I know I’m repeating myself, but Daniel, please, please try cutting the fiberglass or carbon fabric at a 45-degree angle instead of along the fibers. This advice comes from someone who has worked in a composite sport boats factory for years. You’ll be amazed at how much easier it is to work with and how much stronger your parts will be. If you cut the fabric on a diagonal, like at 7:25 here, you wouldn’t need to trim it on the tip of your part, and the entire wing would be more resistant to twisting. The fabric will also adhere to the surface more smoothly. This technique has no drawbacks, only advantages. Other then that - Great Project! Thank you so much for inspiration!
@PermireFabrica19 күн бұрын
Not quite. Yes the fabric would be easier to be placed over the wings, but the stiffness is reduced by that. That's because fibres are only stiff in the orientation of the fibre. For a strain not coaxial, it loses a major part of the stiffness. When designing a composite material, there are a lot of considerations. 0° orientated layers for stiffness in the main loading axis, 90° for stiffness in the other axis, 45° and -45° for adding stiffness to torsional loads. Sometimes it is better to design not for maximal stiffness, so the part has some flex. Also, the stack has an influence on the damage tolerance of the part. Calculations are possible and necessary if one wants to reach the best possible wing, but also not that trivial to do.
@Rob1970s19 күн бұрын
Fiberglass and carbon fiber are both cross fatched weave . .. it doesn't matter what direction you cut at all , it's cross fatched !!! X
@PermireFabrica19 күн бұрын
@@Rob1970s Sorry I'm not sure I understand you. I was referring to the fibre orientation on the part, not the fabric. But there are also different types of weaving patterns. Twill, Satin, Plain weave, unidirectional and lots more. Plain weave is the most common but for curved shape the hardest to drape. Twill might be a good option for him.
@MaciekAnuszkiewicz19 күн бұрын
Sorry if I did not explain it clearly. It is not a trivial task to explain just with words. I'm referring to classic fabric with fibers arranged at a 90-degree angle to each other in a 50/50 ratio, as I believe this is the type of fabric @rctestflight primarily uses. I'm trying to convince him not to cut his fabric along or perpendicular to the edge. Instead, I suggest cutting a few strips of fabric at a 45-degree angle to the grain. Strips cut at a 45-degree angle are much more effective when it comes to shaping them around complex shapes and edges; they lay much more easily, especially on edges. Additionally, if we need stiffness in one direction, we can cut a strip twice as wide as needed and then stretch it. This will give us the required width, with the fibers positioned at approximately a 22-degree angle, which will further reinforce the piece. Of course, when it comes to high-performance parts, the calculations are much more complex, and in those cases, fabrics with fibers aligned in only one direction are primarily used. I was more focused on making components in a home garage setting. Sorry, @Rob1970s, but you're mistaken. As proof, I suggest a simple experiment. Take a multi-layer laminate made from fabric with fibers arranged at a 90-degree angle. Cut a circle from it and try bending it with your hands. You'll quickly notice that it bends much more easily along the fiber axis (where only half of the fibers are bending) and it's much harder to bend when you try to bend it at a 45-degree angle to the fibers (when all fibers are subjected to bending). So yes, it does matter how you cut and arrange the fabric in a composite part. Maybe one day I'll record a short video to explain it in detail.
@w8stral18 күн бұрын
Uh, hem, ALL materials you cut at a 45 as it is the shear angle for ALL materials. --> Watch there is some know it all who knows of some VERY odd material which does not have a shear angle of 45 degrees.......
@jocax18872320 күн бұрын
"The Solar Plane V5." Me: "Hey, that looks really familiar-" *Project Air crashing in the background* "-just convergent evolution, I guess."
@ChadKovac20 күн бұрын
Need to be honest there should be about 40 people working on solar planes right now by statistics alone
@IsaacAllwood20 күн бұрын
Goated comment
@rayinoue669519 күн бұрын
After seeing ProjectAir’s solar plane blow up, I definitely wanted to see the RCtestflight’s proper version of a high aspect ratio solar wing. Was great to see a glimpse of it though.
