Here:
F3N ohjelmat Phoenixilla!
is a bunch of Phoenix recordings of the F3N moves. With few exceptions, no one tells us how to fly those. My flying isn't necessarily the easiest or the most effective way to fly them. Especially for the straight-line moves the rule of thumb is: The bigger, the better.
Videos are here:
F3C: http://www.youtube.com/user/theemju#...E42CCC4357107A
F3N: http://www.youtube.com/user/theemju#...DD9BFA1931D8BC (33 out of 40, if you can do the last 7, you don't need to read this
).
The videos sometimes omit the "10 m straight and level flight" at entry and exit. Those are an important part of the maneuvre and get scored as well. The Phoenix recordings include correct entry / exit.
The official rulebook is here:
http://www.fai.org/aeromodelling/sys...copters_10.pdf
For F3C, the "schedule P" is the most important one.
F3N ohjelmat Phoenixilla!
is a bunch of Phoenix recordings of the F3N moves. With few exceptions, no one tells us how to fly those. My flying isn't necessarily the easiest or the most effective way to fly them. Especially for the straight-line moves the rule of thumb is: The bigger, the better.
Videos are here:
F3C: http://www.youtube.com/user/theemju#...E42CCC4357107A
F3N: http://www.youtube.com/user/theemju#...DD9BFA1931D8BC (33 out of 40, if you can do the last 7, you don't need to read this
).The videos sometimes omit the "10 m straight and level flight" at entry and exit. Those are an important part of the maneuvre and get scored as well. The Phoenix recordings include correct entry / exit.
The official rulebook is here:
http://www.fai.org/aeromodelling/sys...copters_10.pdf
For F3C, the "schedule P" is the most important one.



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