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#21
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A Random Comment
On May 25, 12:41*pm, Mxsmanic wrote:
birdog writes: I stand corrected. However, I don't think anyone misunderstood what I was getting at. Maybe someone should now spend the next 200 posts telling you how wrong and unqualified you are. No need.... A. FACT He admitted the errs of his ways B. UNLIKE YOU, birdog talks real world experience. Much more qualified then you in this group. Do you remember? You are posting in a real world flying newsgroup. Do you remember? You have no PIC time by FAA standards Do you remember? You are not CGI. Do you remember? You pretend you are something you are not. Therefore in light of the above FACTS, you have NO qualifications to comment on real world flying. |
#22
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#23
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A Random Comment
Mxsmanic wrote:
writes: All but the very top of the line, and really expensive, PC flight controls have hysteresis. It's the other way around: if you want hysteresis, you have to build it in. Babbling nonsense. Apparently you have no clue what hysteresis is or what causes it. It takes precision machined parts to eliminate both backlash and hysteresis in a mechanical system and you don't get that with the injection molded parts in less than the most expensive PC flight controls. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#24
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A Random Comment
On May 26, 2:08*pm, wrote:
It's the other way around: if you want hysteresis, you have to build it in. Babbling nonsense. Apparently you have no clue what hysteresis is or what causes it. **shock** :-)) |
#25
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A Random Comment
"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... birdog writes: I stand corrected. However, I don't think anyone misunderstood what I was getting at. Maybe someone should now spend the next 200 posts telling you how wrong and unqualified you are. You, sir, are an oxygen theif and an exhaler of greenhouse gas! |
#26
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A Random Comment
Peter Dohm wrote:
.... You, sir, are an oxygen thief and an exhaler of greenhouse gas! How unkind! How cruel! You are no gentleman.... :-) Brian W |
#27
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A Random Comment
On Thu, 27 May 2010 06:30:36 -0500, brian whatcott
wrote: Peter Dohm wrote: ... You, sir, are an oxygen thief and an exhaler of greenhouse gas! How unkind! How cruel! You are no gentleman.... :-) Brian W However... he is accurate. ;-) Ron |
#28
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A Random Comment
On May 27, 11:24*pm, Ron wrote:
On Thu, 27 May 2010 06:30:36 -0500, brian whatcott wrote: Peter Dohm wrote: ... You, sir, are an oxygen thief and an exhaler of greenhouse gas! How unkind! How cruel! You are no gentleman.... :-) Brian W However... he is accurate. *;-) Ron Well, not entirely. He said theif, not thief. --- Mark |
#29
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A Random Comment
On May 28, 11:17*pm, Mark wrote:
On May 27, 11:24*pm, Ron wrote: On Thu, 27 May 2010 06:30:36 -0500, brian whatcott wrote: Peter Dohm wrote: ... You, sir, are an oxygen thief and an exhaler of greenhouse gas! How unkind! How cruel! You are no gentleman.... :-) Brian W However... he is accurate. *;-) Ron Well, not entirely. He said theif, not thief. And he should have said gasses not gas. :-P Cheers |
#30
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A Random Comment
FWIW..
I have been flying RC Models since '63, full size since '82.... Many skills from RC models transfer easily to full size aircraft poiloting, and skilled RC pilots can progress rapidly through the "flying" part of pilot training. Full size pilots usually take LONGER to be comfortable flying RC, usually due to the lack of sensory inputs from stall, airspeed and attitude indicators and their "butt". The interpetation of speeds and attitudes all (and only) visually at a distance is difficult. I have trained several to fly RC and there is some "unlearning" involved. And there are some that think that after several hundred hours in a full size plane this "toy" airplane should be a "no brainer" to fly!... BIG mistake!! Dave On Sat, 22 May 2010 15:42:27 -0400, "vaughn" wrote: "birdog" wrote in message ... Learning to fly these RC toys is about as hard as the real thing, and my piloting experience helped me not one wit. In the soaring world, I know of at least two cases where previous RC experience seemed to transfer very well to the "real thing". Not so much in the actual mechanics of learning how to solo, but in learning how to stay up and go somewhere once solo in achieved. Vaughn |
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