So realistic. And I agree that the heavy weight v performance helps it look real. Super cockpit camera. And the moving pilots head is a really great touch. Great work.
Awesome! John, we need more videos of you flying large scale birds! I love that interior camera view. I'll have to look into picking up one of those GPS tracking cameras.
@Carlos Clivilles - hopefully now that I have a field to fly the big stuff at again and camera that might actually work well for this job - I'll be able to act on that request 🙂
Beatifuly executed and the attention to detail is very nice. I can appreciate the pilots view aswel as the tracking of the helicopter. I'm glad to see someone flying a helicopter, I got into this hobby because of my love for them. The hobby aided in me making it thru a serious state of depression years ago. I can't Waite to see you put the new heli together. thax for sharing 👍
I so enjoy hearing about how RC helicopters have helped many folks out during life's all too heavy struggles. Same story here; so I thank you for sharing your love of this hobby.
do I love Canadians. hard working and friendly . Great work on this scale heli, the moving pilot is so cool I have to watch how you did that next! Cheers from the USA!
Another great video, John. I am a future scale flyer. The 3D heli's are interesting, but I've yet to see a real helicopter "cut the grass". My goal is to get enough experience to fly a 700 scale like a real one would behave (whether it's a scale model or an Align 700E kit). Thanks for the inspiration! Your website and e-book's are my "go to"' spots for anything RC Heli. Keep up the great stuff!
I can see where many would find acrobatics fun, but I would be more impressed to see a winch lift. I am not asking for a scale diver, even. Just hook something.
I have had a 700 KDS Innova kit for quite some time now and I am slowly getting the electronics for it, watching you fly this heli makes me want to fly mine. Very nice flight John.
Well, John... You have most certainly done it again! Beautiful Scale Heli, beautiful Fuselage, fantastic Pilot and in Heli Camera views and sound are incredible! Although the external camera tracking was off a little at times, the camera works and operates beautifully. Such gorgeous detail from the external camera, for the most part it tracks and zooms in wonderfully. Another great Flight and another magnificent video and editing, John. Take care my friend and stay safe, stay warm and stay healthy!
Great Heli, fantastic backdrop for flying in, the cockpit view was great made even more special with the pilots head movement. A really good show, thanks for sharing.
Beautiful machine and flying, here iam still struggling with my 150 size heli to get a nice scale flight.. :D, ur tutorials helped me very much to get a a hold on it. :)
That's beautiful. Wish I had the resources and space for some scale flying. The camera is good as well, probably just as good as asking a human to film for 10 minutes.
Lovely scale flying, i would love a scale heli but they are so much more expensive than the sport flying types and cost gap is even larger than that of scale planes....one day lol🙄
Awesome vid John. Ive been following your journey with this heli since reading your review on your website. Tail seems to be holding well. How do you find the asymmetric tail blades? Can you still get the tail to blow out? Love these Roban scale helis. Ive been eyeballing an MD500 myself 😉
@Dallas117 - they are an improvement over the stock symmetrical tail blades, but you still have to manage your torque and constantly be aware these big zeppelins don't have (nor should they), the tail lock and authority of a standard pod & boom aerobatic performance bird.
8:53 The tracker appears to be using some predictive algorithms to make up for the GPS lag, where that looks like a case gone bad. I wonder if you held it there if it would’ve eventually drifted back over to the helicopter, or if that offset would ‘stick’.
Wow beautiful flight, video, and special Effects! (Pilot moving). Would love to see this with an air wolf! 😎. So while I fly a drone now, I too started with hells but can never master it (200 size). I know a lot tech has emerged in the last few years, I would love to get back into it. What Heli would You recommend? I too happen to love scale! Big fan, downloaded early training booklets from you years ago!
