18 MORE RC Plane Trends That DIED

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  • čas přidán 22. 05. 2024
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Komentáře • 256

  • @air-headedaviator1805
    @air-headedaviator1805 Před 18 dny +78

    RC catalogs were the BEANS. It was always fun discovering what new planes and products were getting released. I’d day dream about which I’d buy first all the time

    • @dieterweik6858
      @dieterweik6858 Před 18 dny +2

      I wish I had just day-dreamed. Only time I ever maxed out a credit card was using that Tower Hobbies catalog.

    • @eaglekeeper7737
      @eaglekeeper7737 Před 18 dny

      It was my Christmas catalog 😊

    • @Videolinquency
      @Videolinquency Před 18 dny +1

      So true. Chinese websites will never fascinate me the way printed catalogs used to. Fingers crossed, maybe someone will find a business opportunity there.

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Před 18 dny +1

      ​@@Videolinquencysadly, nobody will pay for that catalogue...

    • @fuffoon
      @fuffoon Před 17 dny

      58 year old here. Placed my first Tower order in 1980. Placed my most recent Tower order in 2019. And the catalog was filled with builder's kits. ARF was not yet a term. ARC wasn't even a thing. Giant Tartan glow motors were a thing. Circus radios were high end. MK kits were in stock at Indy RC. Central Hobbies was the place to go for pattern. Lump in throat. Tear come to eye. ❤

  • @bstearn1653
    @bstearn1653 Před 18 dny +14

    The Tower Hobbies catalog was great but even better were RCM and Model Airplane News magazines! They also had kick ass Tower ads that went on for pages. I had memorized the delivery day for each magazine to the stores. And I was a grown ass adult at the time. Would rush home and read them cover to cover. Clarence Lee and Duke Fox were gods!

  • @lordjoechu
    @lordjoechu Před 18 dny +22

    A part of me really misses those days. Something about the sound and smell of glow fuel (when it was not super pricy) and long flight times is a time that almost does not exist anymore.

    • @FarmerFpv
      @FarmerFpv Před 18 dny +3

      I miss the people from those days. There was a more sense of community with one another. I miss the grumpy oldtimers who would get mad but still love to help you and treat you like a stepchild. It was great. You can sense they were good guys even though they were grumpy. lol

    • @Videolinquency
      @Videolinquency Před 18 dny +3

      The smell was actually burnt castor oil. Gross, but I still love it.

    • @charleybarber86
      @charleybarber86 Před 15 dny +1

      I still fly mostly glow planes. I catch a lot of heat about it from the electric guys, but I like the sound and the smoke

    • @Videolinquency
      @Videolinquency Před 15 dny +2

      @@charleybarber86 Then I want to thank you for keeping the genre alive. I love the smell and the sound all the flight line tricks too, but I have to fly from my yard for lack of a proper field these days, and I fly nothing but FPV now, so I try to keep the vibrations, the goop and the noise to a minimum. Which is probably just a lame excuse for being too lazy to do all the hours of kneeling and cranking and swearing that I used to go through in my glow days. I certainly respect those of you who still do it. Happy flying!

    • @V8Power5300
      @V8Power5300 Před 14 dny +2

      I never flew nitro, but still have a bunch of nitro cars. I also miss the smell of a well running warmed up motor

  • @Elnufo
    @Elnufo Před 18 dny +11

    We had 27MHz for cars, 35MHz for Aircraft and 40MHz for boats in Germany. Never heard about 50 or 72MHz 😂

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Před 18 dny

      Ami-Frequenzen.
      Mit 40MHz durfte man sogar fliegen.
      Ich habe diese Einschränkungen nie verstanden.

    • @ArneChristianRosenfeldt
      @ArneChristianRosenfeldt Před 18 dny

      @@daszieher Hat sich an den Gesetzen etwas geändert, oder sind diese Frequenz jetzt frei. Also weil all noch oben abgewandert sind. Gibt es irgendwie regeln bezüglich des Protokolls? Z.B. dürfen Amateurfunker auf ihren Frequenzen ja nichts verschlüsseln. Wie sieht es aus mit digitalen Daten + CheckSum/Signatur, um eine Kollision auf einem Kanal zu detektieren und auf Safe-Mode zu schalten?

    • @daszieher
      @daszieher Před 18 dny +1

      @@ArneChristianRosenfeldt aus dem Gedächtnis (ohne Anspruch auf Richtigkeit)
      40MHz war in DE schon in den 80ern für Fernsteuerung allgemein, also sowohl für Luft als auch für Boden (Land/Wasser) freigegeben.
      27MHz war eine internationale "Trash-Frequenz" wo wirklich jeder Schrott funken durfte. Also Spielzeug, schnurlose Telefone etc. Meidete man so gut es ging. Für R/C Cars gerade noch gut genug.
      Eine Unterteilung in Boote und Autos kannte ich zumindest formal nicht.
      72MHz war in DE für die Anwendungen nie aktuell und galt in U.S.A.
      50MHz ist m.E. (und dem Beitrag nach) eine Amateurfunk-Frequenz und Bedarf einer Lizenz. Ich war nur MilFu, kenne mich mit Amateurfunk überhaupt nicht aus.
      35MHz war in DE der Fliegerei vorbehalten und bedurfte (noch?) einer Anmeldung, Sinn dahinter war, die (grobe) Zahl der Sender zu kennen und die Funkqualität aufrecht zu erhalten, um Funkaussetzer bestmöglich auszuschließen.

