Ha ha. Same here. We got Cox control line airplanes for Christmas 1976. They were the Spitfire and P-40 Warhawk. My brother had a Cox .049 P-40 Warhawk he was trying to start up in the backyard and it drove our mother crazy. The other brother sold his Spitfire to my friend and he crashed it the first time he tried it. It was destroyed except for the .049 engine. I had a Cox .020 Sky Copter I would fly in the back field of our public school when I was a kid.
@@electronixTech The Sky Copters' are always a big event at our S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In's near Little rock, Arkansas! ruclips.net/video/EN64Yht1jjQ/видео.html
@@Winter_Sportster I was just looking them up on Ebay and sellers want big money for them. My Dad pressured me into selling mine when I was a teenager. I should have held onto it. It was in perfect condition with the original box. Thanks for the link.
Thank You! I DO love this stuff! I get a trip back to the days of being a kid whenever one of these little castor-slingers comes to life. I've got some other vintage engines lined up to fly on the Q-Tee, and hopefully will have it's third video out shortly. Thanks for your comment!
@@hawk1481 Yeah, it's difficult to explain the draw of these little engines...they do a lot more than just spin a propeller. Thank You for your c comment! Kim
Pure Truth James!!! Even flying control line in the ballpark back in the 1960's, I tried to imagine what the plane was "seeing" at the top of it's wing-overs. Later, with R/C's, I wanted bad to have a camera on the plane, with not always the best results. Now, a piece of gray foam, some magic tape, and a key fob video camera can give me footage I'd still can't believe. It's been a great ride, and it's still going! Thanks for your post! Kim
@Robert Kuhnke Yeah, that'll be my next "jump" in tech. First Person View would be a cool addition. Got to have a really light weight outfit for the small stuff I love to fly.
Ain't thlat the truth james I remember wen it was electric was the new thing an it sucked an look wat they doin today.. But I'm still an ol skool nitro power flyer today an lov my cox engines
@@Winter_Sportster you can get lightweight fpv gear for these little birds. Not too expensive either. These remind me of the pheonix Park here in Dublin during the 80's. I loved the sound of the gasser 4 stroke engines. The buzz of the Cox on little biplanes was excellent.
I had a Q-Tee with a throttled Cox .049. That brings back memories for sure. Constant winding up the starter spring and the sound of squeezing that expensive Cox fuel can. Hands inches away from spinning prop blades while being soaked with hot oil. And then that unmuffled high-pitched whine. Of all my memories of the '70, these are not ones that I miss. I was so grateful when I could finally afford an engine that had a real throttle and real muffler. Even if it was a K&B. 😁
Now thats Flying! I can smell the hot castor from here, back in the 50's and 60's a Hot summer day out in a farm field is where I spent my days, I miss those wonderful times, every summer as I sit here and lookout over the fields I can here sounds of an 049 and dream of my times out there....
I had a bunch'a Cox engines as a kid. Does anyone remember the Graupner Kapitän? I build one from the original plans an odd 40 yrs ago. I liked how the plane came in, all dripping with castor. I fly paramotors now, and think I should be using Castor oil again; the smell of a careless childhood. The ratio between 'gluing everything back together' and 'hours of proper flying' has definitaly improved since then. Thanks for the video WS! Best, Rob ^^
Thank you! I was actually shocked several years ago when I started doing this, at how willing even a small plane will be to packing cameras AS LONG AS the CG is brought back to where it was. This has been an awful lot of fun. Thanks again for your comment.
That's a terrific video! My first RC plane was a Q-Tee! I love how the digital camera refresh gives the weird effect to the prop but it also catches the piston in motion through the ports. Very cool! What a great property too, you can just go out back and fly!
Thank You! Yes, the Sanwa Q-Tee has quite a fan base...we had a bunch of them in our little group back in the 1980's and 90's. I'm very luck to have this place to fly, and try to make use of it at every opportunity. Thank you again for your comment! Kim
I never got into RC as a lad but my chums did, the sound of these enthusiastic engines brought back good memories from the 70's when model engineers had to think and work hard at their hobby. . Thanks for posting this interesting experiment.
Brilliant!. I used to have a Cox Black Widow .049 back in my mid teens, iirc there used to be a muffler you could fit to them. Seeing these run brings back happy memories.
The little orange plastic prop on the Sky Copter was even worse. It was an .020 engine but the prop was almost razor sharp. I was only 10 years old when I was launching it and didn't know I could have made a chicken stick out of a wooden dowel with some plastic tubing over it to save my finger.
Man, it'd be great if you did! The nostalgia hit from a low pass by one of these little planes is worth the time spent hunkering over a building table! Thanks for your comment! Kim
Yeah, some of my buds on the Cox Engine Forum noticed this is some of my first videos years ago, and pointed it out to me before I noticed it. Thank you for your comment!
Yeah...a "Rite of Passage" for a lot of us. I've got nerve damage in my right index finger from a long-ago encounter with wound-up prop. Wouldn't trade any of it! Thank you for your post! Kim
I remember my late brother getting a keil kraft control line hurricane for his birthday in about 74 with a cox 049 in it. Dad started it up in the kitchen, mum wasn't very happy but I can still remember the excitement and that lovely smell.
Yeah...classically, these have caused a lot of havoc with the moms of future aviators! Receiving mine as a Christmas present, the weather at the time meant I had to wait to fly my new toy. Still managed to crank it up in the back room of our old house and...it was Wonderful!...for me. I got a tank of fuel through it before my "Testing Facility" was shut down!!!! Thank you for your post!
I too had one of these for my birthday(keel kraft fly by wire) in the 90s..... sadly I never got it to fly. I got the engine running twice. I was pretty young mind at 12 years old or so.
Yeah, we had a regular "swarm" of Q-Tee's back the 1980's, when my late cousin Bill built this one. Hopefully, it's got a bunch more flying ahead of it. Thank you for your comment!
@@craigwall9536 I still have an old Controlaire Mule transmitter around here somewhere. It is single channel rudder only and used an escapement mechanism that requires you to wind up a rubber band. That was the power for the escarpment Assy. Also have an old Ace Pulse control single channel too. That was a strange one. The rudder would pulse left to right constantly and to turn it would pulse more to the direction you wanted the aircraft to turn. That’s all we had or, our dad had in the ‘60s and ‘70s. It sure was a lot of fun.
Yeah, prop cuts were sort of a "Right of Passage" in those days. We'd fly whenever we could, including bitter cold days when we were lucky to get the little engines to run. Flying in cold weather added another dimension to prop cuts on cold fingers, along with the usual dose of alcohol in the wound. Fun Times!!!! Thank you for your comment! Kim
Thanks for sharing this. I had a couple of Cox and dozens of Testors cheapies, all control line though. Lots of fun! Your camera set up works great! Nice picture quality.
