Green Hobby Daisy G Istruzioni per la costruzione - Pagina 2

Sfoglia online o scarica il pdf Istruzioni per la costruzione per Giocattolo Green Hobby Daisy G. Green Hobby Daisy G 6.

Now fit the flat stabiliser -elevator onto the rearward tapped holes with two nylon bolts. You can now
see the clear space required under the vertical fin for flat stabiliser's free movement in flight. Trial fit fin
again until completely satisfied.
When happy, wipe off excess glue and leave to harden, with the fin in a perfectly vertical orientation.
Try to keep the amount of epoxy used to a minimum, it's heavy! Try also to avoid getting epoxy on the
flat stabiliser nylon bolts inside the fuselage, you pre-oiled them but even so don't take chances of
gluing them in permanently!
WINGS: Trial fit the wing pegs in wing holes. The front edges are best sanded slightly rounded for
easier fit into fuselage holes. If too tight the wing can not be put correctly onto the fuselage. So take a
little time here. Ease the fit (if necessary) by using a 4mm drill bit gently in a "pin vice drill" or between
your fingertips. Only when you can locate the pegs in the holes in the fuselage AND press the wing
trailing edge down so the nylon wing bolts can be screwed home without danger of breakage, THEN you
are ready to glue.
Oil the peg holes in the epoxy fuselage. The pegs have a tendency to slide too far into the wings while
dry fitting the wings, so try to have them go into the oiled fuselage holes without being pushed back into
the wing holes. Epoxy the pegs into the wings, wipe off excess epoxy, fit wings until glue sets.
After pegs harden into wing, remove the wings for convenience during the rest of the assembly.
MOTOR: This is pre-fitted in some versions of the kit. If not ask the Green Hobby team for an AeroNaut
6.0V Race 400 direct drive motor. The motor is fitted using two steel 2.5x8mm machine bolts. A
downward tilt, or downthrust is noticeable, this is intentional, and indeed is necessary for the excellent
flying characteristics of the aircraft on full power. If the prop is not pre-fitted, test the motor for free
rotation before fitting. Draw centreline on wood. Drill two 2.5mm holes 3mm out from the centre hole in
mounting plate.
It can happen that the motor mounting bolts reach sufficiently far into the motor that they foul the rotor
and prevent it spinning (stalled prop). If this happens, applying power will burn out your motor, so always
test the motor spins free before applying power. The cure is simple, add a couple of 3mm washers
under the bolt heads before the bolt goes through the hardwood motor mounting plate, this shortens the
length of bolt inside the motor, preventing any problem.
PROPELLER: Installation of the types of propeller supplied by Green Hobby is simple. It is pre-installed
on most non-aileron versions of the DAISY. Assemble the prop and fit onto the motor shaft with the
Allen keys supplied. Do not overtighten or you might "pull" the threads in the plastic prop assembly. Try
to have a 1 to 1.5mm gap between the propeller rear and the fuselage front, this aids cooling, prevents
the bolt heads fouling the prop, (same problem as for the motor bolts!), and also gives a tiny shock
absorber in bumpy landings as the prop can "give" a little as it slides back under the impact. Remember
to release the prop from possible locking up after any nose down landings however! The free-spinning
prop test for the motor finds any problems here, before power is applied.
ELECTRONIC SPEED CONTROLLER: This is pre-fitted on most non-aileron versions of DAISY. The
polarity of speed controller-to-motor connection is not vital to the life of the speed controller. This
determines the direction of prop rotation. The polarity of speed controller-to-nimh battery connection IS
VITAL if you get this wrong even for a split second you will short out the speed controller and destroy it.
No warranty will cover this damage. Read the manufacturers instructions carefully.
Solder on appropriate connecting plugs that prevent plugging in the wrong way round. Red-to-red -
positive (+), black-to-black-negative (-). Cover bare solder-wire ends with heatshrink of the correct
To fit the fin, apply epoxy to three
places - the fin sides above the
epoxy fuselage, the fin sides under
the epoxy fuselage, and the fin base
with epoxy gluing it to the fuselage
floor at the front edge of the fin.
A matchstick is handy for application
of glue to the difficult to reach places.
The best position is with the forward
edge of the fin base lower, touching
the fuselage floor. Lift the underside
of the fin's trailing edge up slightly by
resting the hinged rudder part on a
piece of matchstick until the glue
sets. This allows better access to
remove the elevator bolts after
completion, for easier transport of
your aircraft.