    • @miklosko3355
      @miklosko3355 Před 5 dny +1

      Yes. I remember 😂.
      Now I'm thinking that I'm flying on 868mhz frequency and the range is ... well, let's just say 10+ km is no problem.
      I've built an fpv plane with GPS and it's a blast. But it's not just the long range but also the short range object pentration that's gone so advanced. 😅 Wow.

  • @arnaldoleon1
    @arnaldoleon1 Před 15 dny +4

    This was a massive trip down memory lane

  • @stetsonpowers5589
    @stetsonpowers5589 Před 18 dny +7

    Oh memories! The slimy rubber bands, forgetting to charge the G.D. Glow igniter, and bashing a Tower Trainer making a tail dragging, trexler rolling cluster with a .46 O.S. Max swinging a 11x5…

    • @matthewdurkee5673
      @matthewdurkee5673 Před 5 dny

      I still deal with the slimy rubber bands every time I fly . I love my old glo planes .

  • @lancebbowman
    @lancebbowman Před 18 dny +2

    My first plane was a Goldberg Gentle Lady with a Goldberg power pod and a Cox .049 glow engine. The radio was a 72mhz JR 4ch FM radio. Good days!

  • @sport2175
    @sport2175 Před 16 dny +3

    I drive by a local RC field once every two weeks on a Sunday. There’s never anyone there no matter how beautiful the weather is. It’s so depressing

  • @Ramztothaz
    @Ramztothaz Před 17 dny +5

    I will add a few that a few OG's will remember but don't probably miss all too much: NiCD batteries, NiMH batteries, Gremlins, Idle bar plugs, die cut, Quadra, servo lead chokes, plastic servo gears, power panels and last but not least....range checks.

  • @simmer-the-skywing3751
    @simmer-the-skywing3751 Před 18 dny +15

    One that he didn’t mention was balsa builds. It’s super hard now to find real kits for balsa birds now due to everyone buying ARFs

    • @spindash64
      @spindash64 Před 18 dny +3

      Honestly, I wouldn't be surprised to see balsa building make a resurgence at some point. Flite Test has helped popularize scratch building with Foamboard, which has given newer hobbyists an opportunity to learn building techniques at low risk. And the next stage to make bigger, lighter airplanes is balsa
      As an added bonus, balsa is theoretically _better_ than carbon neutral, because the main building ingredients are CO2 and Water, and the trees grow fast for how tall they get: that means a demand for growing more balsa can suck a lot of carbon out of the air.
      Sure, foamies and ARFs have taken over, but I can see a culture soon forming of "if you want something built right, build it to your own specs".

    • @malachiteofmethuselah9713
      @malachiteofmethuselah9713 Před 18 dny +4

      The desktop laser cutter has a real chance of bringing these back due to the easy of "printing," kits with the push of a button.

    • @tirpitz1904
      @tirpitz1904 Před 17 dny

      Love to see another WoF fan here, lol!

    • @spindash64
      @spindash64 Před 17 dny

      @@malachiteofmethuselah9713 it's certainly the only reason _I_ feel confident enough to design something

  • @owenthescifigamer5181
    @owenthescifigamer5181 Před 18 dny +12

    My dad when in college got into building balsa models and 15 years later when I became old enough he bought a foam trainer to fly with me (he had never seen one before and is a compulsive buyer) and the most ironic part to me now looking back at it is although he built 2 balsa models installed the gas engines and all he was too afraid to ever fly them so when he got that trainer 15 years later it was the first time he ever flew

  • @michaelcasella4774
    @michaelcasella4774 Před 18 dny +2

    I loved those tower catalogs! I prefer my field box with a gallon of nitro and my power panel then a giant bag full of hundreds and hundreds of dollars of batteries and I still have my Zagi!!!

  • @joedonbaker1673
    @joedonbaker1673 Před 18 dny +3

    Well done. Sadly, I'm old enough to remember all items mentioned. I did not know the Byron story. Interesting... I just donated my Wemac 049 and Green head Torpedo 19 to the AMA museum. Both had never been run. Have a great weekend THP!

  • @1320fastback
    @1320fastback Před 18 dny +2

    We had a club member pass away decades ago that designed the ducted fans for BVM. I bought a OK Models SupraFly 45 that he owned and it had so many custom parts he had made.