That's awesome how you mounted a camera onto the plane. I just wish you would have shown a picture of how you did that. Thanks for the video and the memories.
Yeah, Hobby Shops were so cool when I was a kid. Mine was run by a guy named "Hop Johnson", and his shop was a side room of his "Radio and Television Repair and Sales" in Metropolis, Illinois. The building is still there, now a 2nd Hand Store, and I check it out whenever I cruise through town. Wonderful memories! Thank you for your comment! Kim
Loved seeing this. Will never forget that sound. Flew these in the 90’s and got my pilot license in 2007. It’s been a long time, but I bet I’m still better at starting a flooded .049 than a vapor locked io-360!
Yeah, It's definitely a "you had to be there" situation with these little powerplants, and how cool it is to get the old things running. Take care in your flying, and thank you for your comment.
Still love these old 0.49 engines. Started with these back when i was a kid and started flying in the early 80's. Loved this hobby ever since. Thanks for sharing. Definitely brings back some great memories.
It brings back childhood memories. I think my neighbours hated me when I "test ran" the engine on a Sunday. At some point he flew away with my Graupner glider because the thermal brake didn't trigger. I couldn't afford a remote control as a child
So cool we never had this perspective when we were messing with these when we were kids in the 60-70's. Had so much fun with the control line planes.........Lil Bomb.... Lil Bee... Lil Bat
YES!!!! Riley Wooten's "Flight Line Products" out of Lubbock, Texas!!!!!!!! Those little sheet wings were the first balsa control line planes I was able to "build" on my own. They were around a buck and a half when I discovered them in 1968...about the price of a couple mowed yards or 30 GRIT newspapers sold...followed by a bottle of incredibly expensive Aero Gloss dope! My favorite was the "Lil Bomb" because it "looked more like a big combat model" with its elevator mounted on short tabs out behind the wing. It first flew with the QZ Babe Bee from my PT-19 trainer, followed by another first when I got a new Babe Bee from America's Hobby Center. I learned to fly inverted with the Lil Bomb, but could only make the better part of a single lap because I HADN'T learned how to change the engine's internal fuel pick up. Thank you for the Flash Back...it's probably gonna force me to finish the replica Lil Bomb project that's been on the back burner for a few months! Kim
Of course the first engines came from the wreckage of the Cox airplanes. My Spitfire made about 3 laps before she augered in...then I built the Lil wing that actually flew like crazy. All the kids had to have one when they saw it.
@@funone8716 Yeah Man! After all the leisurely cruising with my PT, the Lil Bomb wing was like a Ferrari on JATO! Our little group of flyers eventually went through all three designs (with some repeats!), and also introduced us to our version of "combat flying". I was a confirmed 'chicken" though, as even these cheap little models were still too expensive to smack if it could be avoided. What great times!!!!
@@Winter_Sportster Great times my friend. And we learned all sorts of things about engineering, mechanics, aerodynamics, life skills! I feel very sad for most of todays youth, they are missing out on so much fun and learning. Your video has brought back much joy and nostalgia, thank you.
@@funone8716 Yeah, we were a pack of lucky, obsessed rascals for sure. I also got some basic life primers such as: How pain from a prop strike in winter is always twice as severe as one in summer... How the fuel's alcohol helps point out those cuts.... Speaking of alcohol...how its flame is invisible on a summer day, with its first warning being a crackling sound, along with a corresponding bubbling of the plane's paint! I'm now retired, but even as back then, my first thought of the day is, "Wonder if it's gonna be windy?" Thank you for your comment! Kim
It's amazing what we can do these days! I started my flying career at the Toledo Weak Signals field in 1979. Today I fly 767's for Fedex and flew 747-200's for Kalitta Air. Back in 1979 when I was 13 the notion of being able to see what a pilot in one of my airplanes was seeing would be unbelievable!
That's fantastic! Yes, I love these little cameras, and the footage they can bring. Back in the 1980's I totaled a fairly new plane, trying to get it to pack a Super 8 movies camera into the sky. Yesterday, I launched my Draco packing 4 GoPro cameras, and blew of the ground like there nothing onboard. Sounds like you're deep into the whole flying thing. Take care and Thank You for your comment! Kim
Love this video, I've watched it 5 times across the last few years, such a great review of a wonderful hobby. In the 80s i flew the 049 piece of cake planes, like yours, the real magic is after the motor runs out. Sure a lot of fun! Thanks for sharing. Terry
Hey Terry, Thanks for your note, it IS appreciated! Yes, these things have brought a lot of fun to hobbyists over the decades, and I still enjoy messing with them. Thank you again! Kim
@@Winter_Sportster Yes sir I agree, they are a simply plane with just fun to be had.. I have looked at these plans a couple of times,, But have not bought them yet.. I guess its time to start the fun.. Please post more videos if you do anymore flying.. I watch these when I am rained in !
@@terrybolin1518 Will do, Terry! I've got three other Q-Tee flying videos on my channel (along with a bunch of other silliness) and several more antique engines to fly on the little model. Just got to get my ducks in a row to do it. I can spread myself a bit thin with the assorted projects I take on, so there is often a dry stretch where I don't publish much, then crank out several in a a couple days. Hope you can find time or a kit for the Q-Tee. With the SUPER cheap and reliable radios available today, it's REAL easy to have one of these as a stand-by plane that can be flown on a moment's notice. Runnable engines seem to always be on Ebay, and ALL of their gaskets, reeds, and parts can be purchased from Bernie at: coxengines.ca/ Q-Tee Videos: ruclips.net/video/jIZ-LRdi4m4/видео.html ruclips.net/video/qUDg10pIDyk/видео.html ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html
That’s great old school RC flying! Really good camera angle also. It’s really a shame that so many young kids, just want to play video games and go on their phones.
Now alot of ppl are flying fpv wings and mini quads. Myself included. Good STEM for the youngsters for sure. Flying fpv is like a real life video game.
Used to love messing with these little Cox engines back in the day. I'll bet if I could smell the fuel now, or the exhaust - I'd instantly go back 50+ years...
Yes....and it happens for me pretty-much every time I crank up one of these tiny castor slingers. I've manage to collect or recreate most of the models from my early teen years, and even try using some of the support equipment from back then. This often draws some head shaking by my buds as they wonder why I would enjoy the hassle inherent to this stuff. And, about the only response I can come up with is, "You just had to be there."