Hi Claudio - Leaning to fly collective pitch hasn't changed regardless of technology and I wouldn't say any heli today is any easier than it was a decade ago to learn on & fly (unless you use GPS autopilots or self level stabilization which won't do you any favors if scale or aerobatics are your end goal). The same learning to fly fundamental apply today as they did 30 years ago. Ground up learning method, master the tail in hover, work toward your side on orientations, circuits, and nose in. Then repeat for all the inverted orientations if getting into acro. Practice, practice, and more practice. I give heli recommendations on my Best Heli page: www.rchelicopterfun.com/best-rc-helicopter.html Quickly however & it of course depends on budget, but you can't go wrong with an OMP M2 in my opinion if you want something that is fairly robust, fairly easy to see, and behaves similar to a larger heli (to the extent the laws of momentum & inertia allow).
@@Rchelicopterfun thanks John. In love watching scale air wolfs 450-700 size and find it facing ting as you describe in your video. Perhaps it was the models I started with, Walkera, but had a tough time hovering them. With indoor mini I did fine, like old nine eagles etc. Perhaps lack of knowledge, but it seems not many are making scale RTF helis, at least here in the USA. But will look into your suggestion, OMP.
Excellent flying. Noticed you are using a FrSky tx...would you trust the Radiomaster TX16S on a bird that size? I've had zero issues with mine and am tempted.
Already have one - a full build summary going over every part; both mechanical and electrical of a typical collective pitch RC helicopter: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-2N39ephs5w8.html Of course, every heli is different and your best source for specificity is the build manual that comes with each heli kit.
Is heli setup easy? Depends on how much experience you have setting up collective pitch RC helicopters. I don't think anyone would call it easy, and it's certainly harder these days with computerized radio and flybarless systems over mechanically mixed CCPM and trusty mechanical flybar stabilization. With that said, it's still a very logical process of both mechanical and radio programming steps with only a few special helicopter setup tools involved. Once you've done a few helicopters, it certainly gets easier and more intuitive. I have written two ebooks on the entire process: 1. www.rchelicopterfun.com/rc-helicopter-tips.html 2. www.rchelicopterfun.com/swashplate-setup.html
@@Rchelicopterfun I've set up my Trex 450, Hirobo Sceadu 30 and Thunder Tiger Raptor 50, but that was all Futaba. I have the pitch gauges and swash plate leveler. Just been about 6 years since I dabbled in heli's. But these scale birds are so sweet I just need one. I dug out the Trex (the battery still charged!!). And have been hovering in the backyard. Man I want the Huey so bad. I want to rig a sound system to it and blast "fortunate son".
Then I suspect you would have no issues setting up a Roban scale bird - they are the same more or less. Not sure I would recommend a big robbie as a good first scale heli project, but looks like with all your RC modeling experience, you wouldn't have too many head scratching moments 😀
@@Rchelicopterfun thanks!! Yeah I have just never set one up on a FRSKY radio. But I'm by no means any good at it. I'll have to go through the paces. Thanks to the links to your ebooks!!
If you are by chance running Open or EdgeTX on your FrSky's, I do have a video going over my Open/Edge TX Heli Template: ru-vid.com/video/%D0%B2%D0%B8%D0%B4%D0%B5%D0%BE-XdFOndPG7xo.html Even with it, the basics of collective pitch heli setup are the same, just the programming of the radio input/mixing/output and associated menus are different from a conventional computerized radio with a pre-configured built in heli template.
+1 Celsius (34F) is practically shorts weather here in Canada - haha. No issues at that temp. I've flown helis down to -10C (14F) for over 3 decades now and never once had an issue with ball links becoming brittle (grease starts stiffening up in some servos which is more of a concern). Of course, don't take my anecdotal experience for anything but what it is; you would really have to do a material analysis to determine a correlation between temp and link strength. Seeing that most ball links are made from Nylon that is where to start. -100C seems to be a popular number that comes up for Nylon/polymer strength thresholds, but it of course totally depends on the type of Nylon/polymer. Regardless, I'm sure the majority of ball links would be fine, even well below my own personal winter flying comfort level of -10C (14F). 🤔
Collective pitch RC helicopters are for most people a steep and long learning curve. I cover this question in detail on my "Are RC Helicopters Hard to Fly" page on my website: www.rchelicopterfun.com/are-rc-helicopters-hard-to-fly.html And you certainly don't start or learn on scale. You start with pod & boom and slowly work your way up to something like this.