  • @simitarknut2201
    @simitarknut2201 Před 18 dny +2

    I got the complete Model Builder magazine collection and read every one. In the one where glow ducted fans were just out on the market, the user was instructed to start the engine and let the fan and duct wear into each other.

  • @mattyltd
    @mattyltd Před 18 dny +7

    I came into the hobby in 2012. I still remember the puzzled look on my face when the hobbyking skipper I ordered came with a balloon and no instructions. Receiver balloons are not dead. I still use them, especially on those planes that I know are gonna end up ground(water) looping

    • @rockysbeats3064
      @rockysbeats3064 Před 18 dny +2

      i got a Skynetic dragonfly last year and it had a balloon as well

    • @Mr-ue2ul
      @Mr-ue2ul Před 11 dny +1

      Started in 78 with a 4 channel 27mhz futaba
      Moved to ff9 in 2000
      Changed module to 2.4mhz
      Still using it.
      I do like a 50cc gas motor

  • @millerrc5829
    @millerrc5829 Před 18 dny +5

    The tower hobbies catalog hits hard😢😢 miss those days.

    • @kaasmeester5903
      @kaasmeester5903 Před 18 dny +2

      Robbe and Graupner catalogs here in the EU, but yeah... Always great when the new ones arrived, spending a few afternoons thumbing through them. With loads of stuff that I couldn't afford.

  • @DKTek07
    @DKTek07 Před 18 dny +1

    Tower Hobbies and the Sears catalogs....YEAH BABY!

  • @smacfe
    @smacfe Před 17 dny +9

    So many old things that disappeared, like frequency pins, hobby shops, missle like pattern airplanes, Ambroid glue, wire antennas, the shouts of “I don’t have it”, the ever present spray cleaner and paper towels. We have also lost some good things like the great airplanes like the Kaos and the Ugly Stik that actually flew instead of flopping around the sky like the styrofoam toys today.

    • @ALOUCKMRBLDKHAHJ
      @ALOUCKMRBLDKHAHJ Před 11 dny

      Me and Dad brought the Falcon 56 back to life and my old scat cat Nitro is kinda coming back here🇺🇸✌🏽

    • @Random4RC
      @Random4RC Před 7 dny

      So many folks have only flown foam planes that I don't think they understand how floppy they feel. Just check the reviews of the balsa Timber. The rigidity seems to blow people away. New pilots that have flow balsa are nearly exclusively flying ARFs wich are heavy pigs compared to a well designed kit. It seems like planes these days are designed to crash, not to fly

    • @ALOUCKMRBLDKHAHJ
      @ALOUCKMRBLDKHAHJ Před 7 dny +1

      @@Random4RC Balsa flies better no doubt and I'd rather have a kit plane now days, Falcon 56 is up and running with OS FP.60 and scar cat OS .40 FP ,I'm restoring my Extra 300 .120 OS 4STK and Dad is building an Astro Hog, we've missed Nitro and balsa 😅 I still think if you're going to do jets EDF is great and there are some good jet arts available, but prop planes should run on Nitro because it's just proper 🇺🇸👍🏼

    • @nerd1000ify
      @nerd1000ify Před 6 dny

      I'm currently helping a local kid build his first plane, and it's a balsa high wing trainer (his choice). Just electric rather than combustion.
      Foam planes can be made rigid too, a bit of pulltruded carbon fibre rod goes a long way in that regard... assuming you put it in the right place. I've flown some planes where the carbon would make the wings twist the wrong way above a certain speed, leading to a sudden nose dive.

  • @bobbertee5945
    @bobbertee5945 Před 10 dny

    This brought back some memories, im 53 yrs old and from the age of 6 I was raised on an RC field, usually running around with an old 049 in my hand, my dad started flying at a young age, started with U control, dad built everything in those days, built some beautiful planes that are still hanging in the basement, still has a lot of his old radio too, that yellow Kraft, couple of them he still has, my first plane was a Piece of Cake, they called it, giant bent wing glider with and an 049..... Always getting that Tower Hobbies catalog in the mail..... miss those days....

  • @JohnVHRC
    @JohnVHRC Před 18 dny +9

    First time I've seen someone call control line, RC. haha

  • @manchildrc
    @manchildrc Před 17 dny +1

    For modern Zagi wings I would very much recommend Crash Test Hobbies and specifically the Assassin. Lots of fun and inexpensive. Not for beginners.

  • @uTube486
    @uTube486 Před 18 dny +6

    Gonna catch heat for the PT-19 dis.

  • @toolbaggers
    @toolbaggers Před 18 dny +4

    The Tower Hobbies catalog was the best. Then HH bought them out and killed Great Planes

  • @panther105
    @panther105 Před 13 dny +1

    Wonderful look back at my teenage modeling years. Thank you...