I had these little cox engines as a kid. I could get them to run but was too young to work out how to fly them and my dad wouldn't help me. I did finally have a buch of RC planes as an adult though. That frustration probably drove all my life choices since, like designing and building my own RC planes, building a homebuilt airplane and getting a pilots license lol.
Built a S-Tee maybe a Q-Tee in the early 80's Don't remember the wing being more than shoulder mount. Had a 051 motor with an after market carb. It ran great, and I got way more flight time with it than I got from three 40 sized planes. Going to be trying electric soon with FPV.
Hey Dave, Thank you for your comment...I figure that, someday, serious collectors may take out a contract on me! But I believe these noisy little monsters were meant to make noise and sling castor, so I try to crank them up and get them to fly. It was actually worst a few years ago, when I owned three RR-1's, and used them to power my big Bird of Time sailplane, and also videoed some of those flights...one is listed below. This power pod device was christened "The Board of Engines" by a good friend, and still gets used today. I soon after sold two of the engines to friends, and am now down to a single RR-1. Thanks again for your comment! Kim ruclips.net/video/kVzPYgkNrFE/видео.html
Ok, this is your falt. Lol. I've watched this video so many times after being hooked the first time that ive ordered a short kit and planning to build this little fellow this spring when I'm finished with my present build. I hope to use transparent covering but not 100 percent sure about the power system yet. I have a few cox motors to look at . Gonna be so great. Thanks for sharing this.
I had a QT when I was first starting out learning to fly r/c planes in 1978 or '79. I loved that airplane, it was so simple to build, cover and fly. Once I got a little more proficient I wanted a new airplane but my mom wouldn't buy me one so I invented one. I took the old 049 off and put a TeeDee .09 on it. That turned it into a whole different airplane! Needless to say I eventually crashed it, totaling the fuselage. I kept the wing and ended up putting it on a Wanderer sailplane. I use a high start to get it up in the air and for a few minutes I had a fast aircraft
@@Winter_Sportster hard to beat a sunny calm Saturday morning to wake the neighbors up with a fly by of angry bumblebees. I have a novel 061 with surprising throttle response and a 1/2 a 3 channel plane called the Wizard by ace rc they are perfect together 10 t0 15 mins flight time if I'm conservative flight times of 8 to 10 if I'm ripping around banking and yanking. Peace from iowA.😎
@@jnmwtkns YES!!! The Wizard is a great plane...one of the classics from the great days! The Norvels are also great engines with quite a bit of power. Thank You for your post!
Yes, I do love these things. My first real encounter (successfully) was in late '67, when my uncle taught me to fly a Cox PT-19 plastic trainer. We have a great forum if you might like to check it out: www.coxengineforum.com/ Thank you for your comment, Kim
@@Winter_Sportster yup my first encounter was with a cox trainer where you could adjust the engine mount to change the position of the engine. Lost in the fog of time as to the reason for this. The guy that owned the local hobby shop/ photography store use to take a bunch of kids from the neighborhood and bring a couple of trainers and teach us how to fly them.
@@356rah Yeah, the adjustable engine mount allowed "beginners" to slow the plane's speed by playing its trust line against the elevator. They were actually marked with a pointer scale between beginner to expert". Man, I thought I was the dude when my uncle moved the pointer to "Expert"!😁 I was able buy an example of my original Cox PT-19 (a Quiet Zone with muffler), and still fly it!
Thank you for your post , John! On small planes, I'm still using some small key fob cameras I've had for a while. They can be scotch-taped directly to the wing or fuse, or for a cooler angle, mounted on a "selfie stick" . I use 1" x 3/8" balsa sticks, with a square of gray foam between the camera and balsa (be sure to always put a loop of tape on both sides of the foam. I position the camera by "squishing" it into the foam and locking it in place with the tape (takes a little practice). The sticks are usually held in place with rubber bands. Finally, BEFORE you fly, you MUST make sure that the plane is back to it's original CG---laterally and longitudinally!! I've had guys actually argue that they should be able to trim the plane after launch rather than balance it. One thing for sure, you'll get some exciting video as you try to keep the plane from killing gophers! It may take a few attempts to get clear, mostly vibration free footage, which depends on the length of the stick and the engine's vibration (prop balancing is VERY important). These two videos show some of the camera installations I've tried: ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html ruclips.net/video/2jgeDMRvTJU/видео.html
I remember my older brother flying his controll line airplanes, he had Baby Bees, Golden Bees, and straight 049 engines . Always problems with batteries, lol. My Dad bought me a Cox Miss America P-51 mustang with an 049 engine, it was great!
Nice, I had a Herr engineering balsa p-51-d kit, and an .061 Russian glow plug motor..., I used to love flying that plane a lot, when I was younger...😎
One of my favorite planes was a Jr. Falcon with a Cox 049 on it. One day I forgot to switch the plane receiver on and it flew out of site. A year later I got a call from someone the it, over 6 miles away as the crow flies.
Glad you got it back! Hope it was in fairly good shape. If you got to 1:28 on the video below, you'll see Tony flying his Junior Falcon at the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In a few years ago. He controls it with one servo, set up with a torque rod to control the rudder just like the original. Thank you for your comment! ruclips.net/video/U1AQwk6tISI/видео.html
I hope that you do! There are several sources for engines and parts. I'd recommend first checking out the Cox Engine Forum for all-around info: www.coxengineforum.com/ Ex Model Engines: www.exmodelengines.com/ Willy Nillies has lots of retro-type kits that are basically intended for E power (with complete power systems), but can also be converted to Glo. willynillies.com/ If you search my channel for "S.M.A.L.L. Fly-Ins" you'll find lots of both R/C and Control Line flying.
Thanks for sharing! I had an Airtronics version from about '83-'84 withe a two channel Cox/Sanwa radio. Many Black Widows were hung on the nose. That airplane taught me things that I still use today flying full scale. I have an electric Q-Tee now and pull it out for the special evenings.
I did just receive some quarts of 25% Sig fuel that was delivered so fast it kinda shocked me, so they apparently have it stocked and ready if you want to get a few quarts.
i built one of these in the lates 90's as a young teen. I split my thumb in half with a razor trying to get a wing spar loose that I had glued in wrong. I got it all built and it only needed paint and wing covering. I had it hung on the wall in my room, and not thinking about it I let my pet cockatiel out to fly around. I came back in the room to find he chewed the whole nose off the fuselage. It sucked so bad.
