Bon Voyage.
Big shame the boat was sent by temu though
@@BroomAtoom so many examples of such practices , I wonder what manufacturers are not party to them , half or the origin of ali express / amazon is prob the same ?
temu ad is crazy, bills gotta be paid i guess
After many years racing RC sailing boats, I learned that no matter how "waterproof" and sealed anything is, especially servos and control units, moisture will ALWAYS find a way inside.
I ended up using the receiver sans the plastic housing. Some of the variable potentiometers corroded off their plating, but it meant a quick spray of water displacing oil shifted the short-circuit inducing water, and the IC chip was plugged into a socket, allowing for rapid replacement at the waterside when it invariable blew up.
So those failed power units were to be expected, after getting dunked a few times. On the other hand, those grease-filled servo boxes were the first ever truly waterPROOF enclosures I have seen. The immersion in grease meant that there was no route for water to get to the servo. Great idea and execution.
My plans for a productive next 30 minutes have been foiled!
Noice 😂
I see what you did there
It's always like this whenever he uploads hahaha
First non Temu comment I came upon lol
It took a solid pun to distract from the temu hate.
Seventeen miles!? That's _crazy,_ dude. That's like, an entire day of chillin' out on the water. Well, more like _flying_ out on the water. Too cool, man.
How much are they paying you??? 😂
Daniel keep using whatever sponsors you want. These people complaining about temu never do anything with themselves anyway. Great vid love your projects I won't lose respect because of a silly sponsor that helps you afford your amazing projects. This project makes me want to build a hydrofoil for my kayaks for next summer.
You've _really_ created something amazing here, bud. This thing is *awesome!*
@@eamonia “blud” 😂
Can't wait for next summer's autonomous hydrofoil boat powered by solar
I'm really excited to see more hydrofoil content next year! And a side effect of the Temu sponsorship seems to be HUGE engagement numbers, which I hope helps your algorithm!
I think enough people have comment on the sponsor, so here is a real comment on the content of your video:
Having grease around the servo helps conduct the heat to the casing. But the case is made of plastic which is a bad heat conductor. To had to this, you have a cover over it for hydrodynamic that would isolate the servos even more. I would suggest 2 solutions:
- first easy solution: to make a water channel to get water flow between the casing and the cover. But this is not optimal.
- 2nd more complicated solution: machine off as much plastic as possible from the servo casing and then glue in an aluminum plate machined in the shape of the cover. The ideal solution would be to have the casing made of aluminum as well as the cover, but this would be expensive.
For the seat, you could cutout a seat out of a bloc of foam and fix it to the board. This way, you would be a lot lower and more comfortable. You could even make it to fit tracks to adjust postion.
For your electronics, I suggest to seal them into a box. You could have a water cooling system going through an aluminum intercooler inside the box. Water could be picked up using the mast internal channels either with a self priming pump or using a venturi effect at the outlet. Inlet and outlet could be near the foil to prevent air pickup.
Your project is really nice, but it could look a lot more professional with everything neatly tucked away. Such as have the wiring incased in the board (while remaining accessible), etc.
I’ve had that same issue with inexpensive motors. The ones I had didn’t have a metal bushing to support the back end of the shaft. When the motor drew too much power it melts the plastic around the shaft.
We 3d printed a new end cap for the motor with a pocket to press a little bushing into and that fixed it.
Going in reverse, and then forward,
usually takes any weeds off,
I think what you have achieved so far,
is nothing short of Legendary
Love your videos !!!
Shakespeare in the comment section
24:50 So those stranded wires can be an ingress point for water as it can just wick through the interior of the wire.
The housing boxes for the servos could have a heat sink incorporated, making direct contact with the water with some kind of rubber o-ring or gasket between the metal and the plastic. If placed correctly, would give the servos more chance to release the extra heat without letting in water.
Bro I've been watching your videos for years and I love all the crazy stuff you design and create
You should put a spring on the sides of your sonars so they have a bi-stable position.
You definitely have yaw and roll inversely affecting one another in this project. Differential thrust will only exacerbate this because of such a high center of gravity. If your vessel is rolled to the left with locked ailerons at neutral position, then you would need to apply right differential thrust to try to get counteracting lift on the left side, but doing this will move your center of gravity further off axis to the left, which is fighting the lift you are providing. The solution is likely to actively control roll and yaw, and possibly add some control surface for yaw control.
"Welcome to RCTestFlight where today we'll be flying my buddy Axel out on the lake..."
