Tuesday, 10 September 2013

First Flight with 2200mAh Battery

...and the carbon prop

The weather this morning had calmed sufficiently to venture out with the Walrus for a flight. Not just any flight, the first flight with the 2200mAh battery installed in the nose.

The Walrus assembly instructions do not provide any particular clues regarding location of the battery. In an attempt to resolve the packaging issues, I had fabricated a battery tray directly behind the motor. This layout is similar to the Phoenix 2000 and worked well with the 1800mAh battery I'd been using.



Lifting the Walrus out of the car I could really feel the extra thirty grams of the larger battery, located well in front of the wings. However I held my resolve not to change-out the new battery for the smaller unit sitting in the car, and headed out. There was a moderate breeze blowing which would help the Walrus to get flying quicker, which was good.

All connected, I set the throttle generously and heaved the Walrus up. I was prepared for various scenarios, being prepared to hit the flaps if necessary to get a bit of emergency height, and perhaps having to nurse the gravid Walrus onto a high-power approach to prevent it from nose-diving.



My concerns, however, proved groundless as the Walrus soared into the air without a hint of imbalance or labouring under the heavier load. If anything, the heavier battery gives the plane a more planted feel in the air, and the higher output combined with the larger carbon prop transform the Walrus from an intermediate trainer to a sports tourer. It's performance is now much more three-dimensional capable of higher speeds and sustaining steep climbs.

With the good news of power and speed one would expect a nasty compromise on approach. However I am relieved to report that the Walrus floated into the breeze for landing absolutely happily, for a landing as easy as any...

1 comment:

  1. Hey ! Thanks for all your videos and reviews !
    I am currently planning to buy a glider at Hobbyking and I am hesitating between the Walrus, the Phoenix 1600 and the BFG 1600. Since I saw that you tested both the Walrus and the Phoenix can you tell me which one you prefered ?

    I saw that some have problems with the ESC, motor and sometimes on servo connection on those models, did you experienced any (appart from the wire rubbing in the phoenix) ?

    Overall what i'm looking for is a very strong reliable glider that can fly slowly with its flaps on, provide high flying time and can be playfull in aerobatics but still forgives mistakes (aren't we all ^^)

    Thanks for your help

    Axel

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