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- 3D
- Term describing
a type of flight pattern, which is characterized by
the performance of very specialized aerobatic manuevers
below the model's normal stall speed. Examples include
torque rolls, 'walk in the park', harriers, hangers,
etc.
For helis:
combining two or more maneuvers into one maneuver.
Examples: rolling circle, inverted backwards loop.
- 3F
- Slang
abbreviation for flip flop flying. Similar to 3D,
but without the finesse.
- 360,
540, etc.
- Number
describing degrees in an arc. A 360 represents one
full turn through an axis. A 360 turn, for example,
is a flat turn where the aircraft does not roll its
wings but rather just 'slides' through 360 degrees
turning on rudder only.
For helis:
A 540 stall turn, for example, describes a one and
one half revolution spin at the apex of a vertical
stall, which results in the helicopter resuming
nose forward flight before recovery.
- ATL
= Adjustable Throttle Limiter
- High-end
feature which adjusts to bring full servo potential
within the limits of bind-free servo travel. Ideal
for throttle control, or for more effective braking
in gas racing.
- ATV/EPA
= Adjustable Travel Volume/End Point Adjustment
- Allows
separate adjustments of maximum servo travel to both
sides of neutral. Helps tailor outputs for different
control styles.
- Aileron
Differential
- Creating
larger upward aileron travel than downward aileron
travel to help minimize the model "dragging"
the drooped aileron which causes a model to yaw with
aileron input.
- Ailerons
- Hinged
control surfaces located on the trailing edge of the
wing, one on each side, which provide control of the
airplane about the roll axis. The control direction
is often confusing to first time modelers. For a right
roll or turn, the right hand aileron is moved upward
and the left hand aileron downward, and vice versa
for a left roll or turn.
- Ailevators
- Twin elevator
servos plugged into separate channels used to control
elevator with the option to also have the 2 elevator
servos act as ailerons in conjunction with the primary
ailerons.
- Airfoil
- The shape
of the wing when looking at its profile. Usually a
raindrop type shape.
For helis:
The rotor disk is the effective wing, and airfoil
refers to the shape of the blades.
- Angle
of attack
- The angle
that the wing penetrates the air. As the angle of
attack increases so does lift, up to a point (and
drag).
- Articulated
Rotor
- This is
borrowed from full sized helicopters, and is a rotor
head which allows the blades to flap, drag and feather.
- Aspect
ratio
- The ratio
of the wingspan to the wing's chord (depth). For sailplanes
this number will be larger than sport planes, which
will generally be larger than a "jet" style
aircraft.
- Autorotation
- The ability
of a rotary wing aircraft to land safely without engine
power. This maneuver uses the stored energy in the
rotor blades to produce lift at the end of decent,
allowing the model to land safely.
- Axis
- The line
around which a body rotates.
- BEC
= Battery Eliminator Circuitry
- Allows
receiver to draw power from a main battery pack, eliminating
the need for (and weight of) a receiver battery.
- Ball
Link
- Connection
using a ball, and a link which rotates on the ball.
Used to connect the servo to a control surface or
lever.
- Backlash
- Term describing
the amount of play between gears, or gear mesh. If
too loose, the gear can slip, or strip the teeth.
Too tight, and excessive wear is caused.
- Base
Load Antenna
- A rigid,
short antenna mounted to the model. Used to replace
the longer receiver antenna.
- Bell
and Hiller
- Control
system used in helicopters. Changes pitch of blades
in relation to their position via a swashplate. A
flybar with paddles is used to gain responsiveness.
The two systems are linked with Control Levers.
- Binding
- What occurs
when the friction at a joint is stronger than the
linkage.
- Boring
holes in the sky
- Having
fun flying an R/C airplane, without any pre-determined
flight pattern.
- "Buddy"
or Trainer Box
- Two similar
transmitters that are wired together with a "trainer
cord." This is most useful when learning to fly
-- it's the same as having dual controls. The instructor
can take control by using the "trainer switch"
on his transmitter.
- Butterfly
- Also known
as crow. A mix which activates up flaperons and down
inner-most flaps for gliding speed control without
spoilers or airbrakes.
