Quote: jeaton01 Hi, Chad. If you get stuck, e-mail me. I sort of remember how Jim did it as we talked about it at the time. I think it could be done more simply with modern radios, and perhaps a little more scale in the way the flaps worked, as they were coupled to the throttle on the full scale. Not mechanically, but because the full throttle prop wash blew them up from the full down position on take-off. There was a WW II training film Jim had that explained it all.
Jim and I each have Don Lien F6F's to build, I swear I'm gonna do that one right after the Dart. It's been sitting around here, engine, gear and all for nearly 20 years.
Thanks for the kind offer John. I hope you mean it because I just might take you up on it when I get started! I am aware of the Hellcat's (and Wildcat's) spring loaded flaps but I probably won't be attempting to emulate that particular feature. Although it could be a nice feature in a go-around situation I suppose. I just sold off a Don Lien Hellcat kit as I decided to go slightly bigger and, as a dyed in the wool balsa basher, design my own built up airframe. I was fortunate enough to see Jim's prototype at Top Gun in 1990 and it remains the best Hellcat model I've seen to date.
__________________ Chad Veich
www.cwvmodels.com
Scale Model Design & Construction
If it ain't broke, go fly it!
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