avatar_GTX

RAF C-17

Started by GTX, March 21, 2008, 12:55:47 PM

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GTX

Hi folks,

This was recently emailed to me - just wait until you get to picture number 5 !!!









The four builders are shown in the image above. Colin Straus, the owner, is at the nose of the aircraft.

This 1/9th scale radio-controlled C-17 model was built in the United Kingdom . It was built as the centerpiece of a 15 program television series produced in the U.K. for the Home and Leisure satellite TV channel.

Built with the aid of three friends, it took one year to build and is powered with 4 Jetcat P-120 turbines with a total thrust of 108 lbs. The model weighs over 250 lbs fueled, and carries 12.5 liters (3.3 US gallons) of 95% kerosene and 5% turbine oil fuel. Other details include 5 Futaba PCM receivers, 16 battery packs (93 cells), 20 Futaba servos, on board air compressor, electro/pneumatic retracts, etc. Wingspan is 20 feet 8 inches, and the top of the FIN is 74 inches (6 feet 2 inches) above the ground. Takeoff weight is 264 lbs.

The rear cargo doors open and they drop an r/c jeep on a pallet, as well as 2 free-fall r/c parachutists.

The model also has smoke systems both of the inboard turbines, and uses a 2.4 GHz data link to provide real-time data to a laptop computer on the ground while in flight. This data includes airspeed, turbine RPM, EGT, fuel consumption, etc. Built mainly from balsa and ply, with many glass and carbon fiber moldings to reduce weight. It is covered in fiberglass and epoxy resin. Complete with retractable landing gear and pneumatically operated flaps.

This C-17 Globe Master III is one of the largest jet models in the world today.

Regards,

Greg


All hail the God of Frustration!!!

Shasper

*jaw hits floor*

Shas 8)
Take Care, Stay Cool & Remember to "Check-6"
- Bud S.

AeroplaneDriver

WOW!  I'll be sure to show this to the wife next time she says an Airfix Vulcan it too big!

I can just imagine Gordon Brown's conversation with the RAF chiefs...

" Well laddies, the good news is yer getting two more C-17s..."
So I got that going for me...which is nice....

Martin H

Oh That monster............. :bow: :bow: :bow:

If i understand the rules in this country correctly, they have to seek permission from the CAA (the uk version of the FAA) each time it flys All because its so big, its classed as a UAV not an RC model. :tornado:

I saw a photo of it while it was being built, they stood it on its nose and propped it up against a wall of a house, in lenght its as tall than a standard sized UK 2 floor house  :huh:
I always hope for the best.
Unfortunately,
experience has taught me to expect the worst.

Size (of the stash) matters.

IPMS (UK) What if? SIG Leader.
IPMS (UK) Project Cancelled SIG Member.

nev

lol, ok, you got me  -_-
Between almost-true and completely-crazy, there is a rainbow of nice shades - Tophe


Sales of Airfix kits plummeted in the 1980s, and GCSEs had to be made easier as a result - James May