Thank you Martin! I was gifted the little Q-Tee by my Uncle Wayne. It was originally built in the 1980's by my late cousin Bill, and needed a bit of work to get it back to flying status. During the rebuild, I had the idea of making easily removable engine mounts to exercise my collection of little castor-slingers. I think Cousin Bill would get a kick to know it's STILL flying after all these decades. Thank You Again for Your Comment!
You're welcome and thank you for your comment! These two videos show the typical (super simple) camera set-up I use on the Q-Tee in the first. The second shows some "fancier" installations on larger planes that can handle the weight of extra gadgetry. Thanks again for your comment. Kim ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html ruclips.net/video/2jgeDMRvTJU/видео.html
Awesome video that gave me such much of a new perspective about flying with these engines! The legacy flight of the airplane was wonderful to watch and thank you for posting:)
Thank you for your note Barry! The Q-Tee is just the right size for these hijinks, and I'm sure my Cousin Bill would get a kick out of seeing his little plane making laps around the hill with old castor slingers bolted to its snout! Got more waiting...just need to make the time...
Hey Gerald, On small planes, I'm still using some small key fob cameras I've had for a while. They can be scotch-taped directly to the wing or fuse, or for a cooler angle, mounted on a "selfie stick" . I use 1" x 3/8" balsa sticks, with a square of gray foam between the camera and balsa (be sure to always put a loop of tape on both sides of the foam. I position the camera by "squishing" it into the foam and locking it in place with the tape (takes a little practice). The sticks are usually held in place with rubber bands. Finally, BEFORE you fly, you MUST make sure that the plane is back to it's original CG---laterally and longitudinally!! I've had guys actually argue that they should be able to trim the plane after launch rather than balance it. One thing for sure, you'll get some exciting video as you try to keep the plane from killing gophers! It may take a few attempts to get clear, mostly vibration free footage, which depends on the length of the stick and the engine's vibration (prop balancing is VERY important). These two videos show some of the camera installations I've tried: ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html ruclips.net/video/2jgeDMRvTJU/видео.html Also, I HIGHLY recommend your checking out the "Cox Engine Forum"...a great bunch of guys, and ton of good info on engines AND planes. Thank You for your comment!
The sound of that Cox engine brings back many memories!
Yeah,
Memories are the driving force, at least for me, behind there great little engines.
Thank you for your comment,
Kim
sure do
Ha ha. Same here. We got Cox control line airplanes for Christmas 1976. They were the Spitfire and P-40 Warhawk. My brother had a Cox .049 P-40 Warhawk he was trying to start up in the backyard and it drove our mother crazy. The other brother sold his Spitfire to my friend and he crashed it the first time he tried it. It was destroyed except for the .049 engine. I had a Cox .020 Sky Copter I would fly in the back field of our public school when I was a kid.
@@electronixTech
The Sky Copters' are always a big event at our S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In's near Little rock, Arkansas!
ruclips.net/video/EN64Yht1jjQ/видео.html
@@Winter_Sportster I was just looking them up on Ebay and sellers want big money for them. My Dad pressured me into selling mine when I was a teenager. I should have held onto it. It was in perfect condition with the original box. Thanks for the link.
You just brought back countless happy memories. I LOVE the smell of castor oil in the air. Smells like a happy childhood.
Thank You! I DO love this stuff! I get a trip back to the days of being a kid whenever one of these little castor-slingers comes to life.
I've got some other vintage engines lined up to fly on the Q-Tee, and hopefully will have it's third video out shortly.
Thanks for your comment!
@@Winter_Sportster you just brought back some long memories between me and my father I just wish we had remote back then we lost our
@@hawk1481
Yeah, it's difficult to explain the draw of these little engines...they do a lot more than just spin a propeller.
Thank You for your c comment!
Kim
When we were flying these in the 70s we could never have imagined that, one day, you could put a camera on it and watch it on your phone.
Pure Truth James!!!
Even flying control line in the ballpark back in the 1960's, I tried to imagine what the plane was "seeing" at the top of it's wing-overs. Later, with R/C's, I wanted bad to have a camera on the plane, with not always the best results.
Now, a piece of gray foam, some magic tape, and a key fob video camera can give me footage I'd still can't believe.
It's been a great ride, and it's still going!
Thanks for your post!
Kim
@Robert Kuhnke Yeah, that'll be my next "jump" in tech. First Person View would be a cool addition.
Got to have a really light weight outfit for the small stuff I love to fly.
Ain't thlat the truth james I remember wen it was electric was the new thing an it sucked an look wat they doin today.. But I'm still an ol skool nitro power flyer today an lov my cox engines
One of my first planes was an ace high an loved it then to a sig kadet
@@Winter_Sportster you can get lightweight fpv gear for these little birds. Not too expensive either. These remind me of the pheonix Park here in Dublin during the 80's. I loved the sound of the gasser 4 stroke engines. The buzz of the Cox on little biplanes was excellent.
I had a Q-Tee with a throttled Cox .049. That brings back memories for sure. Constant winding up the starter spring and the sound of squeezing that expensive Cox fuel can. Hands inches away from spinning prop blades while being soaked with hot oil. And then that unmuffled high-pitched whine. Of all my memories of the '70, these are not ones that I miss. I was so grateful when I could finally afford an engine that had a real throttle and real muffler. Even if it was a K&B. 😁
Yep...those were the days!
Now thats Flying! I can smell the hot castor from here, back in the 50's and 60's a Hot summer day out in a farm field is where I spent my days, I miss those wonderful times, every summer as I sit here and lookout over the fields I can here sounds of an 049 and dream of my times out there....
Still love these nasty, loud little powerplants! Lots of fun!
Thank you for your post!
I had a bunch'a Cox engines as a kid. Does anyone remember the Graupner Kapitän? I build one from the original plans an odd 40 yrs ago. I liked how the plane came in, all dripping with castor. I fly paramotors now, and think I should be using Castor oil again; the smell of a careless childhood. The ratio between 'gluing everything back together' and 'hours of proper flying' has definitaly improved since then. Thanks for the video WS! Best, Rob ^^
Thank you for your comment Rob!
Totally cool man. I wanted to see how you mounted the camera.
Thank you!
I was actually shocked several years ago when I started doing this, at how willing even a small plane will be to packing cameras AS LONG AS the CG is brought back to where it was.
This has been an awful lot of fun.
Thanks again for your comment.
That's a terrific video! My first RC plane was a Q-Tee! I love how the digital camera refresh gives the weird effect to the prop but it also catches the piston in motion through the ports. Very cool! What a great property too, you can just go out back and fly!
Thank You!
Yes, the Sanwa Q-Tee has quite a fan base...we had a bunch of them in our little group back in the 1980's and 90's.
I'm very luck to have this place to fly, and try to make use of it at every opportunity.