- CA
- Abbreviation
for cyanoacrylate. An instant type glue that is available
in various viscosities (Thin, Medium, Thick, and Gel).
These glues are ideal for the assembly of wood airplanes
and other materials. NOTE: Most CA glues will attack
foam.
- CCPM
- Cyclic-Collective-Pitch-Mixing.
Type of swashplate mixing which requires a radio with
CCPM mixing functions. This uses three servos to control
the cyclic, while all three work together to raise
and lower the swashplate for collective control.
- CG
= "Center of Gravity"
- For modeling
purposes, this is usually considered -- the point
at which the airplane balances fore to aft. This point
is critical in regards to how the airplane reacts
in the air. A tail-heavy plane will be very snappy
but generally very unstable and susceptible to more
frequent stalls. If the airplane is nose heavy, it
will tend to track better and be less sensitive to
control inputs, but, will generally drop its nose
when the throttle is reduced to idle. This makes the
plane more difficult to land since it takes more effort
to hold the nose up. A nose heavy airplane will have
to come in faster to land safely.
- Carburetor
- The part
of the engine which controls the speed or throttle
setting and lean/rich mixture via setting of the needle
valve.
- Channel
- The frequency
number used by the transmitter to send signals to
the receiver. If radios transmit on the same frequency,
or channel, glitching will occur in the active receiver
on that channel. This is due to conflicting signals
sent by the two radios. Flying sites should have a
frequency control system to ensure that only one radio
operates on any given channel at one time. This is
usually a board with some type of marker for each
channel. If the marker is not available, someone else
is using that channel. Do not use your radio unless
you are sure you are the only one on the frequency.
- Channel
- The number
of functions your radio can control. Ex: an 8 channel
radio has 8 available servo slots used for separate
control surfaces or switches. These channels can also
be mixed on many radios, for such functions as collective,
which increases pitch when throttle is increased.
- Charge
Jack
- The plug
receptacle of the switch harness into which the charger
is plugged to charge the airborne battery. An expanded
scale voltmeter (ESV) can also be plugged into it
to check battery voltage between flights. It is advisable
to mount the charge jack in an accessible area of
the fuselage so an ESV can be used without removing
the wing.
- Charger
- Device
used to recharge batteries and usually supplied with
the radio if NiCad batteries are included.
- Cyclic
- Term used
for the horizontal controls used to determine the
attitude of the helicopter. Also known as elevator
and aileron.
- DSC
= Direct Servo Control
- High-end
convenience feature which allows control/adjustment
of servo function without sending signal through receiver.
Requires optional DSC cord (FUTM4250) and DSC-compatible
receiver such as R149DP and R113IP.
- Dead
Stick
- A term
used to describe unpowered flight (glide) when the
engine quits running.
- Dialed
In
- Slang
term for the condition in which the model is set up
to fly smoothly and predictably. This is the state
where the mechanics and electronics work together
to produce the best performance.
- Differential
- Uneven
movement in each direction of a control surface. Usually
used when discussing ailerons or when describing an
undesired unevenness in movement of other controls.
- Diode
- An electronic
component which only allows current to flow one direction.
Protects the transmitter against reverse polarity
or power surges during charging.
- Dual
Conversion
- A type
of receiver that converts the incoming frequency through
two intermediate stages. This tends to eliminate the
type of interference known as "image". With
high-precision components, it also allows the receiver
to be much more precise in selecting the incoming
channel it accepts. This is what helps the receiver
to be very narrow-band.
- Dual
Rates
- A switch
that can make controls more or less sensitive. Lower
rates are better for beginners, who tend to overcontrol.
- Elevator
- Hinged
control surface located at the trailing edge of the
horizontal stabilizer, which provides control of the
airplane about the pitch axis and causes the airplane
to climb or dive. The correct direction of control
is to pull the transmitter elevator control stick
back, toward the bottom of the transmitter, to move
the elevator upward, which causes the airplane to
climb, and vice versa to dive.
- Elevator-to-Flap
Mixing
- Used to
apply flaps along with elevators to increase lift,
allowing modeler to fly at slower speeds, make tighter
loops or turns, etc.
- Epoxy
- A two-part
resin/hardener glue that is extremely strong. It is
generally available in 6 and 30-minute formulas. Used
for critical points in the aircraft where high strength
is necessary.
