Would You Fly In A Radio Controlled Airplane?

Kinja'd!!! "Chris Clarke" (shiftsandgiggles)
03/19/2014 at 13:58 • Filed to: planelopnik

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This 1/3 scale B-17 replica has a 34 ft wingspan and sports four 60 hp engines for a total of 240 hp. Here's the catch... its not R/C!

Jack Bally has spent approximately 20,000 hours dedicated to building this 1,800 pound, one-of-a-kind, homebuilt aircraft, and plans to strap himself in and go flying. The scratch built aluminum airframe features retractable landing gear and is powered by four Hirth 3002 4-cylinder 2-stroke air cooled engines. A homebuilt mold and vacuum system was designed to craft the plexiglass nosecone and strutural testing estimates the design will be good for 6 positive and negative g 's.

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Originally planned as a scaled B-24 Liberator but was switched to a B-17 Flying Fortress because it had the potential to make a more accurate replica. With only a set of 1/9 scale model airplane plans, big dreams, and a whole lot of ingenuity, Bally has created on insane awesome airplane.

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Would y0u have the cohones to fly in this thing?

Photos courtesy of !!!error: Indecipherable SUB-paragraph formatting!!!


DISCUSSION (15)


Kinja'd!!! For Sweden > Chris Clarke
03/19/2014 at 14:00

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Given that around 20% of first flights of experimental aircraft end in a fatal accident, no.


Kinja'd!!! Chris Clarke > For Sweden
03/19/2014 at 14:09

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Good answer.


Kinja'd!!! McMike > Chris Clarke
03/19/2014 at 14:39

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These guys should get together.

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Kinja'd!!! FJ80WaitinForaLSV8 > Chris Clarke
03/19/2014 at 14:47

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My mind is blown. When I see things like this all I can think of is how awesome the internet is for allowing me to see them.


Kinja'd!!! Chris Clarke > McMike
03/19/2014 at 14:49

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They could have a mini re-enactment.


Kinja'd!!! Yowen - not necessarily not spaghetti and meatballs > For Sweden
03/19/2014 at 14:50

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Is that percentage the same for experimental aircraft with 4 props? At least there is some redundancy there, lol!


Kinja'd!!! Blind Willy > Chris Clarke
03/19/2014 at 15:00

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If he'd have made the B-24 I would.


Kinja'd!!! Blind Willy > For Sweden
03/19/2014 at 15:01

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That means you'd have an 80% success rate :)


Kinja'd!!! Chris Clarke > FJ80WaitinForaLSV8
03/19/2014 at 15:21

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I agree, but I hope to see this in person someday as well.


Kinja'd!!! FJ80WaitinForaLSV8 > Chris Clarke
03/19/2014 at 15:45

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That and fly in a real one are on my B-17 bucket list.


Kinja'd!!! Chris Clarke > FJ80WaitinForaLSV8
03/19/2014 at 15:47

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I've looked into flights too. There's one that tours, but $450 isn't a drop in the bucket.

http://www.b17.org/


Kinja'd!!! jetpilotyeah > Chris Clarke
03/19/2014 at 22:38

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This guy has upped his odds of having an engine failure by 4 times. And im not so sure it would do so well in maintaining control or altitude in an asymmetric flight situation. Some people just cant wait to die.


Kinja'd!!! Vettedrmr > For Sweden
03/23/2014 at 05:01

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Sorry, that's a fail. 20% of all experimental aircraft accidents occur on the first flight, and only a subset of those are fatal. Experimental aircraft accident rates are close to the same as the rest of general aviation.


Kinja'd!!! Vettedrmr > For Sweden
03/23/2014 at 05:09

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Um, no. 20% of experimental aircraft accidents happen during the flight test period, usually around 40 hours in duration. Data I looked at didn't identify fatal/non-fatal accidents.


Kinja'd!!! For Sweden > Vettedrmr
03/23/2014 at 11:22

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HAHAHAHAHA no.