Thank you again for your comment!
Kim
Built a Q-Tee as a teenager in the late 70’s. Loved seeing this.
I never got into RC as a lad but my chums did, the sound of these enthusiastic engines brought back good memories from the 70's when model engineers had to think and work hard at their hobby. . Thanks for posting this interesting experiment.
Thank you for your comment!
Kim
Brilliant!. I used to have a Cox Black Widow .049 back in my mid teens, iirc there used to be a muffler you could fit to them. Seeing these run brings back happy memories.
Thank You! I still love these things in all their noisy, oily crankyness! The Black Widows were/are great versions of the Cox reed valve family.
My fingers still hurt from 1974 lol. One of the best x-mas gifts ever.
I stuck a Cox 049 on a boat an launched it cross a local lake, 45 years later I still have a scar on my thumb where the prop 'bit' me!
😅
The .060 did me pretty good on two fingers
Happy memories. By Starting up the engine I almost lost my finger 😮
The little orange plastic prop on the Sky Copter was even worse. It was an .020 engine but the prop was almost razor sharp. I was only 10 years old when I was launching it and didn't know I could have made a chicken stick out of a wooden dowel with some plastic tubing over it to save my finger.
My first RC aircraft ! Probably around 1975 . I have plans and may build one for old times sake !
Man, it'd be great if you did! The nostalgia hit from a low pass by one of these little planes is worth the time spent hunkering over a building table!
Thanks for your comment!
Kim
The rolling shutter effect on something that spins that fast is pretty awesome.
Yeah, some of my buds on the Cox Engine Forum noticed this is some of my first videos years ago, and pointed it out to me before I noticed it.
Thank you for your comment!
Still have scars on my fingers from hand starting these engines in my youth. Good times.
Yeah...a "Rite of Passage" for a lot of us.
I've got nerve damage in my right index finger from a long-ago encounter with wound-up prop.
Wouldn't trade any of it!
Thank you for your post!
Kim
Me too! But in my case it was a car. The Shrike! And the prop bit me!
I too have the slightly misshaped right index finger . Can't straighten it properly due to prop induced tendon damage.
"Cox finger" syndrome!
I always used a “chicken stick”, especially when I was using anything larger than an .049.
I remember my late brother getting a keil kraft control line hurricane for his birthday in about 74 with a cox 049 in it.
Dad started it up in the kitchen, mum wasn't very happy but I can still remember the excitement and that lovely smell.
Yeah...classically, these have caused a lot of havoc with the moms of future aviators!
Receiving mine as a Christmas present, the weather at the time meant I had to wait to fly my new toy.
Still managed to crank it up in the back room of our old house and...it was Wonderful!...for me.
I got a tank of fuel through it before my "Testing Facility" was shut down!!!!
Thank you for your post!
It's like "guy perfume". Same experience!
I too had one of these for my birthday(keel kraft fly by wire) in the 90s..... sadly I never got it to fly. I got the engine running twice. I was pretty young mind at 12 years old or so.
Oh my gosh I had one of these and it was the most fun little plane I ever built!
That was soooo cool. Only a two channel radio. Rudder and elevator. Just like the old days.
Thank You!!!!
Uh, NO. 2 chl was for rich kids. It was FF or Rudder Only for most of us. And we built our own radios and escapements. Later, pulse proportipnal RO.
Yeah, we had a regular "swarm" of Q-Tee's back the 1980's, when my late cousin Bill built this one. Hopefully, it's got a bunch more flying ahead of it.
Thank you for your comment!
@@craigwall9536 I still have an old Controlaire Mule transmitter around here somewhere. It is single channel rudder only and used an escapement mechanism that requires you to wind up a rubber band. That was the power for the escarpment Assy.
Also have an old Ace Pulse control single channel too. That was a strange one. The rudder would pulse left to right constantly and to turn it would pulse more to the direction you wanted the aircraft to turn. That’s all we had or, our dad had in the ‘60s and ‘70s. It sure was a lot of fun.
Pretty neat. I never knew they made those with 2 channel remote.
That airframe is happy to carry a wide range in capacity. Great little engines. I received many a bloodied finger from my Cox engines.
Yeah, prop cuts were sort of a "Right of Passage" in those days. We'd fly whenever we could, including bitter cold days when we were lucky to get the little engines to run.
Flying in cold weather added another dimension to prop cuts on cold fingers, along with the usual dose of alcohol in the wound.
Fun Times!!!!
Thank you for your comment!
Kim
I have one, it flew once in Houston, great little plane :-) Thanks for posting this! It brought back memories.
Thank you for your comment!
Kim
I always love those 049 motors back in the seventies growing up as a kid great memories... It sounds like a pissed off bumblebee..
Yeah Man,
These things are so great. I get a flash-back to being a 13 year-old whenever I mess with them.
Thank you for your comment!
Oh man that sound ! The sounds of childhood fun. Thanks from Australia
Brilliant...now that's taken me back many years
Yeah man...Great Memories, coupled with bunches of Fun in the Present!
Thanks for sharing this. I had a couple of Cox and dozens of Testors cheapies, all control line though. Lots of fun! Your camera set up works great! Nice picture quality.
Thank You!
That is just way too cool! Thanks for sharing this
Thank you for your comment!
That's awesome how you mounted a camera onto the plane. I just wish you would have shown a picture of how you did that. Thanks for the video and the memories.
Thank you for your comment! Yeah, in the next series, I'll start the videos with a sweep around the Q-Tee, showing its "Selfie Sticks" and cameras.
Thanks !! Like everybody said brings back a lot of memories.
Thank You!!!
Thank you for showing those little beauties flying high so vibrantly
Thank you for your comment,
Kim
This was soo cool! Reminds me of going to the local hobby shop as a kid in the 80s and 90s
Yeah, Hobby Shops were so cool when I was a kid. Mine was run by a guy named "Hop Johnson", and his shop was a side room of his "Radio and Television Repair and Sales" in Metropolis, Illinois.
The building is still there, now a 2nd Hand Store, and I check it out whenever I cruise through town.
Wonderful memories!
Thank you for your comment!
Kim
Great views! Very cool! Those little engines can really get going!
Thank you!
Yeah, they're a lot of fun.
Ahh yesss sounds of the 70’s for me … 😊I still have a tackle box full of these engines !
Loved seeing this. Will never forget that sound. Flew these in the 90’s and got my pilot license in 2007. It’s been a long time, but I bet I’m still better at starting a flooded .049 than a vapor locked io-360!
Yeah,
It's definitely a "you had to be there" situation with these little powerplants, and how cool it is to get the old things running.
