Re: Re: Larry Coslick Hobby Shop EZB Contest

From: <colemancoat_at_aol.com>
Date: Tue, 1 May 2012 22:29:21 -0400 (EDT)

I just built your BS-6 Kang. It came out at .6 ish. Not terribly bad for my first ezb. I dint even touch my indoor wood save for the prop blades.
 



-----Original Message-----
From: Yuan Kang Lee <ykleetx_at_gmail.com>
To: Indoor_Construction <Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com>
Sent: Tue, May 1, 2012 2:42 pm
Subject: [Indoor_Construction] Re: Larry Coslick Hobby Shop EZB Contest


  
    
                  
Rick,

Someone who's fairly new can start with a 1.2g F1L (EZB) or perhaps a smaller, Hobby Shopper sized EZB of about .9 g. Don't be scaring people off talking about 0.3g EZB's.

A 0.6g EZB is not "easy" but is easier than a sub-0.5g one. I hope the interest is there.

-Kang

--- In Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com, themaxout_at_... wrote:
>
> Kang...now you are singing a righteous tune...I have had folks ask about
> EZB and when they hear .3 or even .5 grams they just walk away...especially
> if they are not "serious" indoor types, but others who do now or would like
> to fly indoor.
>
> Lessee...EZB _at_ 1 gram (?), F1L _at_ .7 gram, and Unlim B ? ...logical
> progression. I do appreciate those like yourself who do build the .3 gram models
> and I aspire to that (maybe?), but getting more folks out is a great idea
> too. strength in attendance numbers.
>
> A6 is popular with folks too as I hear from them it's easier than trying
> to build an "EZ"B.
>
> Rick Pangell
> Editor of "The Max-Out" Newsletter of
> The Magnificent Mountain Men FF Club of Colorado
>
>
> In a message dated 5/1/2012 2:23:46 P.M. Mountain Daylight Time,
> ykleetx_at_... writes:
>
> The 0.6g rule is to make the contest more competitive, open up the contest
> to more potential fliers, and to see how the 0.6g rule would play out in
> practice.
>


    
             

  
 
Received on Tue May 01 2012 - 19:29:30 CEST

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