@marcusellby20 күн бұрын
How much epoxy did you use? - Yes
@hanswoast720 күн бұрын
This is secret campaign by big epoxy, I can feel it!
@pov_fusion19 күн бұрын
@@hanswoast7 set up by big milk, THEY CONTROL EVERYTHING
@PankajDoharey19 күн бұрын
10 litres for sure.
@onjofilms19 күн бұрын
@@PankajDoharey No way! More like 2.64172 gallons!
@butstough18 күн бұрын
me screaming to use polyester resin
@MaggieKeizai20 күн бұрын
"No annoying semen between your toes"? I would hope not!
@fookingsog20 күн бұрын
DAGNABBIT!!! I HEARD THAT TOO!!! 😂
@Very_Grumpy_Cat20 күн бұрын
🤨📸
@TAnders87720 күн бұрын
Had to run it through my mental translator to figure out what he really said.. lol
@nonsequitor20 күн бұрын
@@fookingsog I have no idea what else he could have said 🤷♂️....also don't understand how he was getting semen in his socks. But there's a lot we don't understand about America so 🤷♂️
@ethanmonat20 күн бұрын
@@nonsequitor Seam in between
@drrock535620 күн бұрын
I love how you're constantly pushing the envelope of RC aircraft, and now hydrofoil board systems! I also love how you use your 3D printing, composites, and CNC machining tools, materials, engineering design, and manufacturing skills to make it happen! As a fellow tinkerer, thank you for sharing your design, build, and test projects with us, which helps expand our world!
@antoniomontero360720 күн бұрын
glad to see someone using his knowledge the way he want
@gsftom19 күн бұрын
5:38 Bombas - no annoying semen between your toes
@ErickC19 күн бұрын
I was going to post the same thing. :D
@devilselbow19 күн бұрын
I hate when that happens!
@petrus_nierop_thaigertech19 күн бұрын
Does not ship ... useless then.
@Ireallyhatebuses19 күн бұрын
I had to check that's what i heard. Thanks for clarifying 😅
@naejelangelogonzales662318 күн бұрын
@Raxdflipnote has warned us about the "MARIAH CAREY ENTITY" waking up this soon christmas just like the previous gaurd @Frosted_Derp . Be wary of going to antartica during this period as you may experience hallucinations and other phychological symptoms. Just dont go there please and may god bless us
@planckstudios20 күн бұрын
"In the spirit of ignoring the sunk cost fallacy..." my brother! Haha
@naejelangelogonzales662318 күн бұрын
@Raxdflipnote has warned us about the "MARIAH CAREY ENTITY" waking up this soon christmas just like the previous gaurd @Frosted_Derp . Be wary of going to antartica during this period as you may experience hallucinations and other phychological symptoms. Just dont go there please and may god bless us
@lennyschmalisch743920 күн бұрын
Would love to see the Solarplane V5
@robe431420 күн бұрын
Same...I for one am tired of the water stuff :(
@Fifsson_20 күн бұрын
@@robe4314 It's cool, but like it's cool, planes were actually interesting for me at least
@Alex-xs6ht19 күн бұрын
In return for the previous temu ad 😂
@Fifsson_19 күн бұрын
@@Alex-xs6ht THIS
@kasperwinterhag20 күн бұрын
These hydrofoil adventures are so fun to watch
@aserta20 күн бұрын
The stiffness is both pressure in the manufacturing (which you did not do) but also the direction and what kind of resin you use. There's charts online that tell you what resins you need to use to obtain stiff laminations vs more flexible ones. Afaik, boat stuff is towards the more flexible part of the spectrum, because you need to have a flexible hull. You'd need the type of resin used in things like water storage tanks, for example. I've made a couple of custom ones back in the 90's with resin specific for the purpose and those were 3 layers deep only, no pressure (only the form), and chopped strand on the exterior (first layer laid) and it's extremely stiff, which i needed for the application, because it would've otherwise made a bulge because of the weight of the water.