  • @Videolinquency
    @Videolinquency Před 18 dny +2

    Power panels and fuel pumps were usually attached to car battery powered field boxes, which were probably the heaviest items we regularly managed to forget on our way to the field - unless spouses count. I do miss those days, but I'm in no hurry to repeat them.

    • @orbitalair2103
      @orbitalair2103 Před 15 dny

      car battery ? we used a small motorcycle battery. or 2 6volt lantern batterys. say theres a thing i've not seen in years either.

    • @Videolinquency
      @Videolinquency Před 15 dny

      @@orbitalair2103 Many did use MC batteries. So did I for a few years, but I got tired of the low capacity. Large bikes were not very common in my part of the world back then, so the ones I had access to were 2 or 4 Ah. Not always enough for a weekend of winter temperature starts. So I didn't mind the extra kilos of a small car battery.

  • @EleanorPeterson
    @EleanorPeterson Před 18 dny +8

    Excellent radio gear is so cheap nowadays that I don't think peeps new to the hobby can appreciate just how big a deal it used to be to 'get into RC'. Expense-wise, it was pretty much the same as buying a second-hand car.
    As a kid, it meant saving, saving, then saving some more to get into the air. Servos were hideously expensive, so a first model would be rudder only or, if you were lucky, rudder and elevator.
    It's incredibly sad - and ironic - that getting into RC has never been cheaper or easier, but that our wonderful hobby has been ruined for newcomers by the frenzied introduction of new 'drone' legislation - pilot registration, new taxes, fees, limitations, mandatory memberships, examinations, regulations, and all the rest of the unnecessary (and just plain wrong) nonsense that bureaucrats with no knowledge of or interest in aeromodelling are rushing to impose.
    [Disclosure: I'm English, based in the UK, and currently only involved with sub-250g models.]

  • @Mustang5L5
    @Mustang5L5 Před 13 dny

    I got into RC in the late 90's and fondly remember getting the Tower Hobbies catalog. I still have my old Tower Hobbies Trainer with it's .40 ABC Tower Hobbies Engine in it. I remember learning to fly with a trainer cable hooked up to someone elses remote. I got back into the hobby recently and am surprised to see how far electrics have come and how easy it is to fly some of these models now.

  • @GNaranjoN
    @GNaranjoN Před 6 dny

    You just made me cry, on a good way.. Thanks for the memories

  • @yakacm
    @yakacm Před 18 dny +1

    The Nighflyer episode, lol. From watching Dave's' channel, I know you guys steam Aero Fly together, which is pretty wholesome, Dave seems like a lovely fella.

  • @Chris-5.56
    @Chris-5.56 Před 8 dny

    Flew R/C allot back in the mid 1980s as a teenager. Man it was so fun building balsa kits like the Kaos or Toppo. Flew in some pattern contests and went to the AMA Nats one year. Those were fun times!

  • @mr.sir.
    @mr.sir. Před 14 dny

    Remember Depron Airliners? I do and I also miss the RC nitro choppers that carried around full sized cameras before drones

  • @damienmilk3025
    @damienmilk3025 Před 18 dny +1

    Australia had 27mhz, the very same as the early CB radios here. Same issue, the lawn dart. Caster soaked rubber bands were kept in a jar with talcum powder in it. I started in the late 60s, wow, how things have changed now.

  • @johno9507
    @johno9507 Před 15 dny

    Even down here in Australia I loved my RCM magazine with the Tower Hobbies section...I miss paper. 🇦🇺

  • @Fury9er
    @Fury9er Před 16 dny

    I remember RCM&E 1995 issue having a custom plan for an EDF jet called a Tyto - it used an Estes D class rocket motor to enable takeoff from the ground because NiCads and brushed EDF just didnt have the guts. Five minute flghts were a good result for an electric thing in the 90s, so if you wanted a jet without a loathsome engine sticking out of the nose it was the only practical option.
    I do like that modern stuff has made aeromodelling more accessible. The zen of turning a box of sticks and tissue paper into a flying machine is a precious experience as well.

  • @MrBIG4D
    @MrBIG4D Před 17 dny

    Grew up with my dad and his buddies flying all of the things you mentioned in the video. I still have my "40 size" Eagle 63 that I built as a kid. It still has the ENYA .46 on it. I flew again 7 or 8 years ago after being in storage for 30 plus years. It still had the same Monokote covering on it that I installed when I built it as a kid. The first flights after storage quickly taught me that Monokote gets pretty brittle after sitting in the attic all that time. It's sitting in the corner of my "hobby room" right now. I'm going to recover it and put it back in the air with modern electronics and modern covering. I still what we would call the "flight box" with the battery and control panel as mentioned in the video. Everyone at the field had one back then. My Dad still flies to this day. None of his old planes are around but a few years back he built a new 60 size Ugly Stick and put a 90 four stroke on it. Most of what he flies now is electric for all the reasons you listed but he still loves (as do I) the sound, and smell, of the nitro glow engines. Once tuned properly they are extremely reliable. The modern nitro fuels and the oils they contain, are much better than the old caster oil based stuff. Many, many great memories of the planes, people, and fun Saturday or Sunday afternoons at the flying field with my Dad and his buddies.

