Asked this on Talk heli and got some interesting answers so Im asking it here too.
Got me thinking recently about a few things to do with this hobby.
Very shortly after I started flying I got addicted, hook link and sinker as they say. I always said I was not interested in competing at comps as they are all 3D orientated and I soon learned that as much as I do like to watch it in person and am in awe at some of it I had no real interest in flying that style. I also never imagined I would be involved in the hobby as much as I am now with being sponsored by Climb-Out and Optipower. Since I have got the TDR I have been bitten big time by the speed bug and you would not believe how much its cost me, not just in £ but in time too. I have spent a hell off a lot of time reading about induced drag, retreating blade stall, parasite drag, dissymetry of lift etc the list goes on.
I consider myself a very helpful person and quickly realised this carried over as I enjoy helping people in this hobby and progressing the hobby too and this is obvious in the fact Im now testing lithium for Opti and am an employee of Kontronik Drives which is a job I do not need for the normal reasons of getting a job (although it all helps
)
So to cut a long story short I guess in a short space of time recently I have gone from not taking it seriously at all to taking it quite seriously as I now spend more of my free time doing something heli related. So where some might take it seriously for wanting to be a better flyer and enter comps, I guess I take it more seriously for helping others rather than progressing my own flying as I do not fly no where near as much as most.
Does this mean i'll actually attend more events? haha I doubt it lol but who knows
So do you treat it as a hobby, slightly more than a hobby but not to seriously or do you take it seriously??
Got me thinking recently about a few things to do with this hobby.
Very shortly after I started flying I got addicted, hook link and sinker as they say. I always said I was not interested in competing at comps as they are all 3D orientated and I soon learned that as much as I do like to watch it in person and am in awe at some of it I had no real interest in flying that style. I also never imagined I would be involved in the hobby as much as I am now with being sponsored by Climb-Out and Optipower. Since I have got the TDR I have been bitten big time by the speed bug and you would not believe how much its cost me, not just in £ but in time too. I have spent a hell off a lot of time reading about induced drag, retreating blade stall, parasite drag, dissymetry of lift etc the list goes on.
I consider myself a very helpful person and quickly realised this carried over as I enjoy helping people in this hobby and progressing the hobby too and this is obvious in the fact Im now testing lithium for Opti and am an employee of Kontronik Drives which is a job I do not need for the normal reasons of getting a job (although it all helps
)So to cut a long story short I guess in a short space of time recently I have gone from not taking it seriously at all to taking it quite seriously as I now spend more of my free time doing something heli related. So where some might take it seriously for wanting to be a better flyer and enter comps, I guess I take it more seriously for helping others rather than progressing my own flying as I do not fly no where near as much as most.
Does this mean i'll actually attend more events? haha I doubt it lol but who knows

So do you treat it as a hobby, slightly more than a hobby but not to seriously or do you take it seriously??

+ 7 x Eddies finest EGS's








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