@2testtest220 күн бұрын
Resin has some effect, but the main thing is the volume fraction of fibers and their orientation. With hand layup like this, you never get a good volume fraction of fibers, so you get a lot of thickness but little strength and stiffness compared to a propper vacuum bag setup or press. The 1708 is not helping either. The mat backing is great for building thickness, but the fibers are randomly oriented, so only a few are pointing in the right direction, and the weave is 45/45, so all the long fibers are going at a diagonal, almost negating their contribution. It is good to have some fibers at a diagonal for stability, but the majority of fibers should be oriented in the load direction!
@roderickmcleod486420 күн бұрын
@@2testtest2 crap, i spent all that time writing my comment, but this was already here, but ill also put this here balsa wood is probably the best material for making a cheap and strong sandwich plate.
@PermireFabrica19 күн бұрын
@@2testtest2 Just was about to point this out as well. In a proper design, the epoxy has almost a negligible effect on the mechanical properties. Composite material design is hard and needs a lot of knowledge to reach the optimum for the desired application. The calculation itself can be done with CLT (Classical Laminate Theory). I'm certainly no expert in this, but If I would design such a foil I would probably end up with a stack that looks like something like this: [45/-45/0/0/45/-45/0/0] then followed by the foam and the same stack on the other side. The 45 degree fibre orientation helps with torsional loads which are fairly important in this twisted foil design and placing them on the outside helps to reduce the risk of delamination.
@naejelangelogonzales662318 күн бұрын
@Raxdflipnote has warned us about the "MARIAH CAREY ENTITY" waking up this soon christmas just like the previous gaurd @Frosted_Derp . Be wary of going to antartica during this period as you may experience hallucinations and other phychological symptoms. Just dont go there please and may god bless us
@timfrisch569415 күн бұрын
Crazy amount of glass/resin
@nuttyDesignAndFab20 күн бұрын
For your fiberglass work: wet the foam with epoxy first, then lay the weave on top, way easier to get the fabric soaked through.
@ryannebrich986920 күн бұрын
This sponsor is miles better good content man
@1Howdy120 күн бұрын
You are getting closer to what I see as a boat that doesn't float and a plane that doesn't fly, but together they sail very well. Glider foil for below and above. Ground effects on a water rail. The top wing might have to rotate on the bottom wing, like a sail rotates on a keel, but the ground effects would point the foil into the wind. It would be cool if it could launch from one swell to the other, Thanks for being interested in this.
@jimbobhootenanny444020 күн бұрын
Put small motors on it for a high efficiency wing board that you can ride
@bensnacks20 күн бұрын
When laying down composites, consider the bias of the biaxial cloth, and layout 90º offset each layer for extra stiffness. (2nd gen boat builder)
@couldhaveseenit19 күн бұрын
45 degrees*
@bensnacks17 күн бұрын
@@couldhaveseenit You're right thank you
@mattmarzula20 күн бұрын
Always interesting. Never a let down. How anyone can watch this without being just a little happier is beyond me?
@nonsequitor20 күн бұрын
Bro, did you mean to write that in Valley Girl voice? 😂😂😂 ... either way it's given me a laugh 🙏👊
@tissuepaper996219 күн бұрын
15:56 homie just casually whipped out the Intermediate Value Theorem in everyday life. Nice.
@aleksjenner67719 күн бұрын
8:30 "This cloth is so thick it just drinks epoxy. And this is where the baby oil actually comes in handy..." - rcdiddyflight
@kenreynolds100020 күн бұрын
“Nausicaä of the Valley of the Wind” vibe. 👍
@Bobsry1619 күн бұрын
❤😅😊
@Trust_me_I_am_an_Engineer18 күн бұрын
Well spotted! Congrats. I wanted to tell you that Kazuhiko Kakuto in Japan built the Flappter from Laputa Island in the Sky and the Mehve or Möwe jetwing from Nausicaa as a working RC model. And then I wanted to end my reply saying that technically you could build a Mehve but thankfully nobody , not even James 'let's stick a rocket engine in it and make it go faster' from ProjectAir would be bonkers enough to try and fly a full size Mehve with an actual jet engine... But I googled "flying machine from nausicaa valley of the wind" and ... Wow.