  • @tempest411
    @tempest411 Před 5 dny

    I always wondered what happened to Byron Originals. Their P-51 Mustang with the gear reduction four bladed prop was the coolest thing ever when I saw it as a kid back in 1983. It's still cooler than just about anything out there today.

  • @abnurtharn2927
    @abnurtharn2927 Před 18 dny +1

    I had a F-4 with twin glow ducted fan back in the old days. Made more noise than a full size F 104.

  • @TheLostSquadron
    @TheLostSquadron Před 18 dny +1

    What a surprise to see my Zagi video cited! They owned the wing market when I got into flying, the Zagi's pure toughness made it a solid trainer for me even though it wasn't the easiest thing to fly. I was out of the hobby for nearly 10 years, and when I came back EVERYTHING had changed. LiPos and Brushless motors had replaced brushed and Nicads. I took the best guess as to what Lipo/Brushless would power my rebuilt Zagi and boy did I ever miss. I totally overpowered it, and it flew like it was on meth (as seen in vid). It flapped at full throttle and I finally stopped flying it since I didn't want to destroy the plane I learned to fly on.
    I'm really kind of bummed they just kind of slow-faded out of RC, I really have a fondness for the company that got me into flying.

    • @ElijahMiniBikes
      @ElijahMiniBikes Před 18 dny +1

      I fly zagis often, a friend of mine has a hot wire rig where he can make zagi wing half’s and build the wings.
      I have a 6 foot battle wing with a lead nose and it weighs 11lbs. It destroys everything in its path while combating other battle gliders.
      Also have the hand launch 3 footers. Great for light thermals or soaring.

    • @TheLostSquadron
      @TheLostSquadron Před 18 dny

      @@ElijahMiniBikes That's pretty awesome! I hung my Zagi in the garage and replaced it with a Crash Test Hobby Grim Reaper. Still my go-to on windy days or if I feel that I need a warmup flight. 🍻

    • @bstearn1653
      @bstearn1653 Před 18 dny +2

      I still have a Zagi downstairs. I loved the coffee candies the kits came with.

  • @3DMOFO2020
    @3DMOFO2020 Před 18 dny

    Another fantastic installment guys I still remember these trends! BTW Will you guys be doing that video on the Micro Drago soon???

  • @stevendegiorgio3143
    @stevendegiorgio3143 Před 18 dny +1

    Great video.O started R/C back in 1980.I miss nitro engines and tuned pipes.My retracts were air operated.My first radio was a 5 channel MRC 765 which I still have in my parents attic.I also had a 2 channel Cox Sanwa radio.But I will say,that flying electric R/C planes is a much nicer experience.You charge your flight pack batteries,fly,and your finished for the day.No cleaning the oily mess off you model.

  • @dkjens0705
    @dkjens0705 Před 4 dny

    The GRAUPNER katalogue was my bible back in the 70s and 80s in Denmark. That and the Marklin model train katalogue. I worked all summer vacation and bought the black Graupner Varioprop 14S 40MHz radio and Graupner's first 1/8 scale glow race car with the HB.21 engine. I didn't leave money for repairs so it was a short lived pleasure.

  • @jeffreyjones6409
    @jeffreyjones6409 Před 17 dny

    Thanks for the trip down memory lane. Seems to me at one time I had a "throttle collar" for both a cox.049 and a Cox .09. Ran the .09 a Sig Colt. 3 channel failure at it's best. One other thing you forgot to mention was the RC magazines of the day. 200 pages of magazine, 176 pages of ads...........

  • @rc-fannl7364
    @rc-fannl7364 Před 17 dny

    7:37 You could say with the rise in 3D printed designs, that plastic planes are not really a thing of the past, but rather gaining again

  • @ssrattus
    @ssrattus Před 18 dny +3

    Thanks for the videos.

  • @user-zu6wg9wt8m
    @user-zu6wg9wt8m Před 18 dny

    Yes!!! been waiting all day to watch it!!!!

  • @Hangar14RC
    @Hangar14RC Před 15 dny

    Still a sucker for glow engines, even though most of my fleet is electric now I still make sure to keep a couple glow powered planes on deck. That darn nostalgia will get ya.

  • @awood12345
    @awood12345 Před 18 dny +1

    If you do this again EZ aircraft would be a interesting one. An early ARTF range and they came from japan's OK model company. Basically wood covered in depron covered in vinyl. They were great (now collectable) with a large range but prices were very high, even back then.

    • @bstearn1653
      @bstearn1653 Před 18 dny

      I have my second EZ Dago Red sitting downstairs unflown. OS .91 four stroke and retracts! Loved that plane.

