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 Posted by WinField on 07/27/06 17:55 
Ah yes, the Jet-X engine.  Brings back more memories ... 
 
One of the hobbyist magazines ran an article by an author who designed a  
small balsa glider specifically for the Jet-X.  It was called "Small  
Wonder" - and indeed it was. 
 
I sent away for the plans, and built me one.  As an impatient kid, I  
just couldn't wait to fire it up. 
 
At night, without really taking the time to trim flight characteristics  
on "Small Wonder", I lit the fuse, waited for thrust and let'er rip ... 
 
Mostly what I could see was the dim orange glow of the engine case as  
"Small Wonder" performed two really halatious loops - barely missing a  
tall tree, and then glided into a park across the street.  Luckily there  
was some lights there.  A beautiful landing.  A truly exhilarating flight! 
 
There were problems with Jet-X engines.  Every flight was less powerful  
than the last.  The hot exhaust would enlarge the nozzle (methinks).  
Getting consistent fuse ignites was a bit hellish. 
 
The last flight of "Small Wonder" was sad.  Limping along on a very  
weakened Jet-X engines, it pretty much replicated the Wright brothers  
first flight.  It hit a tree trunk, and (sob) shattered into pieces. 
 
 
	- Winf 
 
 
jimp@specsol.spam.sux.com wrote: 
 
>  
> Should have used Jet-X engines; lower peak thrust and longer burn time. 
>  
> What we learned was if you didn't put foil over the balsa where the 
> exhaust hit it, you got a really neat in-flight fire. 
>
 
  
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