@Yeetely_deet17 күн бұрын
That’s what I was thinking
@leechby45909 күн бұрын
I was looking for this comment
@matthewprather738620 күн бұрын
Shear Web for stiffness. Without that the foam is carrying the shear load between the two reinforced skins. And foam is flexible so the structure is too.
@Trust_me_I_am_an_Engineer19 күн бұрын
My thoughts exactly. With the foam in the middle connecting the two laminates it is like taking a metal or whatever I beam and replacing the middle vertical part with a flexible foam. That is such an obvious mistake. And thanks for the term 'shear web' :) Didn't know that. I've designed and built lots of industrial machines the past 40 years or so but never anything with wings. Now I kind of want to (do wings)...
@roderickmcleod486418 күн бұрын
If it is a high density foam it would be fine, the main problem is the bond strength
@CaptainMagnus20 күн бұрын
@rctestflight What did you say at 5:39 ?
@CozzyKnowsBest19 күн бұрын
Unlile most socks, there is no annoying semen between your toes. No one is forgetting this ad 😂😂
@gshingles19 күн бұрын
@@CozzyKnowsBest And coming to the comments section just to find this discussion 😆
@notravstar20 күн бұрын
3:01 the horizontal stabilizer provides static, not dynamic stability
@UnitSe7en19 күн бұрын
Yes! H. stab. incidence won't correct the attitude alone if the craft gets disturbed. Only thing is does is provide a static pitch up moment.
@notravstar19 күн бұрын
@UnitSe7en No, the horizontal stabilizer does provide a negative pitch up moment (its lift varies with aoa), so in response to a pitch disturbance the aircraft will counteract that disturbance trending towards to steady level flight; this is static stability. Dynamic stability is the tenancy of the aircraft to not oscillate and has to do largely with the damping coefficient of the aircraft as a whole, which is related to but certainly not caused by the pitching moment provided by the read stab.
@coriscotupi18 күн бұрын
@@notravstar I was under the impression that @UnitSe7en was *_agreeing_* with you, that the horizontal stab provides static stability only.
@j0rp16 күн бұрын
This is an excellent observation! I think that the most important thing paired with this is that while his wing may be statically stable, it may also be dynamically (over-)damped which would preclude the dynamics necessary for pumping.
@bretthawton20 күн бұрын
You make complex ideas very easy to understand while being entertaining. This is a rare skill in the business world that will serve you well.
@RJMBricks16 күн бұрын
Bro ur upload frequency is insane, loving the vids 👌
@rickjames739119 күн бұрын
10:55 fiberglass underwear...
@ThaJay19 күн бұрын
From my experience building longboard skateboards from flexy carver or cruiser to full on downhill boards, I would think that small amount of straight strand carbon fibre does more than you think. It has completely different properties from glass. Glass is flexible and bouncy and carbon is much stiffer end springier. It does break at a lower deflection compared to glass and it shatters while glass tears. But on flexible sports equipment you're riding you can defilitely feel the difference in flex and damping between different materials or combination of materials.
@cadthunkin17 күн бұрын
Yep, my thought too. You add some carbon and the part gets 4x stiffer. Its just expensive.
@josiahjackson375719 күн бұрын
Next video: "I built the worlds first liveaboard hydrofoil"
@BLENKO_17 күн бұрын
Bro my dad had issues with shoulder dislocations when he was younger. Ended up avoiding surgical intervention by listening to a friend who was a gym owner. He built up the muscle in,his shoulders and never had a problem since
@wmffmw15 күн бұрын
McNair Marine was first to build fiberglass boats using vacuum bags back in 1967. The original application of the vacuum bag technique of fiberglass molding was the Radar Dome on the A6 Intruder. My father ran Grummans Flight Test Department and help develop the process.