  • @Herofromzer0
    @Herofromzer0 Před 17 dny

    Still has a glow ducted fan in the box, and it's kit, a bunch of hobby king lsd nicad batteries, etc. These are good old days for most of us still keeping kyosho pt19 balsa arf model in its box for my kids.

  • @Wbrick_LEGO
    @Wbrick_LEGO Před 18 dny +3

    Love your vids ❤❤❤❤

  • @KimcheeRacing
    @KimcheeRacing Před 16 dny

    The Zagi! My first RC and build! Also the crystal swap! love it!

  • @michelpetrus
    @michelpetrus Před 18 dny +2

    Don’t miss most of those, RC hobby is now better than ever. Cheaper and better radio systems, better planes and electronics, etc.
    What’s going down is that there is not enough young people in flying clubs !

    • @TailHeavyProductions
      @TailHeavyProductions  Před 18 dny +3

      Check out our video titled, "Kids don't fly RC Planes. Here's Why."

    • @orbitalair2103
      @orbitalair2103 Před 15 dny +1

      thats because it tended to be filled with snobs. i remember after i learned rc planes in college, graduating and moving to a new town. the local rc field was filled with upper crust types. i quit flying at fields then. i would occasionally go to a schools field on a sunday afternoon and fly for a bit, but my stuff is now ceiling decorations. i remember using or seeing all the things in this video.

  • @EJ-74
    @EJ-74 Před 18 dny +1

    7:45 I still have this exact plane and motor...

  • @userTJ39780
    @userTJ39780 Před 13 dny

    I still use rubber bands on my wings (Flite Test high wings), and remember a glow-powered EDF that just taxied. It couldn't get off the grass. I do miss the catalogues! I held on to a few. Had a Cox .049 motor on a control line plastic Cosmo plane when I was too young to use it. The Flite Test Arrows mimic the Zagi wings. Crystals were expensive! I still use a balloon on my water planes. Sucks losing power and control when the plane flips. I still swap props with my buddies and we bring 6 by 3's, 9 by 6's and 10 by 4.5's to the field.

  • @torstendarrell7448
    @torstendarrell7448 Před 18 dny +7

    this channel deserves way more than 47k subs

    • @trumblez
      @trumblez Před 18 dny

      Dang, I never noticed that, feels like it has like 900k

  • @EDCandLace
    @EDCandLace Před 18 dny

    What I miss more than anything is the monthly tower sales Mags. They just made me happy.

  • @hydrojet7x70
    @hydrojet7x70 Před 17 dny

    To start flying RC planes back in 1988 to 1993 was a magical time. At the perfect age to be part of almost everything flying to current in the hobby has ever had to date.
    This video is really cool to capture all of it to current.
    This brings back a lot of amazing memories. I have experienced all of this and still learning today.
    I am thankful for where we are today for the hobby because while all of this is really cool,… I’m glad we are where we are today.
    I wouldn’t go back.

  • @BlackCatRedScarf
    @BlackCatRedScarf Před 17 dny

    Good memories. I still recall that the trend of sharing props changed a bit into trading props, because itvwas cheaper to buy in bulk and sometimes you had too many of those GWS props of a certain size. Folks at the park often used 8x4", 8x4.3", 8x6", 9x4.7", 9x5", 9x7", 10x4.7".

  • @NonEuclideanTacoCannon

    Ahaaa my dad had a home made HAM band transmitter when I was a kid. Two channels! It was for a glider that he crashed before I was born, and it got repurposed for a Tamiya buggy with the old mechanical servo throttle. Had them NiCad batteries too. Both the transmitter and the car.

  • @mikebergman1817
    @mikebergman1817 Před 18 dny

    Banger video. Thank you

  • @furmaster212
    @furmaster212 Před 18 dny +1

    Awww man I've been thinking about those Zagi wings for a few weeks now! Back in 98 there was a bunch of guys that flew them off 80amp brushed motors and 10s nimh they were surprisingly fast!

  • @iant8842
    @iant8842 Před 18 dny +4

    The models shown in 15 were Control Line (C/L) NOT RC (Radio Control) and introduced a generation to the joys of model airplane flying with their low cost and being harder to break than balsa models.

    • @kenkingsflyingmachines2382
      @kenkingsflyingmachines2382 Před 17 dny +1

      I noticed that, too, but went with "Remote Control" instead of "Radio Control".

    • @MrBIG4D
      @MrBIG4D Před 17 dny

      RC actually stands for "Remote Control", only later did they become "Radio Control". Remote control still applies to control line, whatever...(There were control line cars as well).

