Great, thats the right way to go about it! Sorry to get on at you, but the amount of people I have approach me when Im flying these things, and either stand right next to/ underneath it or ask for a go and then cant understand why I say no... Its clear to us heli fliers that most of the "joe public" have no perception of how dangerous they are and merely see it as a toy!
Im glad your doing things the right way round. I'd certainly suggest investing in a simulator or getting some lessons, they are both extremely worthwhile investments. Phoenix is a good one, a lot of people use it on here - and you can fly in groups online too, so to a certain extent people will tutor you when flying online. We are all very helpful
Just FYI since its a nitro, you shouldnt have a problem plugging in that battery and switching the transmitter on and checking everything moves like it should do, the engine will not start on its own - so you should be safe to do that.
Does it have an autoglow thing? (Some nitros use a special module fitted to them so you can flick a switch on the transmitter to ignite the glowplug, others require the use of a separate glow plug ignitor thing like the below)
http://img.dxcdn.com/productimages/sku_122538_1.jpg
If it has a built in auto glow module just check its not on before you plug the battery in. you dont want to burn out the glow plug or flatten your battery.
Things you should probably research now are a bit of battery technology, charging, caring for them etc, and then things like starting procedures, engine tuning, have a read of the manual for your transmitter and whatnot. Its important to understand things like trim, sub trim, dual rates, swashplates etc.
You may find this series of videos very interesting. Its quite high level stuff, but explains a lot of concepts very clearly. I think there are 7 in the series.
Helicopter Physics Series Intro - #1 Smarter Every Day 45 - YouTube
Im glad your doing things the right way round. I'd certainly suggest investing in a simulator or getting some lessons, they are both extremely worthwhile investments. Phoenix is a good one, a lot of people use it on here - and you can fly in groups online too, so to a certain extent people will tutor you when flying online. We are all very helpful

Just FYI since its a nitro, you shouldnt have a problem plugging in that battery and switching the transmitter on and checking everything moves like it should do, the engine will not start on its own - so you should be safe to do that.
Does it have an autoglow thing? (Some nitros use a special module fitted to them so you can flick a switch on the transmitter to ignite the glowplug, others require the use of a separate glow plug ignitor thing like the below)
http://img.dxcdn.com/productimages/sku_122538_1.jpg
If it has a built in auto glow module just check its not on before you plug the battery in. you dont want to burn out the glow plug or flatten your battery.
Things you should probably research now are a bit of battery technology, charging, caring for them etc, and then things like starting procedures, engine tuning, have a read of the manual for your transmitter and whatnot. Its important to understand things like trim, sub trim, dual rates, swashplates etc.
You may find this series of videos very interesting. Its quite high level stuff, but explains a lot of concepts very clearly. I think there are 7 in the series.
Helicopter Physics Series Intro - #1 Smarter Every Day 45 - YouTube




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