@ISpinTires31520 күн бұрын
Omg dude designed a Russian uav drone 0:47
@owengrossman141420 күн бұрын
Back when I was building balsa planes I think they called that twist in the wings “washout” 🤷🏻 Also, I recently learned about a product called “peel ply” that reduces the amount of sanding needed for fiberglass layups.
@manp103918 күн бұрын
This build is awesome! I wonder if adding self-balancing tech, similar to what Segways use, could help maintain the hydrofoil’s angle relative to the board, stabilizing it for a smoother ride. Maybe actuators could automatically adjust the angle for optimal lift and control. A joystick on the board could also give riders the option to manually adjust the height by shifting the foil’s angle in real-time. For an advanced twist, the actuators could even oscillate the foil angle slightly, generating a form of propulsion by mimicking a fish’s tail movement. This could add some extra thrust without relying on traditional motors! And with independent control of each end of the foil, the rider could achieve left-right 'yaw' turns for better maneuverability. This project has so much potential!
@sock50119 күн бұрын
You landed a good sponsor this time. Those are some of my favorite socks.
@kitewinds66320 күн бұрын
Nice build! It looks like you would benefit some from vacuum bagging more of the laminating steps, pre-coat the foam etc. Not only save weight but makes for quicker and stronger/stiffer build, since you mess around less with epoxy saturating the fibers. No need for peel layer that covers "everything", use only very narrow peel strips and somewhat dense pattern of outlet holes to allow transport of air and excess matrix. For the areas in between you use somewhat thicker plastic sheets that allows see through and that leaves smooth shiny surface. Also, do not sand in between layers, instead time the gel state, do a quick clean up with razor sharp blades (tons of), and just continue with next layering step. 😅
@mapsofbeing593719 күн бұрын
not trying to stand on it is such a cliffhanger
@fossilfool19 күн бұрын
This vid really resonates with me! I see so many similarities to my custom work and projects. I use the same chip brushes, the same pink foam, and the same Mitutuyo calipers. I don't have a CNC router in my shop and this makes me want to look into that. Within DIY KZbin I see an overreliance on 3D printing and an under-awareness of the benefits and ease of composites. Thanks for putting it out there!
@SticksBlocks4 күн бұрын
Don’t you just want to skip to the part he tries it 14:50
@hanswoast720 күн бұрын
When comparing costs (make or buy), do not forget that your time is also valuable! If you feel like doing it yourself anyway, because you want to, that is a separate thing :)
@mckenziekeith743420 күн бұрын
True but for youtubers, time they spend working on projects is compensated to some extent. What I mean is, if you are a maker type of youtuber, then making stuff is your job. Viewers indirectly finance whatever you are working on. So the economics are different compared to non-youtubers. For a non-youtuber, it is a mistake to ignore the value of their time. But for a youtuber, it is different. Few people would watch a video of RC testflight selecting the best wingfoil online shopping. But a fair number of people will watch the video of him making a ridiculous (in the best way) wingfoil to play with.
@pjz708820 күн бұрын
15:33 the bunny kicks 😂
@JasonBlack6617 күн бұрын
Solar Planes is my main reason for subscribing to this channel. Incidentally, it would seem I was unsubscribed somehow. Please keep making solar planes. Ultimately I would love to see you make a solar plane that can fly 24 hours.
@ASDasdSDsadASD-nc7lf11 күн бұрын
LOL, there is a brand new material they invented that when in an I-beam configuration is super strong. It is called "steel".
@DanielLEVY-c3v10 күн бұрын
I love your energy .... As a boat builder myself I can only compliment you. Keep on trying ... Then you will make it !! Good luck
@smartereveryday7 күн бұрын
Incredible project.