If a V-shape foil and a small center board is used instead of just a flat hydrofoil, the dihedral effects may improve the stability and side shift when doing turns. It is expected that the agility of the board and drag will be affected too. Excellent job & video. Thanks.
love how it's become the most dad project ever that you've done on accident, you need your trusty camper dad chair.
Daniel, great work! the only things missing are: 1) attach a bucket seat on adjustable rail. 2) attach joystick controls to the arm rests, using arduino setup to emulate the radio control PCM signals. You can also use the arm wrests to control roll.
Loved this series, one of the coolest things built on youtube
That's actually how self driving cars work. Elon Musk has a sweat shop in Thailand, with a load of kids with remote control radios and FPV goggles driving the cars when they go in to self driving mode.
more temu sponsorships! get that bag
Huh. Look at that. A new reason to stick around 'till next summer! Thanks for your hard work!
So much patience! Thanks Ray
I loved this project. Can't wait for more next summer.
I miss the Factor sponsor ads. That stuff looked delicious af.
PCBWay ads are also interesting.
I dont really care who sponsors him. I like Rctf videos any way.
I love hearing "It's so majestic" within the first minute!!
I had an interesting idea. I understand as an armchair engineer my opinion doesn't mean much but i thought the 7foot wingspan with so much surface area is really holding you back because it is likely creating so much drag under the water line.
One thing to consider that you are trying to make a hydrofoil boat but are attempting to use Hydrofoil boards as a start point. Perhaps looking at Hydrofoil Sailboats or other boats could be beneficial. Typically those use two "T" or "Slight Y" shaped hydrofoils on either side of the boat to create lift and using a "T" shaped foil on the rear to act as a rudder / possibly even an elevator. This separated design could allow you to have the desired lift while reducing the underwater drag associated with all parts being connected to each other. take a look at the "america's cup" sailboats they have a very strong an different hydrofoil design that could inspire your next design.
Thanks for all the videos!
Looks like the board needed a set of handle bars so you could stand up and allow your weight to be tilted over without falling off....... awesome series.... stay safe..... greetings from down under
I think the main problem, why you have no roll control is, that your Wing is straight. You need a bit of a V-shape to get roll control. It's the same on airplanes. The wings of an airplane are designed with a slight upward angle, a V-shape, to ensure stability. The V-shape allows the rudder to also influence the roll axis of the aircraft. When the rudder is used to yaw the plane, the V-shaped wings create a rolling effect, helping the aircraft return to level flight. This effect increases overall stability, especially in turbulent conditions, by enabling coordinated control between yaw and roll. Without the V-Shape the ruder only effects Yaw.
Greetings from Germany
Fabian
Super awesome! So glad foils are a thing now.
I always look forward to these videos. I hope electric foil boards will be affordable in the near future.
Really enjoyed this series, thanks 👍💪✌
Great work! Owsome project! Love your channel ❤👏👏
Good stuff!
I can't wait to see what you make for hydrofoil 2.0!
To continue the aircraft analogy. You're looking for fighter-plane flight characteristics. From a stratofortress body design.
That's one way to generate viewer engagement
This is the coolest thing I've seen you do, congrats!
It looks like you have a couple of issues that you could fix on the current design relatively simply:
- A bit too much wing for your power/weight
- What you mentioned about control surfaces being too large and curved
- No restoring moment for the roll
- No Roll/yaw coupling
If you trim the ends of your wings off and re-print them a bit shorter, with a little bit of dihedral and smaller ailerons that should a lot less stress on your servos, and the dihedral will help the roll stability.
The lack of a rudder is ultimately the main issue with yaw - you are ending up in a sideslip situation like an uncoordinated turn in an aircraft. The vertical element might help, but you'd have to match the size of the surface to the moment of inertia about the yaw axis. I wonder if for the next iteration, instead of a tail for pitch authority, perhaps a leading element would help to couple the two movements (the banked leading element is ahead of the CG leading to a yaw moment in the same direction).
Fantastic,,, I hope you make another video on upgrades to your board , I'm new so I'm going to have to go watch you make the project from the beginning 😊
A racing version of this would be very cool. With an aerodynamic casing around the pilot, etc.
Love this project and series. Can’t help but think we’re looking at the future of PWC and sport watercraft. I want one
You're pinging my sonar bro..... Best line
That was really interesting to watch. Thanks.
