I'm new to the RC hobby, and for my first plane, I kind of wanted to
make/buy a DHC Twin Otter. Anyone know of a company making these?
FYI, I wrote a book where a Twin Otter plays a role, so I sort of have
an attachment to these, and as long as I'm putting the money out, I
might as well get something I'm interested in, eh?
Thanks in advance.
Randy Farnsworth
Author of "A Stand Yet Taken"
http://randyfarnsworth.com/
Ted Campanelli - 18 May 2004 21:05 GMT
On 5/18/2004 1:41 PM Ted shuffled out of his cave and grunted these
great (and sometimes not so great) words of knowledge:
The Twin Otter is a nice plane, but it is not for a beginner. It SHOULD
make a nice 3rd plane though.
IMHO, the best way to go is find a club and get an instructor (the clubs
provide instructors at no charge), see what the instructor suggests for
a plane, engine, radio, etc. and learn to fly. Once you have mastered
both high and low wing planes (and taildraggers), then get your Twin
Otter. By then you will have a much better idea of what is involved and
whether or not you want to go with glo or electric.
> I'm new to the RC hobby, and for my first plane, I kind of wanted to
> make/buy a DHC Twin Otter. Anyone know of a company making these?
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> Author of "A Stand Yet Taken"
> http://randyfarnsworth.com/
Steve Morley - 18 May 2004 22:03 GMT
Hi Randy,
> I'm new to the RC hobby, and for my first plane, I kind of wanted to
> make/buy a DHC Twin Otter. Anyone know of a company making these?
I've got an old set of plans that are waiting for me to clean off my
workbench, I'll see if there's a manufacturer or artist's name on
them anywhere.
Steve
Paul McIntosh - 18 May 2004 23:34 GMT
Here is an interesting one:
http://www.rtmodels.com/products/TwnOtter.htm
--
Paul McIntosh
http://www.rc-bearings.com
> Hi Randy,
>
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
>
> Steve
Gord Schindler - 18 May 2004 23:11 GMT
I can understand your interest in the twin otter but I would not recommend
it for a beginner. Any twin is a daunting project both from building and
flying for most RC pilots. Consider finding a local club, buying a trainer
and learning to fly on it first. In the meantime, get to work on the Otter
and when you are ready to fly it you will be set to go.
Gord Schindler
MAAC6694
> I'm new to the RC hobby, and for my first plane, I kind of wanted to
> make/buy a DHC Twin Otter. Anyone know of a company making these?
[quoted text clipped - 8 lines]
> Author of "A Stand Yet Taken"
> http://randyfarnsworth.com/
aeropal - 19 May 2004 00:01 GMT
> I'm new to the RC hobby, and for my first plane, I kind of wanted to
> make/buy a DHC Twin Otter.
Sure nothing wrong with building your dream model airplane, but save
yourself a lot of grief by flying trainer aircraft first. If you're
interested in electric flyers, here are some suggestions:
http://beginnerparkflyers.nexuswebs.net/index.html
One popular electric twin is the Multiplex TwinStar
http://www2.towerhobbies.com/cgi-bin/wti0001p?&I=LXEXU5&P=ML
Discussion Thread
http://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthread.php?s=b73f4335c1e3e8d21d19b34480f738a9
&t=215776&page=1
Electric Twin Otter Plans
http://www.modelairplanenews.com/plan/fsp0502.asp
Randy Farnsworth - 19 May 2004 16:20 GMT
Thanks for all the advice. I like the Twin Otter from RT Models, but I
think ya'll are right, I need a training model first. I have a fairly
good instructor in my brother-in-law, who's been in this hobby for a
while. But he seems to wreck the planes more than fly them. Although,
when it's not your plane, the wrecks are more exciting to watch than
the flights, in a twisted sort of way :)
Randy Farnsworth
Author of "A Stand Yet Taken"
http://randyfarnsworth.com/
RT Models - 19 May 2004 23:49 GMT
> Thanks for all the advice. I like the Twin Otter from RT Models, but I
> think ya'll are right, I need a training model first. I have a fairly
[quoted text clipped - 6 lines]
> Author of "A Stand Yet Taken"
> http://randyfarnsworth.com/
Hi Randy,
I mfg. the Twin Otter and while an easy build it is better suited for
someone who has several birds and over the learning curve of flying.
Get a good trainer and instructor join a local club and have fun. I'd
much rather see someone get started out right than picking the wrong
bird to start on.
HTH's
Mark
http://www.rtmodels.com