Flying
After waiting a few days we finally got a nice day. Cloudy, almost no wind and temps in the high 40s. The RC field was covered in snow and rutted and packed from snowmobiles, no place to take off or land. Trying to hand launch a biplane is somewhat risky as there is no place to hang on to it so that it balances. The full scale airstrip that I fly from has a roadway plowed that parallels the runway. Cannot fly off the airstrip as it is full of ridges from ski flying, so it has to be off the roadway, just have to stay away from the frozen snow banks on either side and not crash into any parked aircraft.
With the CG at the recommended 4" from the wing leading edge the plane flew dead level both upright and inverted, only required a couple of clicks of roll trim.
I first flew it with the dual rate set at the not quite so high rate which was good thing as this plane is super responsive to the controls, so much so that I was afraid to try it on high rates. It will do a pinwheel in its own wingspan and a flip in its own fuse length. Rolls and snap rolls are a blur. Not a loose airplane but it sure is touchy.
Some roll coupling to upright during knife edge, the rudder is so sensitive that it was difficult to hold at an even angle. Some negative pitch coupling during hard rudder turns and flat spins. Harriers had a small amount of gentle wing rock in high alpha, none in low.
Generally biplanes are wobbly unstable things that wander all over the sky but this one locks in solid, flies straight as an arrow. Pull it up into a hover and it instantly locks right in, so easy to hover that your Granny could do it. Because it tracks so well it is real easy to land, doesn't stall or drop a wing just does a nice predictable sink. Perfect airplane for spot landings at a Funfly.
It does the best elevators of any plane I have ever flown. It keeps its heading, no wing rock or wobble and just comes straight down, does not even require any throttle.
Half way through the second flight I noticed that it wanted roll to the right badly, I flew it in close and could see one aileron flapping in the breeze. I managed to bring it around and land it without hitting the snow banks. The gears on one servo had stripped. They were old and well used so I expect the gears were on their way out when I installed it, still I had tested them all with a servo tester and they seemed OK. This really pissed me off as I wanted to work a lot more on the setup. Biplanes typically require quite a bit of effort to get the setup right and this one is no exception.
Back to the shop to replace the servo and tweak the surfaces a little to try to reduce some of the control sensitivity.