Don Weigt
There is always pressure from the indoor community for participants to
progress to more difficult events and I do understand why this is. But the
most important thing is to BE a participant. What kind of models you fly
should be something that is best decided by YOU. You can have fun at any
level of indoor flying. That is what is most important.
Bill Gowen
(the perennial beginner)
On Sun, Jan 31, 2016 at 9:15 AM, dweigt47_at_gmail.com [Indoor_Construction] <
Indoor_Construction_at_yahoogroups.com> wrote:
>
>
> As a newbie and lurker on this list, I don't understand what is being
> proposed, to form and offer an opinion. But since I'm not really
> competition oriented, except versus gravity and the laws of physics, that
> probably doesn't matter!
>
> I simply want to enjoy flying light, slow airplanes, ones that aren't
> beyond my building skills. The MASH-UP is about my limit. I just don't know
> how anybody works with thinner materials than that. I've crushed parts
> before I've felt any resistance to know I'm holding them!
>
> Maybe with mentoring about methods I haven't learned or thought of, I
> could build lighter and longer flying models. But, I am not going to bang
> my head on the wall until it's bloody, trying to build something far beyond
> my skills.
>
> Don Weigt
> Madison, WI
>
>
Received on Sun Jan 31 2016 - 11:32:57 CET
This archive was generated by Yannick on Sat Dec 14 2019 - 19:13:48 CET