    • @iant8842
      @iant8842 Před 17 dny

      @@MrBIG4D I thank you for your clarification. I would propose that a C/L aircraft is not "remotely controlled" - there is a direct linkage from the flyer to the elevator of the model being flown and there is no other equipment involved. Directly controlled would be my call but not remotely controlled. There are still many contests and flying worldwide divided into two very separate divisions that being C/L and RC. Advocates of C/L flying will point out that one of the advantages of flying C/L is the feedback the flyer receives through the lines from the model which doesn't occur with RC (the closest, I believe, to the direct feedback from C/L flying would be FPV - although the feedback is visual rather than physical).

    • @TailHeavyProductions
      @TailHeavyProductions  Před 16 dny

      Control line does fall under "RC" as the original definition of "remote control" - as @MrBID4D noted.

    • @orbitalair2103
      @orbitalair2103 Před 15 dny

      Control line has a lot more flyers than I ever thought. And if you get to AirVenture, in the kids area at the Museum field, they will let your kid fly a control line plane. its really cool just to stand there and watch the kids and pros fly control line planes.

  • @user-pu9ex9wo2w
    @user-pu9ex9wo2w Před 18 dny

    My catalogs were usually in the guest bathroom with my gun magazines. When guests are gone guess which I found laying out the most.

  • @volvo245
    @volvo245 Před 13 dny

    PCbway. I quoted them for a small, simple steel adapter sleeve with flange. Basically 3 tool changes and maybe 30 seconds of machine time... 80 euros. I think I'll ask a friend with an ancient manual lathe to make one for me for half that and I'll even get the tolerance right for the interference fit.

  • @mikenadler7118
    @mikenadler7118 Před 17 dny

    GWS. They were the first to come up with inexpensive brushless motors, as well as the Slow Stick and many other products.

  • @johndoe528
    @johndoe528 Před 13 dny

    It's interesting how many "obsolete" parts of the hobby still retain some nostalgia, like control-line flying, and nitro engines in general, but nitro ducted fans were a thoroughly dead branch once lipos got under $1/watt-hour and brushless EDF's could outperform them in both endurance and power. They were all compromise, no benefit.
    Cox "released" a .049 TD just a few weeks ago though, I wouldn't say they're entirely gone.

  • @Dyson_Cyberdynesystems

    Yeah I miss all of those. I have a unbuilt Combat Models Falcon sitting in my attic haunting me and yet it's seems pointless to even attempt to build it with all the options out there.

  • @tedsmith6137
    @tedsmith6137 Před 17 dny

    I still have and fly my Byron BD5J and Rossi 90 which I bought during a visit to the factory in 1988, then carried home to Oz as hand luggage. I still use nicad's and will not allow Lipo's in my workshop. All my planes are Glow or petrol, No ARF's and no foamies. I love to build and love the smell of methanol in the morning.

  • @trondaustad8617
    @trondaustad8617 Před 18 dny +1

    Ohhh. Belive me this was funny days with allot testing this and that😊

  • @flynbenny
    @flynbenny Před 6 dny

    You left out the old guy in the club who couldn't hear and thought that Zagi wings were called "Ziggys".
    I don't miss nitro at all. LiPos are a PITA sometimes but I don't miss cleaning all that crap off my planes, or worse the damn paper towel holder bottle thingy tipping over and the precious 409 leaking into your van's carpet.

  • @toddc2466
    @toddc2466 Před 16 dny

    Still have a couple Byron glow fans. Love the flight times compared to EDFs. Refuel and go again as well... F-86D with Rossi 91 and Mig 15 with OS77

  • @kenkingsflyingmachines2382

    Here's one: building models from plans enlarged on the office copier from magazines.

  •  Před 18 dny

    How I hated breaking propellers every time a landing wasn't butter.

  • @rogercamp2910
    @rogercamp2910 Před 10 dny +1

    I still fly nitro ducted fans. Best thing there is and cheaper than gas turbines.

  • @redalrt4
    @redalrt4 Před 14 dny

    I see that Aerostar 40. Outstanding flyer. I had the ARF version before it rekitted itself.

  • @exoticsnyc6990
    @exoticsnyc6990 Před 18 dny

    Good ole days, my first trainer was a Hobbico Avistar. Flew that thing 3 times and then I discovered cars…the rest is history.

  • @getacookie4458
    @getacookie4458 Před 18 dny +1

    Just started rc planes, really fun!

  • @urgaynknowit
    @urgaynknowit Před 18 dny +2

    This was nostalgic AF

  • @craigforrest6548
    @craigforrest6548 Před 16 dny

    They forgot the hearing loss associated with the Cox .049's! :)

  • @NightFlyyer
    @NightFlyyer Před 18 dny

    Great content Zack. Thanks for the shout outs. And btw, I do love my nitro helis. 😊Hope to fly with you again Thursday night. Fly easy. ~ Dave. NightFlyyer

    • @TailHeavyProductions
      @TailHeavyProductions  Před 18 dny

      Thanks for helping make this video a reality! Unfortunately, my computer is officially bricked. A power surge destroyed the mother board, video card, and power supply. Probably out of simming for the season. :-( - Zach

  • @joelamb3581
    @joelamb3581 Před 18 dny

    I miss catalogs. They had their own smell - like fresh ink and pulpwood.

