Construction Rating: | starstarstarstarstar_border |
Flight Rating: | starstarstar_borderstar_borderstar_border |
Overall Rating: | starstarstarstar_borderstar_border |
Manufacturer: | Fun Rockets |
Brief:
This almost-ready to fly kit is a good introduction to the concept of the
swing-wing glider. I stumbled across one in a clearance bin at my neighborhood
craft/hobby store and at $5 couldn't pass it up. With a lightweight and
colorful Styrofoam body, this looks like a nice little flyer (but mine
wasn't...).
Construction:
Opening the box turned out to be harder than making the glider. Once I got
everything opened and unpacked, I found the glider body, the stabilizer, some
clay for weight, and a rubber band (would love to have seen a few spares
included with this).
The box described this as a skill level 4 kit, which in my opinion is grossly overstated. This was a very easy build and well within the abilities of the typical cub scout. I'd rate it more of a skill level 1, although glider trimming might push it to a 2.
The only "assembly" required is sliding the stabilizer into the tail end of the fuselage and filleting with white glue. Mine was a pretty tight fit and I wound up cracking the Styrofoam, which was easily repaired with a bit more white glue.
The swing-wing mechanism was a little tricky to figure out, mainly due to the fact that it was a bit too stiff and needed to be worked a little. During boost, the wings are held in the swept-back configuration by a metal pin that slides into a notch in the wings. When the ejection charge fires, this arm is pushed forward releasing the wings (a rubber band supplies the oomph).
Finishing:
Other than trimming the glider, there's nothing to finishing this.
Construction Rating: 4 out of 5
Flight:
First flight was on a C6-3. Even going through the closest slip hole, the
rubber band felt pretty tight, and there was a slight bend to the rocket on the
pad, as can be seen in the photo. It took off on a not-quite-vertical path. I'm
not sure if this was due to a short rod (only had a 36" rod today, and the
lug starts over 15 inches up) or the design.
The boost only got this about 75-100 feet up due to the roughly 45 degree trajectory. During the 3 second delay, the not-quite-a-glider-yet managed to tumble about halfway back down. When the ejection charge finally blew, it did so with a vengeance, breaking the brittle Styrofoam fuselage in two. The wings flopped out slightly, just in time to hit the ground.
Overall, this was a very disappointing flight. If I'd gone with a longer rubber band and less tension, it would probably have been fine. This one though, is ready for an early retirement, as even with additional gluing and reinforcing, I don't think the body is going to weather another flight.
Recovery:
The Styrofoam was obviously pretty flimsy (stabilizer broke on installation),
so the single rubber band is probably not the right size or tension for my kit.
Flight Rating: 2 out of 5
Overall Rating: 3 out of 5
Brief: I bought 36 Swingers in a job lot. Obviously I was going to fly one, as Ive been more interested in rocket gliders than rockets for some time. Construction: After a bit of trimming, this rockets is ready to go. The general feel of the kit is cheap. The elliptical wings that sweep forward are very stiff and unless the elastic band is stretched taught the wings rarely ...
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