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And there are many more which say the same thing.
ThatRoboGuy wrote:I gave up on single bladed rotors. We spent many weeks until we collectively dismissed it as a deterrent, meant to slow people down from making their helicopters.
Just a quick note, I meant to say I haven't been busy with optimizing single-bladed Science Olympiad helicopters. I've been absurdly busy in my other lives, otherwise this would be a very fun project with a high priority.chalker7 wrote:And nope, Jeff, I have not been busy and can't offer any advice.
Some clarifications:jander14indoor wrote:Well I hope EVERYBODY'S helicopter is home made. If you mean scratchbuilt vs kit, more power to you.
Need more information to answer accurately, but here's some questions on what we'd need and generic recommendations that depend on your answers..
What kind of rubber are you using, what's the thickness?
What's the weight of your helicopter without rubber? If its not very close to 3 gm you might gain time faster there than messing with the rubber.
How close to breaking is your motor at 750 turns? This sounds low unless its a very fat motor. Hm, though, 23 cm, 9 inch loop, yeah sounds kind of short. I know students worry about breaking motors, but if you aren't breaking them occasionally you are flying on less than a full tank of gas. Turns are fuel! If you are so short you are worried about it try to get more rubber. Hard. It takes lots of experimentaiton
Assuming you are doing all the above right (min weight, max turns), how many turns does your helicopter have when it lands?
If lots of turns left on landing, you can shorten the motor slowly and gain some time because you carry less weight.
If few turns left on landing (if you have a 3.0gm heli I'm guessing not that motor sounds short), you can safely lengthen the motor. I was going to say go larger in small steps, but if you are limited on rubber, you might want to jump a long ways. That way if you have too much you can shorten.
Hope that helps,
Jeff Anderson
Livonia, MI
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