  • @Jon_Flys_RC
    @Jon_Flys_RC Před 18 dny +1

    I got a mousse can pipe with a Macs header for my 25FX nitro conversion in my eflite 1.1M ultra stick. $10 off eBay because nobody knows what that stuff is, then $15 for a pipe because again nobody knows what that stuff is.

  • @mikebergman1817
    @mikebergman1817 Před 18 dny +2

    Dang this makes me feel like a fossil🤣

    • @spindash64
      @spindash64 Před 18 dny

      Hey, everybody loves the dinosaurs, and you've got one up on those guys because you're still here

  • @jdsstegman
    @jdsstegman Před 18 dny +1

    Yep. I'm old. I still have everything talked about!! Not all is used but I'm only 41!!
    I still buy and fly all this old stuff. Because people sell them super super cheap!! And then I get rid of rhe old fm transmitters and servos and still fly them. I have a collection of over 150 nitro engines. Just sitting on acshelf, and about a dozen flyable planes and duckted fans.
    I get that with today's stuff, no one really wants them. But I grew up on them so I still play with them.

  • @SlowerIsFaster139
    @SlowerIsFaster139 Před 6 dny

    I spent so much time looking at Rc catalogs they might as well have been triple x

  • @joepellissier2091
    @joepellissier2091 Před 17 dny

    I never did the crystal swap but I never had more than one plane at a time. Also, what about the radio boards at flying fields where you had to put your radio in while at the flying field and if you took the radio out, you had to pin your radio channel on to the channel board to everyone know what channels are being used.

  • @AtomicFrawg
    @AtomicFrawg Před 17 dny +1

    Add nitro profile planes and wing and Stick Fun fly planes

  • @1hotsupra95
    @1hotsupra95 Před 15 dny

    Talk about bringing back memories and the catalogs tell me i am not the only one who used to flip pages till they were out

  • @charliechmelar9788
    @charliechmelar9788 Před 15 dny

    Right, the old paper catalogs were the bomb. You don't shop the NET, you just go to what you want. No discovery paging anymore.

  • @wallywally8282
    @wallywally8282 Před 13 dny

    You don’t go far enuf back, reed sets, OS Pixie RC set, push button once for left rudder twice for right rudder, single Chanel was exciting😂

  • @pylon500
    @pylon500 Před 17 dny

    We might have been a different here in OZ, but most of our early RC gear was 27mhz. Later we played with 36mhz and I think 40mhz, before we too developed to 2.4Ghz.
    You also mention Cox aircraft, and how many had plastic Cox 'RC' planes, where I think you mean 'UC' planes, better known (as you said) as 'control line' planes. The term UC is from 'You Control', which I think was a trade name for one of the early model kit producers.

  • @janwendt348
    @janwendt348 Před 14 dny

    I REALLY MISS the catalogs

  • @vwtazz
    @vwtazz Před 17 dny

    I still have a couple of Zagi's around here someplace.

  • @richardamiss7000
    @richardamiss7000 Před 6 dny

    Despite flying FPV, electric, automated drones and otherwise keeping up with technology, I somehow still fly my nitro planes on NiMh. I feel like I missed a memo.

  • @jasonhurdlow6607
    @jasonhurdlow6607 Před 17 dny

    Literally just finished building a foam Zagi for sloping to go with the last one I built (also for sloping). I'd say their demise is greatly exagerated.

  • @skylarking12
    @skylarking12 Před 6 dny

    All my electrics were built around seven-cell nicad packs normally used for RC race cars. You would take 3 to 4 packs out for a session, all charged, then, you would have one cooling off, one on the charger, and one in the plane flying, meant you could fly nearly continuously. I find that lipos are better and lighter but way more expensive too, so I couldn't afford that many lipo packs, I had to wait longer between sorties. Some trade-offs are not as good as others. Rubber bands are still just fine for gliders and electrics, where the greasy goo doesn't affect them.

  • @jeromeross9247
    @jeromeross9247 Před 7 dny

    I love how horizon hobby convinced a whole generation of pilots that nitro is hard to tune

  • @richard1472
    @richard1472 Před 18 dny +1

    Building your own models is also a trend that has died.
    Is that included in any of those lists?

  • @randaldavis8976
    @randaldavis8976 Před 18 dny +1

    I love the catalogs

  • @cranklabexplosion-labcentr8245

    Ohhhhh. I’ve been really confused why the F-86 sounds like an OS prop engine. Thanks for solving a 20 year mystery

    • @RussianThunderrr
      @RussianThunderrr Před 18 dny

      -- It was probably a Kyosho with OS-15 DF and pull starter...