- Expanded
Scale Voltmeter (ESV)
- Device
used to read the battery voltage of the on- board
battery pack or transmitter battery pack.
- Exponential
Rate
- Offers
servo travel that is not directly proportional to
stick travel. Control response is milder below half-stick,
but becomes increasing stronger as stick travel approaches
100%. Great for aerobatics and trouble situations.
- FM
- Frequency
Modulation. This describes the mode of transmission
of radio signal from transmitter to receiver.
- Fail
Safe
- A safety
feature which turns a servo to a preset position if
the signal is lost or interrupted. Additionally, battery
failsafe is a safety feature which brings the
throttle servo down to idle as a warning that the
receiver battery's voltage is getting dangerously
low.
- Field
charger
- A fast
battery charger designed to work from a 12-volt power
source, such as a car battery.
- Flaperons
- The movement
of two aileron servos, both in the same direction
at the same time, acting as flaps.
- Flaps
- Hinged
control surface located at the trailing edge of the
wing inboard of the ailerons. The flaps are lowered
to produce more aerodynamic lift from the wing, allowing
a slower takeoff and landing speed. Flaps are often
found on scale models, but usually not on basic trainers.
- Flare
- The point
during the landing approach in which the pilot gives
an increased amount of up elevator to smooth the touchdown
of the airplane.
- Flight
Box
- A special
box used to hold and transport all equipment used
at the flying field.
- Flight
Pack or Airborne Pack
- All of
the radio equipment installed in the airplane, i.e.,
Receiver, Servos, Battery, Switch harness.
- Flutter
- A phenomenon
whereby the elevator or aileron control surface begins
to oscillate violently in flight. This can sometimes
cause the surface to break away from the aircraft
and cause a crash. There are many reasons for this,
but the most common are excessive hinge gap or excessive
"slop" in the pushrod connections and control
horns. If you ever hear a low-pitched buzzing sound,
reduce throttle and land immediately.
- Frequency
Control
- The FCC
has allowed the 72MHz (72.010 - 72.990) band to be
used for R/C aircraft operations. This band is divided
up into many different channels in which you can choose
a radio system. You should be aware that certain areas
have frequencies in which there is pager interference.
This is why it is always a wise move to check with
your local hobby shop to find out any channels that
may be troublesome in the area you wish to fly. The
FCC has allowed band 75MHz (75.410 through 75.990)
for ground model use only (robots, battlebots, cars,
boats), 50MHz (50.800 - 50.980) is allocated only
to Amateur HAM license holders for R/C use (and only
at 1W maximum power output.)
- Fuselage
- The body
of an airplane.
- Gain
- Gyro sensitivity.
When too low, the tail will not hold position well.
When too high, the surface being dampened by the gyro
will tend to wag, or hunt for center.
- Glitch
- Momentary
radio problem that never happens unless you are over
trees or a swamp.
- Glow
Plug
- The heat
source for igniting the fuel/air mixture in the engine.
When starting the engine a battery is used to heat
the filament. After the engine is running, the battery
can be removed. The wire filament inside the plug
is kept hot by the "explosions" in the engine's
cylinder. See next heading and "Idle Bar"
plug.
- Gyro
- A gyro
is an electro-mechanical, or electronic device which
aids in the control of an R/C model. The gyro senses
motion in one axis, and directs the servo to counter
that motion. The sensor, which can be a mechanical
gyroscope, or an electronic piezo crystal, detects
unwanted movement. The gyro then instructs the servo
to counter for that motion. At all times, the radio
commands will override the gyro command. The level
of control the gyro had is adjusted by the GAIN setting.
Mechanical Gyro: uses a mechanical gyroscope
(similar to the child's toy) to sense movement.
Piezo Gyro: uses a piezo crystal to sense movement.
Non-Heading-hold vs. heading hold: A standard
(nonHH) gyro senses movement and makes an effort to
counter that movement as long as it feels it. Therefore,
it is NOT going to return the model to the exact heading
prior to the movement. Heading Hold (or AVCS) gyros
will lock the model into one position, and accurately
correct for movement by sensing rate of change and
returning at that same rate.
