You are not an old guy .I am 77 and been flying models sense I was 7 years old and am still learning .keep up the videos love to watch when I can't get out to fly them myself
whish you could see the real one up close, I've seen it may be 30 times and really Dassault produced a hell of a fighter...it does high alpha almost like the RC, amazing (105kts lowest speed...Mach 1.8 highest...). The paint scheme is weird, but is a real one they made for a sort of european exercise called Tiger Meet...They change the paint scheme every time and there is a competition between armys to be ellected the better one...Search for tiger meet liveries (Rafale / f-16 / typhoons) some are really great...hope FMS will make another one with better choice. Great flight !
Yeah. Ive seen a few of the Tiger Meet schemes. My preference is more of a basic paint job than anything fancy like that. I do love that plane. Got me into the deltas and how well they fly. Im currently playing with a foam board Viggen... awesome little delta! Im sure the real Tiger Meet Rafale in yellow is stunning in real life, but for a model, its a bit too much for me! Waiting for the paint to get a bit more ratty and ill repaint it?
@@all_rc on French combat one's they just have this all grey paint, kind of absorbant material like all recent fighters (F35-F22...) which for an RC plane can certainly be hard to see and find out which way is up or down from distance...the RC 64mm Rafale has a less weird paint with just "tiger paws scratches" above wings...Some of the real RSD (Rafale Solo Display) paint scheme were really great ones...checked on google and the only combat Rafale who has a sort of camouflage paint is Quatar plane. Indian, Egyptian and others have the same gray which lead again to the special paint (kind of stealthy material)
IF u did a video on how to get to, & remove the original mixing board, without a doubt, I'd buy another Rafale in a second! (MY 10th flight, my MB quit after take off. Couldn't save it. I had rudder & throttle only. Miss that plane but NOT getting another one til I know where the board is.)
The mixing board is attached to a piece of wood located at the rear of the battery compartment. Look for a single small screw that doesnt seem to do anything at the rearmost of the compartment. Remove that screw the small piece of wood will loosen up. Pull that small piece and you'll see the mixing board pull out. Not sure if that makes sense. But its not hard once you figure it out.