@arcticcat17517 күн бұрын
Fr
@mike_tango2 күн бұрын
The whole "milling for days" thing for a simple wing profile is nuts. We cut profiles out of foam with hot wires. The process takes minutes and laves enough of the block intact to use it as a negative form for the reflex lamination.
@rexhorning72282 күн бұрын
Your building skills are improving to mad scientist level. Great job.
@irmatroll19 күн бұрын
Im sorry theres no annoying WHAT between your toes?!?!
@coreyfro19 күн бұрын
If you need long reach mills for a cnc router, consider Helicle's "solid carbide high feed" mills. They are specialized mills which translate forces axially instead of radially. This allows you to reach further without fear of high leverage forces. There is a learning curve because they work differently than end mills
@FabianFoehrenbach16 күн бұрын
Totaly crazy! Soooo much work to build this wing. Hope it will works to pump. Looks awesome. I also built some Waveboards, but this is absolut crazy. Hope you become real success with this concept. Go on! 🎉
@jeanpierrerenault221212 күн бұрын
Amazing, ce gars-là a réussi à réinventer l'eau tiède, total respect... 😇
@jlqtraceur19 күн бұрын
The little kicks were hilarious. Cool project dude, keep it up!
@WilCoxon00719 күн бұрын
This guy is a full DIY wizard. Truly inspiring.
@vad-vad20 күн бұрын
The next step could be the world's first hydrofoil biplane, where the lower wing floats in the water and the upper wing carries solar panels👍
@seethesvt20 күн бұрын
I don't care about what your making, I'm just here for the diy and engineering. Great videos.
@pixelmaster9817 күн бұрын
New drinking game just dropped: drink a shot every time he says "carbon fiber"
@ChaseFreedomMusician2 күн бұрын
@5:39 Finally a sock that doesn't have any annoying seamen between your toes.
@tin200119 күн бұрын
Ah... The solar planes... The reason i started watching this channel. I loved those videos. But Ive also been fascinated by these hydrofoil videos and the autonomous boats. All stuff I'd love to be able to do, but dont have the money or patience to achieve.
@tracybowling115619 күн бұрын
Watching the build was the best fun! I love watching you be a super smart engineer and builder. You are really intelligent and interesting! Keep up the amazing job!😊
@IYIENACE19 күн бұрын
To keep parts flat or to desired shape, build an 'oven' -simple cage with light weight foil faced insulation that you can set over your part. Add a heater with thermostat, leave the part under vacuum in the 'oven' around 180f for 2 hours. It shouldn't pre-release or have any post cure warp Or, build a pressure vessel with heating like formula 1 teams do. Kind of expensive though Source; I built boats for 35 years and after, kevlar parts for race boats
@pete389719 күн бұрын
Wow, I'm impressed with the low amount of dust on the CNC machine! Your dust collection system is very effective :)
@walkeratsea15 күн бұрын
Watched this through and impressed with your hard work and positive attitude to your projects - Look forward to the tow test for your foil 👍
@Rebar77_real20 күн бұрын
Next up: Sail Kite and you're doing 90mph on the edge of a storm, lol. Great work!
@ДмитрийМ-ч6м19 күн бұрын
Hi. You can significantly increase the processing speed with the "Parallel" strategy. The direction of movement should be along the diagonal of the axes of the machine. Then the maximum speeds of the axes will be vector-folded and the milling cutter will be able to move noticeably faster. Good luck with the machining :)
@Doug_Narby19 күн бұрын
Love your total commitment to a completely TLAR project 🎉
@martevdb423620 күн бұрын
5:38 semen between your toes???
@MaggieKeizai20 күн бұрын
OK I'm not the only one who did a spit take at that
@TryAgainFPV20 күн бұрын
Seam in-between your toes
@mattblack673620 күн бұрын
no kink shaming!
@smellycat24920 күн бұрын
😂
@jorionedwards20 күн бұрын
Captions say "seamen".
@Acheiropoietos19 күн бұрын
So many parallels between aerospace and marine engineering. Great video, thank you.