Take care in your flying, and thank you for your comment.
I remember when the local hardware store sold the Cox .049 for $4.99 back in the early 60's.
Now they are averaging $175 for the same .049 on ebay.
Still love these old 0.49 engines. Started with these back when i was a kid and started flying in the early 80's. Loved this hobby ever since. Thanks for sharing. Definitely brings back some great memories.
Fantastic video! One of the best I’ve seen in years!
Thank You!
It brings back childhood memories. I think my neighbours hated me when I "test ran" the engine on a Sunday.
At some point he flew away with my Graupner glider because the thermal brake didn't trigger. I couldn't afford a remote control as a child
What a beautiful place you have there.perfect for flying Sir.
Thank You ! Yes, I'm very lucky to be able to live here!
Briliant work, thanks for sharing this.
So cool we never had this perspective when we were messing with these when we were kids in the 60-70's. Had so much fun with the control line planes.........Lil Bomb.... Lil Bee... Lil Bat
YES!!!! Riley Wooten's "Flight Line Products" out of Lubbock, Texas!!!!!!!!
Those little sheet wings were the first balsa control line planes I was able to "build" on my own. They were around a buck and a half when I discovered them in 1968...about the price of a couple mowed yards or 30 GRIT newspapers sold...followed by a bottle of incredibly expensive Aero Gloss dope!
My favorite was the "Lil Bomb" because it "looked more like a big combat model" with its elevator mounted on short tabs out behind the wing. It first flew with the QZ Babe Bee from my PT-19 trainer, followed by another first when I got a new Babe Bee from America's Hobby Center.
I learned to fly inverted with the Lil Bomb, but could only make the better part of a single lap because I HADN'T learned how to change the engine's internal fuel pick up.
Thank you for the Flash Back...it's probably gonna force me to finish the replica Lil Bomb project that's been on the back burner for a few months!
Kim
Of course the first engines came from the wreckage of the Cox airplanes. My Spitfire made about 3 laps before she augered in...then I built the Lil wing that actually flew like crazy. All the kids had to have one when they saw it.
@@funone8716
Yeah Man! After all the leisurely cruising with my PT, the Lil Bomb wing was like a Ferrari on JATO!
Our little group of flyers eventually went through all three designs (with some repeats!), and also introduced us to our version of "combat flying".
I was a confirmed 'chicken" though, as even these cheap little models were still too expensive to smack if it could be avoided.
What great times!!!!
@@Winter_Sportster Great times my friend. And we learned all sorts of things about engineering, mechanics, aerodynamics, life skills! I feel very sad for most of todays youth, they are missing out on so much fun and learning. Your video has brought back much joy and nostalgia, thank you.
@@funone8716
Yeah, we were a pack of lucky, obsessed rascals for sure. I also got some basic life primers such as:
How pain from a prop strike in winter is always twice as severe as one in summer...
How the fuel's alcohol helps point out those cuts....
Speaking of alcohol...how its flame is invisible on a summer day, with its first warning being a crackling sound, along with a corresponding bubbling of the plane's paint!
I'm now retired, but even as back then, my first thought of the day is, "Wonder if it's gonna be windy?"
Thank you for your comment!
Kim
It's amazing what we can do these days! I started my flying career at the Toledo Weak Signals field in 1979. Today I fly 767's for Fedex and flew 747-200's for Kalitta Air. Back in 1979 when I was 13 the notion of being able to see what a pilot in one of my airplanes was seeing would be unbelievable!
That's fantastic!
Yes, I love these little cameras, and the footage they can bring.
Back in the 1980's I totaled a fairly new plane, trying to get it to pack a Super 8 movies camera into the sky.
Yesterday, I launched my Draco packing 4 GoPro cameras, and blew of the ground like there nothing onboard.
Sounds like you're deep into the whole flying thing. Take care and Thank You for your comment!
Kim
G'day to you,when I was a Kid back in the UK, my Dad bought me a Line Controlled Cox Helldiver, brought back memories!
Love the castor dripping off the O&R as you come in on final!! Great videos Kim!!!
Fantastic! Great video! THANK YOU!
Thank You Charlie!
Love this video, I've watched it 5 times across the last few years, such a great review of a wonderful hobby. In the 80s i flew the 049 piece of cake planes, like yours, the real magic is after the motor runs out. Sure a lot of fun! Thanks for sharing. Terry
Hey Terry,
Thanks for your note, it IS appreciated! Yes, these things have brought a lot of fun to hobbyists over the decades, and I still enjoy messing with them.
Thank you again!
Kim
@@Winter_Sportster Yes sir I agree, they are a simply plane with just fun to be had.. I have looked at these plans a couple of times,, But have not bought them yet.. I guess its time to start the fun.. Please post more videos if you do anymore flying.. I watch these when I am rained in !
@@terrybolin1518
Will do, Terry! I've got three other Q-Tee flying videos on my channel (along with a bunch of other silliness) and several more antique engines to fly on the little model. Just got to get my ducks in a row to do it.
I can spread myself a bit thin with the assorted projects I take on, so there is often a dry stretch where I don't publish much, then crank out several in a a couple days.
Hope you can find time or a kit for the Q-Tee. With the SUPER cheap and reliable radios available today, it's REAL easy to have one of these as a stand-by plane that can be flown on a moment's notice.
Runnable engines seem to always be on Ebay, and ALL of their gaskets, reeds, and parts can be purchased from Bernie at:
coxengines.ca/
Q-Tee Videos:
ruclips.net/video/jIZ-LRdi4m4/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/qUDg10pIDyk/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html
Oh, I so loved this! Thank you! ❤
Thank you for your comment!
Does anyone else remember the Cox flying demonstrations at Disneyland??? You would have to be in your 70s like me.
That HAD to be a Great Time. I only learned about it years later by way of engine groups on Yahoo.
Just action and no mouth full of blather and banter. Well done sir!
Thank You!!!!
That’s great old school RC flying! Really good camera angle also. It’s really a shame that so many young kids, just want to play video games and go on their phones.
If they only knew what they were missing out on... 😔
Now alot of ppl are flying fpv wings and mini quads. Myself included. Good STEM for the youngsters for sure. Flying fpv is like a real life video game.
Also a shame old people complained about the noise
Not my kid, he's NUTS about r/c!!
Lol do you know how expensive these are?
Wow, nice setup you have and nice amount of land to play with. Thanks for sharing!
Thank you, Vince.
Yes, I'm very lucky to be able to fly my planes here.
Thank you for your comment,
Kim
Easy Capt. Vic!.. watch that mixture!..watch that mixture!!