SMM technology: utilizes a microchip to sense
movement and provide all readings. Experiences minimal
effect from temperature change, commonly known as
'temperature drift' which affects piezo and some mechanical
gyros.
- Heading
Hold
- This describes
a type of Gyro which senses rotation, and maintains
direction. This is accomplished by sensing the rate
of motion, and the time of motion, then compensating
for the distance. While this sounds complicated, the
effect is that if you have the model dialed in, and
point the nose north, with a heading hold gyro on
the yaw axis the model will continue to face north
until you command it to yaw. See also Heading Lock.
This is not recommended for aircraft use while in
flight due to the requirement to use YAW (rudder)
command to turn the model. Often used for ground use
only for perfect take off and landing runs.
- Heading
Lock
- Slang
term for Heading Hold Gyro.
- Helicopter
Radio
- A remote
control radio system designed specifically for use
with helicopter models. The helicopter radio differs
from an aircraft radio in a few ways. First, the heli
radio needs mixing functions specific to helicopters,
and usually a minimum of five channels. Collective
mixing for collective pitch helicopters is a necessity.
Second is the throttle stick, which is ratcheted in
airplane transmitters, will not have the clicking
feel on the heli version. This is due to the precise
control needed on the heli collective stick to achieve
and sustain a controlled hover. The specific radio
requirements will vary from user to user, and the
parameters used will vary from helicopter to helicopter.
Note that many radios produced have both airplane
and helicopter programming in a single radio.
- Hit
(or to be hit)
- Sudden
radio interference which causes your model to fly
in an erratic manner. Most often caused by someone
turning on a radio that is on your frequency, but
can be caused by other radio sources miles away.
- Horizontal
Stabilizer
- The horizontal
tail surface at the back of the fuselage which provides
aerodynamic pitch stability to the airplane.
- Idle
Up
- This is
a setting on the transmitter which limits the throttle
minimum. Particularly useful for FFF and 3D stunt
flying.
- Inverted
- To fly
a model upside-down.
- Inverted
Flight Control
- Activates
inverted flight programming for helis, which reverses
the direction of the rudder, pitch and elevator servos,
and sets up inverted flight pitch high-side and low-side.
Inverted programming is used to allow the radio inputs
to be identical to upright flight while the model
is inverted. Note: this approach to hovering
is seldom used. Instead, idle-ups are used and the
modeler learns to understand and respond to the controls'
reversal in inverted flight.
- Leading
Edge (LE)
- The very
front edge of the wing or stabilizer. This is the
edge that hits the air first.
- mHz
= Megahertz
- The unit
of radio frequency. 75 mHz are surface frequencies;
72 mHz are air frequencies; 27 mHz and 50 mHz can
be used for either ground or air applications. Note:
Use of the 50 mHz (ham radio) band requires an FCC
license.
- Mixing
- Allows
a single input to control the operation of two or
more servos. Simplifies routine flying and allows
more involved maneuvers -- great for intermediate-advanced
fliers. For example, Flap-to-elevator mixing: Most
models will change pitch upon deploying flaps (some
will climb; others dive). After test flying the model
and determining the direction and amount of elevator
throw required to correct for this change, a pilot
may set a flap-to-elevator mix to compensate. Once
the mix is operating properly, when the modeler gives
flap control, the radio automatically also gives the
proportional amount of elevator throw, keeping the
model flat and straight.
- Mixing
Arm
- A specialized
lever which has three or more pivots. The length between
pivots will determine the proportion of the mix between
two or more linkages.
- Module
- A removable/replacable
plug in unit used in most complex computer radios,
containing all frequency control equipment, including
the crystal and all tuned components. Changing channels
or bands on a modular radio requires only changing
module. Changing crystals WITHIN a module to change
the channel of the module itself is against FCC regulation
and is not recommended. To use your transmitter on
a different channel you simply purchase another module
on that other channel and the radio is now fully properly
tuned and safe and easy to use on that other channel
as well.
Futaba
module models include TP, TK, TJ, TL, and TK-FSS.
- Narrow-Band
- A radio
with a 20 KHz band width. All Futaba radios produced
1992 or later and all Futaba FM and PCM radios ever
produced are narrow band.
