Radio controlled airplane
Forum rules
Be nice to others! Respect the FreeCAD code of conduct!
Be nice to others! Respect the FreeCAD code of conduct!
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:04 pm
Radio controlled airplane
This is my first completed (well, almost) project with FreeCAD. It is a small radio controlled airplane with mainly balsa and film construction. Wingspan is 32 inches, and I'm shooting for about 8.5 ounces total weight. I have designed it with a pusher prop so that the camera can go in the front for first-person-view flying. The airfoil was also custom designed. All the parts are now done, and all I have left is to design a jig for building the wing on a workbench and transform all the parts to 2D outlines for laser cutting.
For modeling, I used the Draft -> Part workflow exclusively. It is what I'm used to, and it works well for this kind of task where you start with an "outer mold line" solid aircraft and have to slice it into parts. Lots of intersections and booleans were involved. I am using FreeCAD 0.18 (the AppImage) on Slackware64 14.2. FreeCAD was great for this project. It is getting quite good!
Thanks for looking.
For modeling, I used the Draft -> Part workflow exclusively. It is what I'm used to, and it works well for this kind of task where you start with an "outer mold line" solid aircraft and have to slice it into parts. Lots of intersections and booleans were involved. I am using FreeCAD 0.18 (the AppImage) on Slackware64 14.2. FreeCAD was great for this project. It is getting quite good!
Thanks for looking.
- Attachments
-
- 2019-10-02-231507_1600x838_scrot.png (294.77 KiB) Viewed 11366 times
-
- 2019-10-02-231426_1600x838_scrot.png (147.81 KiB) Viewed 11366 times
-
- 2019-10-02-231357_1600x838_scrot.png (159.07 KiB) Viewed 11366 times
-
- 2019-10-02-231316_1600x838_scrot.png (226.92 KiB) Viewed 11366 times
Re: Radio controlled airplane
Nice first shot!montagdude wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 3:22 am This is my first completed (well, almost) project with FreeCAD.
don t forget to show us a video of the first flight!!
I would try with Path workbench, to localize the parts in a single wood sheet, but just for the setup, so you can then generate the dxf or svg you needmontagdude wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 3:22 am transform all the parts to 2D outlines for laser cutting.
have a look here
Re: Radio controlled airplane
Nice. I have a couple of questions:montagdude wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 3:22 am It is a small radio controlled airplane with mainly balsa and film construction
- what's the purpose of the servo on top ?
- you didn't include some diagonal stiffeners in the wing, that's going to be problematic
- there seems to be a week point on the fuselage at the back of the wing, where 2 parts are joining.
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:04 pm
Re: Radio controlled airplane
Thanks for the advice! I have never tried the path workbench. I will look into it, but at this point I'm almost done laying out all the parts anyway. I will try to remember to post video of the first flight when I get it built.nemesis wrote: ↑Tue Oct 08, 2019 6:45 pmNice first shot!montagdude wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 3:22 am This is my first completed (well, almost) project with FreeCAD.
don t forget to show us a video of the first flight!!
I would try with Path workbench, to localize the parts in a single wood sheet, but just for the setup, so you can then generate the dxf or svg you needmontagdude wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 3:22 am transform all the parts to 2D outlines for laser cutting.
have a look here
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:04 pm
Re: Radio controlled airplane
1) The servo on top is for the ailerons.Zolko wrote: ↑Wed Oct 09, 2019 10:58 amNice. I have a couple of questions:montagdude wrote: ↑Thu Oct 03, 2019 3:22 am It is a small radio controlled airplane with mainly balsa and film construction
- what's the purpose of the servo on top ?
- you didn't include some diagonal stiffeners in the wing, that's going to be problematic
- there seems to be a week point on the fuselage at the back of the wing, where 2 parts are joining.
2) Diagonal stiffeners are usually not needed for something so small and light. I'm sure it will be fine in flight. The only potential difficulty is making sure it doesn't twist when heat shrinking the covering.
3) I'm not sure which two parts you are talking about?
Re: Radio controlled airplane
Maybe one of the Finite Element Analysis folk would run this through a solver or 2 and generate some interesting images
Alone you go faster. Together we go farther
Please mark thread [Solved]
Want to contribute back to FC? Checkout:
'good first issues' | Open TODOs and FIXMEs | How to Help FreeCAD | How to report Bugs
Please mark thread [Solved]
Want to contribute back to FC? Checkout:
'good first issues' | Open TODOs and FIXMEs | How to Help FreeCAD | How to report Bugs
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:04 pm
Re: Radio controlled airplane
I actually have some interesting computational fluid dynamics results for it, not done in FreeCAD though. Hopefully linking to another site is okay...
https://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthr ... tral-point
https://www.rcgroups.com/forums/showthr ... tral-point
Re: Radio controlled airplane
Ah, didn't see them. But then, if you have ailerons why did you put dihedral ? Especially on such high wings. And why the swept wings ? For such a small and light plane with constant chord, straight wings would greatly simplify (and strengthen) construction.
-
- Posts: 54
- Joined: Tue Jan 08, 2019 9:04 pm
Re: Radio controlled airplane
The dihedral is because I want it to be stable. One goal is for it to be able to fly itself for awhile in case I happen to lose the video feed at any point. It doesn't need ailerons since it has dihedral and sweep, but I enjoy flying planes much more when they have ailerons. I did consider not including them, since it would have made it lighter and simpler, but in the end I decided to go for it.
As for the sweep, originally I had a straight wing, but after making some CG estimates, I realized it would probably be too far back. After that, I moved the wing back by 1/2", swept it like you see here, and also moved the stabilizers farther away from the wing, all of which move the neutral point aft to allow sufficient longitudinal stability without having to add ballast.