Earl!! come quickly!
Used to love messing with these little Cox engines back in the day.
I'll bet if I could smell the fuel now, or the exhaust - I'd instantly go back 50+ years...
Yes....and it happens for me pretty-much every time I crank up one of these tiny castor slingers.
I've manage to collect or recreate most of the models from my early teen years, and even try using some of the support equipment from back then.
This often draws some head shaking by my buds as they wonder why I would enjoy the hassle inherent to this stuff. And, about the only response I can come up with is, "You just had to be there."
I had these little cox engines as a kid. I could get them to run but was too young to work out how to fly them and my dad wouldn't help me. I did finally have a buch of RC planes as an adult though. That frustration probably drove all my life choices since, like designing and building my own RC planes, building a homebuilt airplane and getting a pilots license lol.
Sounds like a pretty dynamic life!
Thank You for your comment!
Kim
Built a S-Tee maybe a
Q-Tee in the early 80's
Don't remember the wing being more than shoulder mount.
Had a 051 motor with an after market carb.
It ran great, and I got way more flight time with it than I got from three 40 sized planes.
Going to be trying electric soon with FPV.
Sounds great. Good luck with your project and thank you for your comment!
That was so cool... awesome! My brother had a Cox airplane back in the 60's. Good memories!
Hermoso...todavía tengo el Cox dorado que compré a los 13 años en 1977 . Saludos ! 🇦🇷
my goodness, a real priceless RR-1 and getting flown as well! fantastic, that takes a courage!
Hey Dave,
Thank you for your comment...I figure that, someday, serious collectors may take out a contract on me!
But I believe these noisy little monsters were meant to make noise and sling castor, so I try to crank them up and get them to fly.
It was actually worst a few years ago, when I owned three RR-1's, and used them to power my big Bird of Time sailplane, and also videoed some of those flights...one is listed below.
This power pod device was christened "The Board of Engines" by a good friend, and still gets used today. I soon after sold two of the engines to friends, and am now down to a single RR-1.
Thanks again for your comment!
Kim
ruclips.net/video/kVzPYgkNrFE/видео.html
Ok, this is your falt. Lol. I've watched this video so many times after being hooked the first time that ive ordered a short kit and planning to build this little fellow this spring when I'm finished with my present build. I hope to use transparent covering but not 100 percent sure about the power system yet. I have a few cox motors to look at . Gonna be so great. Thanks for sharing this.
AWRIGHT!!!!!
My Evil Plan to spread "Q-Teeism" is right on track!!!!!
Good luck with your Q-Tee project----please post some videos!!!!!
I had a QT when I was first starting out learning to fly r/c planes in 1978 or '79. I loved that airplane, it was so simple to build, cover and fly. Once I got a little more proficient I wanted a new airplane but my mom wouldn't buy me one so I invented one. I took the old 049 off and put a TeeDee .09 on it. That turned it into a whole different airplane! Needless to say I eventually crashed it, totaling the fuselage. I kept the wing and ended up putting it on a Wanderer sailplane. I use a high start to get it up in the air and for a few minutes I had a fast aircraft
Wow...this is so cool! This made my day. Tiny cameras weren't available back when these RC models were first out. Thanks for posting!
My grandfather gave me an old cox sweet Cindy 049 and the control line brought a lot of memories back to him.
Yeah, GOT to love the old planes! Thank you for your post.
It's loud, it smells, it throws oil all over the place.
Perfect.
Yeah Man!!!!!
One of my favorite sounds in the world
@@jnmwtkns Mine too!!!!!!!!!!
@@Winter_Sportster hard to beat a sunny calm Saturday morning to wake the neighbors up with a fly by of angry bumblebees.
I have a novel 061 with surprising throttle response and a 1/2 a 3 channel plane called the Wizard by ace rc they are perfect together 10 t0 15 mins flight time if I'm conservative flight times of 8 to 10 if I'm ripping around banking and yanking.
Peace from iowA.😎
@@jnmwtkns YES!!!
The Wizard is a great plane...one of the classics from the great days!
The Norvels are also great engines with quite a bit of power.
Thank You for your post!
I would love to see your camera and mount for this great video. That sound brings back so many memories. Thanks
Thank You!
Simplicity at it's best, thank you for posting this nostalgic part of the hobby!
Thank You!!!!
Haven’t heard that sound in years. First time flying a plane with one of those engines was back in 1956 when I was 10 years old.
Yes, I do love these things. My first real encounter (successfully) was in late '67, when my uncle taught me to fly a Cox PT-19 plastic trainer.
We have a great forum if you might like to check it out:
www.coxengineforum.com/
Thank you for your comment,
Kim
@@Winter_Sportster yup my first encounter was with a cox trainer where you could adjust the engine mount to change the position of the engine. Lost in the fog of time as to the reason for this. The guy that owned the local hobby shop/ photography store use to take a bunch of kids from the neighborhood and bring a couple of trainers and teach us how to fly them.
@@356rah
Yeah, the adjustable engine mount allowed "beginners" to slow the plane's speed by playing its trust line against the elevator. They were actually marked with a pointer scale between beginner to expert". Man, I thought I was the dude when my uncle moved the pointer to "Expert"!😁
I was able buy an example of my original Cox PT-19 (a Quiet Zone with muffler), and still fly it!
Excellent video 👍 bring back memories. Nice camera views!
Thank you for your post , John!
On small planes, I'm still using some small key fob cameras I've had for a while. They can be scotch-taped directly to the wing or fuse, or for a cooler angle, mounted on a "selfie stick" . I use 1" x 3/8" balsa sticks, with a square of gray foam between the camera and balsa (be sure to always put a loop of tape on both sides of the foam. I position the camera by "squishing" it into the foam and locking it in place with the tape (takes a little practice).
The sticks are usually held in place with rubber bands.
Finally, BEFORE you fly, you MUST make sure that the plane is back to it's original CG---laterally and longitudinally!! I've had guys actually argue that they should be able to trim the plane after launch rather than balance it. One thing for sure, you'll get some exciting video as you try to keep the plane from killing gophers!
It may take a few attempts to get clear, mostly vibration free footage, which depends on the length of the stick and the engine's vibration (prop balancing is VERY important).
These two videos show some of the camera installations I've tried:
ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/2jgeDMRvTJU/видео.html
I remember my older brother flying his controll line airplanes, he had Baby Bees, Golden Bees, and straight 049 engines . Always problems with batteries, lol. My Dad bought me a Cox Miss America P-51 mustang with an 049 engine, it was great!
We all are lucky to have those memories!
Thank you for your post!