- NiCad
(or NiCd) = Nickel Cadmium battery
- Rechargeable
batteries which are typically used as power for radio
transmitters and receivers.
- Nitro
= Nitromethane
- A fuel
additive which increases a model engine's ability
to idle low and improves high speed performance. Ideal
nitro content varies from engine to engine. Refer
to the engine manufacturer's instructions for best
results. Nitro content in fuel is indicated by the
percent of the fuel.
- PA2
= Pilot Assist
- Optional
onboard device which uses optical sensors to correct
model's orientation to upright.
- PCM
= Pulse Code Modulation
- PCM systems
use digitally encoded signals to minimize interference
and provide today's most advanced R/C control.
- PPM
- Pulse
Position Modulation. Another term for FM.
- Peak
- This is
the point at which a battery will no longer accept
a charge, and converts the energy to heat. This is
damaging to the battery pack, and potentially hazardous.
- Peak
Charger
- This type
of charger will eliminate the guesswork. When the
battery has reached peak, the charger reverts to a
maintenance charge rate, which will not damage the
pack.
- Pitch
Axis
- The airplane
axis controlled by the elevator. Pitch is illustrated
by holding the airplane at each wingtip. Raising or
lowering the nose is the pitch movement. This is how
the climb or dive is controlled.
- Pitch
Curve
- The programming
function of the radio which aids in setting the hover
point, and end points of the blade pitch in the collective
mix.
- Pitch
Trim
- Offsets
the entire heli pitch curve, increasing or decreasing
responsiveness proportionally at all points.
- Power
Panel
- 12-volt
distribution panel that provides correct voltage for
accessories like glow-plug clips, fuel pumps and electric
starters. Usually mounted on a field box and connected
to a 12-volt battery.
- Pull-Pull
- A linkage
set up using two rods or wires. One is pulled for
one direction, the other is pulled for the other.
- Push-Pull
- A linkage
set up using two rods. One rod pushes, while the other
pulls.
- Receiver
(Rx)
- The radio
unit in the airplane which receives the transmitter
signal and relays the control to the servos. This
is somewhat similar to the radio you may have in your
family automobile, except the radio in the airplane
perceives commands from the transmitter, while the
radio in your car perceives music from the radio station.
- Resonance
- This is
the vibration frequency of a rotating or moving object.
When the resonance of many parts of a machine are
in synch, the whole machine will vibrate at a greater
rate. This can cause vibration damage. Resonance can
cause difficulties in an aircraft, particularly when
using a vibration mount with an improperly balanced
propeller/spinner wherein the engine is vibrating
at one frequency and the propeller at another.
For helis:
Keep in mind that a helicopter has many rotating
parts, and they all cause resonance. The helicopter
will need to be tuned to reduce the amount of resonance,
and the vibration caused by resonance. While this
cannot be eliminated, the vibrations can be tuned
individually to reduce the overall vibration of
the helicopter.
- Retract
Servo
- Specifically
used for mechanical retracts. It is a non-proportional
servo which only moves 180 degrees. That is to say
this servo is either "off" (gear up and
fully locked) or "on" (gear down and fully
locked). No ATV, EPA, or AST adjustments can be made
on these servos because they are not proportional.
The linkage must be set up properly to allow this
servo to operate at its full range and do its job
-- securing your model's landing gear in a gear-up
or gear-down position.
- Revolution
Mixing
- The function
of the radio which mixes throttle to rudder, preventing
the rotation of the helicopter during throttle increase
or decrease.
- Roll
Axis
- The airplane
axis controlled by the ailerons. Roll is illustrated
by holding the airplane by the nose and tail. Dropping
either wingtip is the roll movement. This is used
to bank or turn the airplane. Many aircraft are not
equipped with ailerons and the Roll and Yaw motions
are controlled by the rudder. This is one reason why
most trainer aircraft have a larger amount of dihedral.
- Rudder
- Hinged
control surface located at the trailing edge of the
vertical stabilizer, which provides control of the
airplane about the Yaw axis and causes the airplane
to Yaw left or right. Left rudder movement causes
the airplane to Yaw left, and right rudder movement
causes it to Yaw right.
- Rudder
Offset
- In radios
with idle up functions, this specifies the amount
of tail rotor pitch in the different idle up conditions.