@imbackinthegame361119 күн бұрын
Man, now i really want to see the Solar Plane V5
@mattphilip326618 күн бұрын
Looking pretty epic man! It's always a gut check to me just HOW much more torque younger off of water than air, even at low speeds.
@818063418 күн бұрын
Next time you need a stiff-ish plate, don't be afraid of a little plywood coated in epoxy, and reduce that sunk cost issue a bit. You get points for creativity, dedication and patience for sure! If you have a traditional job, you must be one of the stand out employees.
@notsonominal19 күн бұрын
This giving "just winging it" a whole new dimension!
@robschilkeСағат бұрын
Coolest thing I've seen on Lake Union in a hot min. Cool build!
@wilgarcia120 күн бұрын
nice job. If you ever feel like making that Solar plane again I bet one of the shrink coatings used on RC planes would work great. They do come in Clear. Monokote and ultra cote are the only brands that come to mind.
@MarkusMöttus-x7j19 күн бұрын
As for overdoing stuff, here's one reason why it's better: Last time I went hammock camping, instead of overdoing the knots for my webbing(which is what the hammock attaches to) I got lazy... Which resulted in me being VERY rudely awaken in the middle of the night by way of smashing my back into the ground.. So I'd say it's waaay better to overdo things than the other way round! And if anyone wonders, yup it sucks about as much as you would imagine slamming your back into the ground from half a metre would! But thankfully I did not sustain anything more than a couple bruises😅👍
@freekshowgamingh60xm20 күн бұрын
You build some wild stuff, been a fan for long time, keep up the great entertainment.
@AndrewDRoyappa19 күн бұрын
I've never seen a man love fiberglass so passionately
@NeuralEngin33r20 күн бұрын
awesome project!! this thing is so big, you could make the world’s first hydrofoil house boat
@DamienLeroyYouTube18 күн бұрын
Awesome stuff!
@HolbrookAerospace19 күн бұрын
Excellent build and excellent video. I suspect that the masts of these craft replace a large amount of the pitching up moment that is usually solely born by the horizontal stabilizer on traditional aircraft. They can do so with their drag, rather than the traditional negative lift that the horz. stab. uses. If you have a dual masted board like this, I think you would need even less reflex than if it only had one mast. I see evidence of this when I see how small the horz. stab. is on other wing boards, especially when compared to the wing. Its much smaller than you would expect if it were going to be an airplane. This wing is so nice though. If it still wants to pitch up after more practice, you can always add adjustable, unpowered elevons that can be adjusted on land. Awesome vid!!!
@melbournesubtropicfruits947417 күн бұрын
Its called washout on tips. Wire cut foam cores with built in washout is your building board. Carbon leading edge say 10mm deep and trailing edge 20mm deep Shear Web Spar 15mm with end grain spruce. Cover with aluminium sheet similar thickness to Coke can using slow cure epoxy weighted down on your core mould - Super strong wing 🛫
@Uzziskatez19 күн бұрын
My man C-walkin in sandals with socks 5:39 😂🫡
@theawsomebananaa685418 күн бұрын
bro i was looking at the coments to see if someonse noticed the clean ah cwalk 😂
@wessonw2-td7kh19 күн бұрын
Have you considered the I Beam effect to your composite layups? Cheaper, much lighter, and less time-consuming. Love what you do man!
@Chaos_God_of_Fate12 күн бұрын
It'd be really interesting to setup a solar plane to use some kind of parabolic mirrors that keep the sun in line and a little steam engine to power the flight. That would be a hard challenge since those mirrors aren't aerodynamic at all and you'd have to keep it facing the sun just right at all times in order to keep the water hot enough to create steam to run the motor. It's kind of a crazy idea but I've never seen anything like it before- just a suggestion, you could be the first!
@CameronDickson-fe5uj19 күн бұрын
You should make a solar plane v5 and make it do a waypoint mission to england and fly in curcles around project air to assert dominance
@TheNielsAlmelo20 күн бұрын
this might be the only channel where I don't get annoyed by the ads hahaha
@SamsLiberty20 күн бұрын
Can't wait for the next one.