Never had the Miss America but really lusted for one. I flew the Ringmaster family. Really good times. Thanks for writing
Brings back wonderful memories!
Nice, I had a Herr engineering balsa p-51-d kit, and an .061 Russian glow plug motor..., I used to love flying that plane a lot, when I was younger...😎
Aw, man! This flight actually made a rolling landing on grass!
Very interesting fly and model! Very good!
Thank You Michele!!!!!!!
What entertaining content!! Well done and thank you for posting.
Love it! I can smell the castor oil!
Funny how old memories can bring back a smell
One of my favorite planes was a Jr. Falcon with a Cox 049 on it. One day I forgot to switch the plane receiver on and it flew out of site. A year later I got a call from someone the it, over 6 miles away as the crow flies.
Glad you got it back! Hope it was in fairly good shape.
If you got to 1:28 on the video below, you'll see Tony flying his Junior Falcon at the S.M.A.L.L. Fly-In a few years ago.
He controls it with one servo, set up with a torque rod to control the rudder just like the original.
Thank you for your comment!
ruclips.net/video/U1AQwk6tISI/видео.html
Awesome footage, great experience.
I did line control planes and cars as a kid. Never got into rc. I’m 70 now and that vintage rc stuff looks fun. I may have to get into it
I hope that you do! There are several sources for engines and parts.
I'd recommend first checking out the Cox Engine Forum for all-around info:
www.coxengineforum.com/
Ex Model Engines:
www.exmodelengines.com/
Willy Nillies has lots of retro-type kits that are basically intended for E power (with complete power systems), but can also be converted to Glo.
willynillies.com/
If you search my channel for "S.M.A.L.L. Fly-Ins" you'll find lots of both R/C and Control Line flying.
Amazing camera plane. Good job
Thank You!!!!
Hi, great video, please show us the little camera you were using to get these shots. TIA
I loved flying the little .049's. Easy motor to rebuild. Great hobby!
no rings ey!!! 😝😝
Cheap to replace too 😍
Thanks for sharing! I had an Airtronics version from about '83-'84 withe a two channel Cox/Sanwa radio. Many Black Widows were hung on the nose. That airplane taught me things that I still use today flying full scale. I have an electric Q-Tee now and pull it out for the special evenings.
Yes, with our little group back in the 1980's, Black Widows were certainly in the top picks for these little planes.
Thank you!
I had a Cox black widow, great engine, some gas engineer working on my house stole it.
Fantastic! I have a crate of small engines I inherited from my dad. This inspired me to get busy and try them out. The vids are awesome!
I did just receive some quarts of 25% Sig fuel that was delivered so fast it kinda shocked me, so they apparently have it stocked and ready if you want to get a few quarts.
Absolutely beautiful
Thank You !!!!
Cool video! Thank you for posting that!
Outstanding! All very cool engines.
"Boys and Their Toys"!!!!!
i built one of these in the lates 90's as a young teen. I split my thumb in half with a razor trying to get a wing spar loose that I had glued in wrong. I got it all built and it only needed paint and wing covering. I had it hung on the wall in my room, and not thinking about it I let my pet cockatiel out to fly around. I came back in the room to find he chewed the whole nose off the fuselage. It sucked so bad.
Love this! Beautiful plane & great to see these old engines still kickin'. Thanks for sharing.
Really a neat thing to do. Power her with all those different engines. Loved the RR1, I could almost smell the castor burning. Great job.
Thank you Martin!
I was gifted the little Q-Tee by my Uncle Wayne. It was originally built in the 1980's by my late cousin Bill, and needed a bit of work to get it back to flying status.
During the rebuild, I had the idea of making easily removable engine mounts to exercise my collection of little castor-slingers.
I think Cousin Bill would get a kick to know it's STILL flying after all these decades.
Thank You Again for Your Comment!
Man brings back memories flying control planes with Cox 049s.
Yeah, I'm VERY lucky to have been given the chance to have these memories.
Wow, I had this plane about 45 years ago
Well, this poor old dog was flying when yours was flying!!!
@@Winter_Sportster wow, sometimes youtube is a time machine
Beautiful flyer!! Very enjoyable upload. Thank you so much!! Peter A :) :) :)
THANK YOU!!!!!!!!!!
Haven't heard a little Cox .049 in years and the camera on the Q-Tee was great.
Thank You!!!!
Thanks so much for posting this. I played with these in the 50's and 60's and still have them. I would love to see your camera and mount, very nice.
You're welcome and thank you for your comment!
These two videos show the typical (super simple) camera set-up I use on the Q-Tee in the first.
The second shows some "fancier" installations on larger planes that can handle the weight of extra gadgetry.
Thanks again for your comment.
Kim
ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/2jgeDMRvTJU/видео.html
Great Video...awesome camera view?
Good old Times.....thanks...
Holm und Rippenbruch...🤪😃from germany✌
That sound really brings back good memories.
That is a fascinating view from that camera angle!
Thank You!!
Love these little cameras!
Marvellous machines..
Awesome video that gave me such much of a new perspective about flying with these engines! The legacy flight of the airplane was wonderful to watch and thank you for posting:)
Thank you for your note Barry!
The Q-Tee is just the right size for these hijinks, and I'm sure my Cousin Bill would get a kick out of seeing his little plane making laps around the hill with old castor slingers bolted to its snout!
Got more waiting...just need to make the time...
I didn’t see what camera you used . I am 62 and want to fly again you brought back some awesome memories
Hey Gerald,
On small planes, I'm still using some small key fob cameras I've had for a while. They can be scotch-taped directly to the wing or fuse, or for a cooler angle, mounted on a "selfie stick" . I use 1" x 3/8" balsa sticks, with a square of gray foam between the camera and balsa (be sure to always put a loop of tape on both sides of the foam. I position the camera by "squishing" it into the foam and locking it in place with the tape (takes a little practice).
The sticks are usually held in place with rubber bands.
Finally, BEFORE you fly, you MUST make sure that the plane is back to it's original CG---laterally and longitudinally!! I've had guys actually argue that they should be able to trim the plane after launch rather than balance it. One thing for sure, you'll get some exciting video as you try to keep the plane from killing gophers!
It may take a few attempts to get clear, mostly vibration free footage, which depends on the length of the stick and the engine's vibration (prop balancing is VERY important).
These two videos show some of the camera installations I've tried:
ruclips.net/video/quC_bRTre1o/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/2jgeDMRvTJU/видео.html
Also, I HIGHLY recommend your checking out the "Cox Engine Forum"...a great bunch of guys, and ton of good info on engines AND planes.
Thank You for your comment!