My thoughts:
1.) Model some balance tabs forward of the hinge line on those control surfaces, offset the load a bit. Might need more testing to see how big to make them. Smaller, neutral surfaces are also a good idea.
2.) I'd be tempted to make it a canard since you want the vertical stabilizers at the back anyway, better yet if the canard is elevated relative to the main wing it'll breach first even at shallow angles and give you that famous canard stall resistance.
3.) Heading hold gyros on the pitch and roll, use the sonars during takeoff then set the gyros for cruising through chop.
Have you thought about putting springs on the ailerons to try and help take some load off of the servos?
Super awesome project ! So much fun and totally looking forward to what ever you get up to next ! Im wandering who's the worst influence....... You or Tailheavy ? Great job Daniel ♥️😉🙃😎 NZ
Temu? Better than no sponsorship at all❤
Your darn close to a water segway, very cool!
Great video! That thing works well, I also got offered a Temu sponsorship but turned it down I know a lot of people don’t like it including me haha. Keep up the good work you are an inspiration!
How much did they offer?
@@robertschnobert9090 usually it takes a few emails back and forth to negotiate but I declined before it got to that stage
Couple thoughts:
1) sensor fuse the distance sensors with an imu to keep you level and at solid altitude.
2) vertical thrusters to maintain apparent buoyancy with heavy friends. Essentially an aqua vtol!
Can you switch to a single support in the middle instead of 2 on the outside? Could you add adjustable "winglets" under the water to help compensate for the roll? what about vectored thrust for the motors themselves or allow the motors to gimbal and put them each on the far corners instead of near the middle?
Hey, Daniel
To reduce aileron torq you can use very simple solution - so called horned aileron (no idea correct name in english)
Just look carefully at Yak-52 tail and his rudder, you`ll notice that rudder has small part forward to it axis, this part significantly reduce applied force to it. Hope this helps
Also to increase roll selfstability you can add positive V angle to wing, just look at any passenger airliner in front - wingtips are higher than wing root
End of the project? There's nothing else you can do with it? It's ok if we have to wait until next summer. I've loved this series. It rocks!
you can make the foils slightly into a u or v shape to counter the inverted pendulum problem. Leaning to the side would make the interior wing have a more horizontal angle than the exterior one which will create more lift on the inside thus stabilizing
Many foil board fpils have negative dyhedral to help with roll control so it work more like a bike with counter steer
nice work been following the channel from the early days
that was very cool, thanks for a great video once again!
Awesome build.
Dude. Beaver. Ever flown in one? If you haven't, do it. Somehow. A beaver on floats is like freedom in the sky to go wherever you want. When that 9 cylinder radial engine hits takeoff power, you feel it as much as you hear it. 450 horsepower. Wheels, floats and skis. Tipping the plane left to right to remove each float separately or doing a curved water taxi to take off from sketchy places. The beaver can do it carrying a bunch of cargo or humans. As the Rolling Stones say, "Do it, do it, do it, dooo it." If you can, sit in the second front seat. Pay extra if necessary.
In terms of leverage, look into hiking straps for sailing. Allows you to throw your weight around more effectively. You may be able to apply that to manual control while sitting without falling off the board.
Flipsky has a long solid history of doing bad waterproofing. True for their remotes, ESCs and some of the motors. So pretty normal. Most builders are using a waterproof housing around those "waterproof" ESCs.
Concerning efoil efficiency: should be between 50-70 Wh/km @25km/h depending on wing, raider weight and prop used.
And no more temu ads please.
Hey, so that you have some numbers to compare to. My DIY efoil uses ~1.5kw at 30km/h and ~1kw at 25km/h with the total weight of 110kg.
Another awesome project...well done 👍😀
I hope you spend some time optimizing it! There's always the rctestflight classic option of "throw solar on it"
dude that thing is wicked, i can't get eough of it
i have no care at all for the temu stuff, just do what make sense financially for you
I get so pumped when you upload
This was so awesome
You might be able to counter the wave/sonar interference by adding a third sonar at the bow/stern and averaging those inputs to generate the altitude value. Still use the port/starboard to control roll.
Cool project! :)
> 16:40 some thermal compounds are non-conductive and could be pressurized in the same way to form that watertight housing. that would help with thermal transfer (obviously). you can usually get fairly cheap tubes of thermal compound if you don't need them to be high performance, which in this case i don't think you do. maybe something to test?
Now let's talk him into making a larger hydrofoil from 2 people maybe a 2 person kayak or canoe. Something you can actually enjoy with someone with a larger battery bank
I'd suggest getting a "festival chair" to lower your CG while still having a chill ride.
