Bronco Type XXIII in 1/35th scale

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  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Currently there is a ridiculous amount of weight forward to get the c.g. a bit forward of the hulls half-way point. So, yes. I've done that. To no good effect. Keep swinging, Sam. The answer's out there!

    M

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  • goshawk823
    replied
    David- have you tried adding some weight to the bow area where your torpedo system would go, and seeing how it behaves with that extra (approximate) weight in the bow?
    -Sam

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  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by Scott T
    No experience driving a Type-23 so I will respecfully keep quiet.
    No, no. You're a good hand. Your input is always appreciated, Scott.

    M

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  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by ffr2608
    Mine ran great using the bow planes for control and the stern with an angle keeper with no override control.

    D
    Thanks. I'm doing something horribly wrong here. Just gotta find it.

    M

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  • Scott T
    replied
    No experience driving a Type-23 so I will respecfully keep quiet.

    Leave a comment:


  • ffr2608
    replied
    Mine ran great using the bow planes for control and the stern with an angle keeper with no override control.

    D

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  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by Scott T
    I have only spent a few minutes on the controls of a borrowed sub. So let these
    coments go if they are not worth anything.
    Could you adjust your trim sliders on your radio at critical speed to give the
    dive plane some rise to compensate for the diving? Like trim wheel controls on an airplane.

    Drop a fishing weight in the stern to make it tail heavy to start with and see if there
    is any change.

    And just for fun maybe its like a B-52 bomber and flys nose low-tail high.
    :pop
    Tell me what your experience was with that boat you drove ... I assume it was a 32nd Parallel Type-23? How easy/hard was it to drive when submerged?

    M

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  • Scott T
    replied
    I have only spent a few minutes on the controls of a borrowed sub. So let these
    coments go if they are not worth anything.
    Could you adjust your trim sliders on your radio at critical speed to give the
    dive plane some rise to compensate for the diving? Like trim wheel controls on an airplane.

    Drop a fishing weight in the stern to make it tail heavy to start with and see if there
    is any change.

    And just for fun maybe its like a B-52 bomber and flys nose low-tail high.
    :pop

    Leave a comment:


  • redboat219
    replied
    Hopefully you'll figure things out by the time I get my 23...

    Leave a comment:


  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by vital.spark
    David,

    A couple of thoughts. The bow plane guards are very wide on the XXIII and perhaps they are angled slightly downward or have a large effect once the bow drops? The other things I have noticed with Kevin's ADF2 is that you must set the zero bubble, I use a level when I set mine up but I've found things can go wrong. When the equiptment trays in the bigger boats are rotated the bubble angel can change! The small Skipjack is more of a problem as there is no equiptment tray and the inner workings can be rotated 180 degrees which can upset the zero bubble a lot? Could be there is not just one problem but a combination of several?

    Myron
    Myron,

    The fixed forward stabilizers (more correctly defines as bow-plane guards) are of very low surface area, so I don't believe they do much to exacerbate the down-pitch, but you do raise them as a possible contributor of the current problem -- food for thought.

    Yes, a combination of things going on here. I'm going to increase the stern plane throw back to where it was, move the c.g. back an inch or so, and try it again. This weekend. Gotta fill some orders during the week.

    This Type-23 is presenting the biggest challenge I've encountered since getting into the r/c submarine game. It's ****ing me off!

    M

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  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by Kazzer
    Blasphemy! Get back to work and fix it. Good grief! Swearing Smiley
    Gotta fill some orders or Jon will skin me alive. I'll get back to the Type-23 this weekend, Boss (By the way, this is your model, I don't care if it catches fire and sinks bow-first a smoldering hulk!). We still on for October? Just heard from Fred, he'll be here.

    M

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  • MFR1964
    replied
    David,

    I had the same problem with my V80, that boat had the same tendency, by placing a piece of foam inside your tower you create a pivotpoint on which the boat can hinge.
    I know it sounds odd, but this worked for me, it raised the underwaterspeed at peroscope depth with 30%, my CG with that boat is exactly under the tower.
    Hang in there buddy, within a few months i can run my boat to see if she has the same tendency.


    Manfred.
    Last edited by MFR1964; 07-22-2013, 05:54 AM.

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  • vital.spark
    replied
    David,

    A couple of thoughts. The bow plane guards are very wide on the XXIII and perhaps they are angled slightly downward or have a large effect once the bow drops? The other things I have noticed with Kevin's ADF2 is that you must set the zero bubble, I use a level when I set mine up but I've found things can go wrong. When the equiptment trays in the bigger boats are rotated the bubble angel can change! The small Skipjack is more of a problem as there is no equiptment tray and the inner workings can be rotated 180 degrees which can upset the zero bubble a lot? Could be there is not just one problem but a combination of several?

    Myron

    Leave a comment:


  • Kazzer
    replied
    Originally posted by He Who Shall Not Be Named
    Might be a good idea till I work out what's happening here. Maybe you should go with the Welsh conversion?

    M
    Blasphemy! Get back to work and fix it. Good grief! Swearing Smiley

    Leave a comment:


  • He Who Shall Not Be Named
    replied
    Originally posted by MFR1964
    The only thing i had noticed in the books, is the fast divingtime, if done too quickly you could loose your boat.

    David, where is your CG located, still far away from the middle?, if so, try to get it under the conningtower, when you have succeeded that, place two pieces of styrodure foam high inside your tower, and run her again.

    Manfred.
    I started with the c.g. one inch behind the leading edge of the tower, then progressively moved the c.g. (and the center of buoyancy along with it, of course) to the point where it is now, three inches in front of the tower. The un-commanded steep dive angle operating submerged occurred no matter the location of the c.g.

    I don't see how making the tower super-buoyant will help, as the center of the sail is well behind the c.g. on this type submarine.

    However, at this point, I'm grasping at straws and will give your proposal serious consideration when I again engage this beast in bloody combat. Your input is always appreciated, my friend.

    David

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