Matthew
Try a motor the same weight but 5% longer. 10% would have been better if you had no turns left on landing.
You will get more turns, have to back off less to get the same height (a bit more launch torque) and have a slower climb. Good luck and please let us know how you get on.
Bob
----- Original Message -----
From: matthew taudevin
To: Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com
Sent: Sunday, January 04, 2009 12:07 PM
Subject: Re: [Indoor_Construction] optimizing a ministick
Hi all, someone wanted to know how many turns I had left after I had wound my motor to 1600 turns and then backed it off to 1280. When the model landed it had 117 turns left on it. Does this help???
regards
Matthew
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
From: Neil Dennis <wombatt_at_gmail.com>
To: Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com
Sent: Monday, 22 December, 2008 7:07:36 AM
Subject: [Indoor_Construction] optimizing a ministick
For a "front end" as you have lots of wire, look at what is called a
"pigtail", simple to bend and controls both ends of the prop shaft for
thrust adjustments.
wombat
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