There were 6 kids in the Dayton Free Flight workshop yesterday.
Everything went very well. Kids and parents had fun. I had fun too! I’m really enjoying this project since they fly nicely and is so easy to make. It’s easy to direct others to make as well.
I made a Dayton just before the workshop so I could show the kids what they were making and demo it while they were working. I find this is necessary in a workshop environment if the kids are new at it.
The revision 5 Dayton performed extremely well. By the way, that’s laser revision 5. There were four or five non laser prototypes before I started doing batches on the laser.
Here are a few points on the technical side:
- My favorite thing was the flexibility of the flying surfaces. The planes were able to tolerate a fair amount of bumping and rough handling. The wing and tail surfaces would just wobble and bounce around and the integrity of the structure stayed intact. I think I found a sweet spot for the right amount of flex and rigidity.
- The round corners of the winglets and tailplanes didn’t catch on things so I believe that contributed to survival of the planes with children.
- Some of the kids forgot to cap the toothpick (rear motor hangar). I noticed it but made a conscious decision to not correct it and see what happened. No problems came forward despite short glue dry time and high humidity. So I may drop the step. Even without the cap it is considerably stronger than the Squirrel since it is supported on three sides (vs. two sides for the Squirrel).
- I forgot to add the motor stick triplers where the tape holds the wing. Again I noticed this later and decided to proceed without it. No problems came forward so I will look at dropping this. The challenge here is that a narrower motor stick means a narrower wing mount. So this needs to be studied.
- In this revision the wing is a little further back. I think it could be even further back and will try that. In this position a slight amount of down elevator is required and it’s very floaty and slow.
- This batch of Daytons was made from heavier wood. That seemed to be okay as far as wing loading.
- The planes were able to rise of ground (ROG).
- Out of the box they stall a bit and recover instantaneously. I rather like this as the default behavior. Some of the kids put the wing further back. This works well if the elevator is adjusted.