@lookoutlava72936 күн бұрын
Can you make a "storm drone", an semi autonomous maybe parachute or flying wing with deployable parachute, so that you can fly into storm cells, and then use the massive updrafts to go right to the top of the storms, filming and recording altitude/temperature etc. Would be an awesome series of videos. Super cells can reach up to 70,000 feet...! Most of the lift will be provided by the storm itself so you can have something fairly lightweight battery wise and still have really good runtime.
@deanedeane431819 күн бұрын
Whahhooo Daniel this is absolutely killer ! Queen Elizabeth of pumpboard !!! I so can't wait for the next installment ! ❤😉🙃😎 NZ
@hydrostream7620 күн бұрын
I built my first airchair myself back in the day when they came out Amazing work , Keep that imagination going
@dirty_haute20 күн бұрын
Now mount a motor under the water line. And ride across the water, looking like your levitating
That was a total grind my brother but super awesome. Keep up the good work!
@VRMinde19 күн бұрын
as an avid pumpfoiler, I am excited for you man. Looks like you can go forever on such a wing
@dallonby19 күн бұрын
Friend / girlfriend nicely on brand with the Onshape hoodie!
@jimmytclem19 күн бұрын
would you be able to retain the twist in your wings by glassing the upper(or lower) surface WHILE the wing is still in the foam-board? if you are required to flip the foam-board, you would be inserting a glassing step between cutting sides (upper and lower) on the router. this would effectively give you full support during your initial glassing pass and when the wing is ready for the final glassing steps, there would be a rigid fiberglass layer maintaining the wing-tip twist during the next glassing/vacuum-bagging step. another thought about your table size restrictions. you could cut the wing in multiple sections out of the same foam-board by using the same alignment pins you're using for keeping your upper wing surface above the lower wing surface. you'd have to have the space to hang foamboard off the side of your CNC table, but you could use multiple cutting programs (L-tip, L-mid, fuselage, R-mid, R-tip). you'd just program a bit of overlap between wing sections and index the material between programs.
@bob285920 күн бұрын
I love solar planes and hydrofoils. I do NOT love the complete lack of PPE
@cormacsmall944220 күн бұрын
Thoughts on polyester resin? Would completely remove the need to sand in between layers as it chemically bonds as long as you make sure it doesn't contain the wax additive, which rises to the surface as it cures, depriving the resin of oxygen and allowing it to cure fully. Without this the surface remains tacky for days/weeks and can have more layers added.
@fookingsog20 күн бұрын
Isn't that the UV Cure resin??? 🤔
@drewradford350620 күн бұрын
Polyester resins are not nearly as strong as epoxy and will result in much higher weight layups. Definitely easier to work with though and cheaper.
@RussellBankston16 күн бұрын
As a pro skim boarder that’s really cool. Good job building a great board which is progression in the surf world. ❤
@ErtsenPlayGames6 күн бұрын
10:32 --- PETG ----- IS NATURAL SEPARATOR Resin wont stick to it at all (except mechanicall connection trough holes etc (like "hooks") ) but in this case it act more like a "filling" material (like foam in wings but harder) pro tip ----- holes in it (infill) and epoxy paste (with thickeners like silica) can make the bond permanent (mechanically)
@cadthunkin17 күн бұрын
Cool video. It reminds me of first attempts at making RC gliders. Once you have had fun with that, you need to move to vacuum bagging. You also must add some carbon layers though expensive I know. That will make things stiff and stick together. You are essentially building modern RC airplane wings, so no reason to reinvent though the hand lay up method can make good looking parts. The buoyancy thing may be an issue once you do it right as it will be lighter. Still fun to see people take a shot at composite layup.
@DillyDallyRally6 күн бұрын
Noticed your The Front Climbing club hat! Been working there on the bouldering wall expansion, you’ll love it next time you visit!