Great Job 👊
That is a great project.
Really amazing. It needs some control logic like quads have. The cmbination of pitch and roll, depending on a gyro. That can't be so difficult.... tiny model airplanes have such stability control. You just need different channels.
Fantastic vesc autopsy!
This is going to turn into a new water sport
Awesome job!
Dude, so interesting!!!
You might not have the most efficient boat on the lake but it's the coolest
Can’t wait for V2.1!
I wonder if the biggest problem with balancing is the lack of handlebars. If you had a stationary vertical bar to brace against, you could move your weight more quickly and accurately in relation to the board's attitude, and would also have something to hold onto when you're leaning way over. Anyway. Can't wait to see version 2.
Since standing without servo control seems to be a no-go anyway, I think you're going to get much better results with a conventional stick and rudder setup with cables and pulleys rigged to the control surfaces. This has the added benefit of the possibility of rigging up an autopilot to drive the cables with fewer servos, with the servos located above the waterline on the fuselage. This would also solve the aileron asymmetry problem because the ailerons would be physically linked together. At that point, you should also fit trim tabs to the elevator so you can adjust for CG deviations. You've gone far enough out of the conventional RC world (since you're carrying a person) that you really ought to be playing by the rules of the conventional aviation/hydrofoil world.
EDIT: Also, one word: dihedral.
as a fellow RC pilot I laughed at his temu ad because it was genius. He literally paired up every "you have to read this scripted text" audio with the most ludicrous "this is bullshit, do not buy it" video. "It has real servos for gyro stabilization" while showing it flopping aimlessly in the wind. "I'll be using this to clear leaves" while showing a timelapse of it being utterly useless.
Y'all, this man is explicitly showing us DO NOT BUY THESE THINGS. this is a video not a podcast for a reason.
Suggestion for the next version of the grease filled 3D print would be to add a screw cap at the bottom center or two of them at about the 1/3 center marker of the servo so you can unscrew it and use a cylinder push it out instead of pulling. Good stuff tho mate.
We need a DIY hydrofoil boat now built by Home Depot!
hope this series isnt over. one of the best ones
Great video :)
> master-level mechanical engineering for 98% of the project
> uses a brushed servo for a static load
dang
1:08 "Your pinging my sonar bro" 😂😂🔧👍
Next summer. A jet ski powered john boat hydrofoil
Daniel.
I don't know the proper names of things but I do know of something that could help with the servos for the control surfaces.
On a normal aircraft the rudder and elevators are just flapping around behind their hinges, but on sport and stunt aircraft there's part of the rudder and elevators that is Infront of the hinge, this makes it easier to control because the leading part acts against the surface.
There's also the spade, could be useful.
On video that shows what I'm on about is by Kevin Talbot "Idiot buys world's most extreme stunt airplane" and from about 15 minutes in you'll see a walk around the plane.
You'll see the added part on the end of the Aileron and the spade underneath.
Now to wait for all the corrections. 🤔
Hope this is useful.
Spade?
@weatheranddarkness
It's a very small wing that's positioned in front of the control surface on a bracket, it's in the video i mentioned.
I know it's not rocket science but I couldn't find the video I was actually looking for, I'm doing my best. 🤣
Like on boat rudders, instead of just turning the whole rudder, the rudder has a smaller rudder on the trailing edge which requires much less force.
@@Slikx666 well ping this thread when you find it
A trim tab would be on the trailing edge to trim a control. What you are talking about is a spade. It is designed to balance the controls. So if he had a profile that didn't have the camber on the trailing edge that would reduce the load on the servos as it offsets some of the forces the water puts on the controls when they aren't in the neutral position. The problem is that the camber on the trailing edge that he has is acting as a trim tab. It wants to push the control surface up while the servo is constantly forcing it back into the "neutral" position which isn't the hydrodynamic neutral position. In aircraft terms the trim tab basically aerodynamically forces the control surface to have a different neutral position. Spades aerodynamically balance the controls surface so it takes less force to hold any given position. In other words, Balancing out the aerodynamic forces on the control surface.
Great job man
W00000000000! Loving this series. Living vicariously thru rctestflight!
Daniel. Build an RC plane that can land and ride on a hydrofoil. This project was sweet. I would love it if you made the biggest foam RC plane in the world. One that looks like it can take a human up. Put a life-like Mannequin in it. Collaborate with Tail Heavy Productions. lol