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Flying – E-flite Ultimate 3D Profile ARF User Manual

Page 35

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35

Flying

Now that the airplane is set up correctly, it is time

to fine-tune the setup in the air. Start by flying the

airplane on low rates. If you have triple rates, set the

mid-rate in between the high and low rates. Once

you get comfortable with the airplane and tune the

exponential setting, you will be able to fly it all the

time on the 3D rates.
One will find the propeller effects (such as torque,

spiral slipstream, P-factor, gyroscopic procession and

prop normal force) often dominate the stability and

control of the smaller indoor airplanes. Consequently,

the use of smaller diameter/lower-pitch propellers

tends to reduce the adverse effects on the airplane’s

longitudinal and directional stability. The smaller

diameter will reduce static thrust, however lower pitch

increases static thrust. With this in mind, we quickly

see there is a compromise between the precision

and 3D propeller selection. As with most airplanes,

if you use the rudder to generate large yaw rate

you’ll have to counter the adverse rolling moment

with some opposite aileron. With a little practice, this

will become very natural and you can use the rudder

literally like the steering wheel of a car.

Rolling maneuvers are done with relative ease from

normal aileron rolls to slow rolls, point rolls, rolling

circles and rolling loops. Knife-edge flight is also

possible. The Tribute and Ultimate are especially

good at the 3D type maneuvers such as Torque

Rolls, Elevators / Harriers, and High-Alpha Rolls.

While the airplanes are quite capable of all these

maneuvers, the ultimate goal is to make the pilot

capable of performing them as well. We do not

know of any airplane design that will Torque Roll /

Hover without constant help from the pilot. If such an

airplane existed, the mystique of the maneuver would

disappear simply because the pilot skill required

to perform the maneuver would have been taken

away…in other words the difficulty actually makes it

worth learning.
How does one go about learning how to torque roll?

The best way is to practice on a simulator until you

can literally do the maneuver without needing to

think about the inputs. The skill involved is nothing

more than a muscle memory response to what you

see the airplane doing.

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While this is not standard or recommended practice

on a larger airplane because of the potential of

flutter, this type of setup works quite well on the

aerobatic indoor electric models.
Large amounts of throw tend to make the airplane

feel very sensitive around neutral. Because of this,

it is highly recommended that you use a radio with

dual rates that is capable of exponential throws. A

good way to correctly set the amount of exponential

for the 3D-rate is to find a low-rate setting that feels

comfortable in normal flight. Once you’ve done this

for the aileron, elevator, and rudder, dial in enough

exponential to make the low-rate setting and 3D-rate

setting feel the same for the first 1/3 of the stick

travel. If you have a computer radio that displays

the graph of stick position vs. servo output, you

can easily set the correct amount of exponential by

making the slopes of these graphs identical for the

first 1/3 of stick movement.

Slope of the line is the same for the first 1/3 of the stick travel

Stick travel

3D Rate

Low Rate

Servo Output

1/3 of total

stick travel

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