Tim, your F1D is flying great. Good luck at the World Chamnps in August.
Yes, U.S. fliers are extremely fortunate to have several very accessible world-class sites:
- Lakehurst
- Johnson City
- Kibbie
- Tustin (not available at this moment)
As much as we hope otherwise, each will not be around forever.
If you have an opportunity to go to one of these venues, "Just Go."
--- In Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com, "thb248" <tim.haywardbrown@...> wrote:
>
> You guys are so lucky! Thank you Kang and all for the commentary - it is great reading and good watching the videos.
> I just reflect sometimes on the fact that no one built an airship in the 30s that was good enough to fly to Australia. You guys with your 150'+ airdocks, 200' salt mines...
>
> Maybe indoor venues should be more like golf courses... with trees and bunkers and other hazards to make it a bit of a challenge... for example - how about the chandelier in the first part of this video... http://youtu.be/3mCZ9XvT71M
> :-)
> cheers
> Tim
>
> --- In Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com, "Yuan Kang Lee" <ykleetx@> wrote:
> >
> > Defined by the speaker cluster to the east and the scoreboard to the west, the flyable airspace is something like 124' wide by 250 long'. The beams are 106' high in the middle and probably 100' high at the 250' boundary. In essence, the open air space is 124' x 250' x 100' high. If you fly in this space, you are free from obstacles. This is a lot of airspace.
> >
> > -Kang
> >
>
Received on Fri Jun 08 2012 - 09:58:10 CEST