- Rudder-to-Aileron
- Mix used
to counteract undesirable roll which often happens
with rudder input, especially in knife edge, also
called roll coupling.
- Rudder-to-Throttle
- This heli
mix adds a small amount of throttle to counter the
added load on the main gear from increasing the pitch
of the tail blades, helping to maintain a constant
headspeed during rudder application. (This is a minor
effect and is not a critical mix for most helicopters.)
- Rx
- Abbreviation
for receiver.
- SMT
= Surface Mount Technology
- Ultralight,
solid-state components which offer greater vibration
resistance and reliability.
- Servo
- The electro-mechanical
device which moves the control surfaces or throttle
of the airplane according to commands from the receiver.
The radio device which does the physical work inside
the airplane.
- Servo
Reversing
- Reverses
the rotation of a servo with the flip of a switch.
Adds ease and flexilibility during installation.
- Servo
Output Arm
- The removable
arm or wheel which bolts to the output shaft of a
servo and connects to the pushrod.
- Servo
Reversing
- Used to
reverse the direction of a servo to ease installation
and set up.
- Shot
down
- A "hit"
that results in a crash landing. Sometimes caused
by radios miles away.
- Slop
- Unwanted,
excessive free movement in a control system. Often
caused by a hole in a servo arm or control horn that
is too big for the pushrod wire or clevis pin. This
condition allows the control surface to move without
transmitter stick movement. Also, see flutter.
- Snap
Roll Switch
- Combines
rudder, elevator and aileron movement to cause the
aircraft to snap or spin on the flip of a switch.
- Solo
- Your first
totally unassisted flight that results in a controlled
landing.
- Speed
Flap
- The middle
control surface on a 6-trailing-edge-surface glider
or the inboard control surface on a 4-surface glider.
- Stall
- What happens
when the angle of attack is too great to generate
lift regardless of airspeed. (Every airfoil has an
angle of attack at which it generates maximum lift
-- the airfoil will stall beyond this angle).
- Sub-Trim
- This is
a trim function on many computer radios, allowing
trim function during set-up, and still allowing the
full trim function in flight.
- Tachometer
- An optical
sensor designed specifically to count light impulses
through a turning propeller and read out the engine
RPM.
- Throttle
Curve
- The programming
function of the radio which allows throttle operation
to be adjusted to meet the modeler's specific needs
at various points along the throttle movement. Particularly
useful with 2-stroke engines in providing linear throttle
response at the various points of throttle application.
For helis:
Aids in setting the hover point, and end points
of the throttle in the collective mix.
- Throttle
Hold
- A radio
function which locks the throttle at a fixed point
while a switch is activated. This function is used
to hold the throttle in an idle. Useful when starting,
as well as for auto rotations.
- Torque
- The force
which tends to cause rotation.
- Trailing
Edge (TE)
- The rearmost
edge of the wing or stabilizer.
- Trainer
Airplane
- A model
designed to be inherently stable and fly at low speeds,
to give first-time modelers time to think and react
as they learn to fly.
- Trainer
System
- Allows
trainer to link radios with a student via a cord,
and to instantly take control of student's craft in-flight.
The 8U system has special training features available.
- Transmitter
(Tx)
- The hand-held
radio controller. This is the unit that sends out
the commands that you input.
- Tx
- Abbreviation
for transmitter.
- V-tail
Model Mixing
- Used on
a V-tail model to have two servos operate two control
surfaces as both rudder and elevator.
- Vertical
Fin
- The non-moving
surface that is perpendicular to the horizontal stabilizer
and provides yaw stability. This is the surface to
which the rudder attaches.
- Washout
- An intentional
twist in the wing, causing the wing tips to have a
lower angle of attack than the wing root. In other
words, the trailing edge is higher than the leading
edge at the wing tips. Washout helps prevent tip stalls,
and helps the "PT" family of trainers recover,
hands-off, from unwanted spiral dives.
- Wing
- The main
lifting surface of an airplane.
- Yaw
Axis
- The airplane
axis controlled by the rudder. Yaw is illustrated
by hanging the airplane level by a wire located at
the center of gravity. Left or right movement of the
nose is the Yaw movement.
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