Sense you like to shoot things,
http://www.thinkrc.com/u810-missile-launching-35ch-fly-wolf-helicopter-gyro-and-sound-graphite-p-1436.html

At 07:16 PM 1/5/2012, you wrote:
Hi Tom,

Smile. Oh, the topic is fine. Leave it on list. They may be toys, but
there are certainly gaming aspects to RC toys that maybe you haven't
thought about.

For example, if you have a couple of RC race cars you can race them.
That's certainly a game even if it isn't computer gaming specifically.

Another application is RC planes. There are a number of RC planes and
jets that fire toy missiles etc and I've seen people do some pretty
decent mock air engagements with those things. Again, it isn't
computer gaming, but the way the RC toys are used in that case could
be gaming of sorts.

Cheers!


On 1/3/12, Tom Randall <kf6...@comcast.net> wrote:
> Hey Charles and all.
>
> The helis designed for indoor flying are mostly pretty small.  I have a
> couple of them here that I've bought over the last few years, my Bladerunner
> has a rotor diameter of about 11 inches if memory serves and weighs in at
> about 55 grams would have to look at the manual to get exact specs.  Last
> year I picked up one of the little Sima s107 microcopters they're basically
> a cheapy version of the Eflight micros.  These have a rotor diameter of
> about 7 inches and they weigh in at about 35 grams or so so they are very
> very small.
>
> Yes you do need some space to fly these little things around, we have too
> much crap in our house and besides flying things tend to scare Xena our
> female green iguana so I tend to take my indoor craft either down to our rec
> room or over to a friend's place who has more room.  The motors on these
> little things are easily audible so it is pretty easy to use the same type
> of hand-ear coordination that we develop in audio gaming to fly them, the
> difference is you definitely need to have good spatial concepts and be able
> to really understand what three dimensions means and be able to think
> quickly that way.  Basically the first thing I try to work on if I haven't
> been flying for a while is to achieve a stable hover, you want to get the
> heli off the ground a bit so that your rotor wash does not cause too much
> turbulence and then try to hear if it is drifting, they do drift very easily
> despite the fact that most of them have an internal gyroscope and any air
> currents at all will cause this, then you have to apply a very slight amount
> with your directional stick to counter this movement.  If you are a total
> which I am this is going to be challenging because you will not know which
> way to move your directional stick, e.g. you will not know if your heli is
> drifting forward, backward, or sideways.  The best approach that I've found
> is to simply apply a bit of direction and see where it goes and be ready to
> correct quickly if you have guessed wrong.
>
> These little things are loads of fun if you have somewhere to fly them, so
> far as I'm concerned it's like gaming but even better in a way because
> you're actually controlling a real object instead of a virtual one.  I've
> had a fascination with RC stuff most of my adult life but it's only since we
> are seeing the advent of digital radio control and these reasonably
> affordable products that I've been able to actually get into it.  Having
> said that if you do decide to give this a go, I would recommend that you
> pick up one of the inexpensive ones to start with, something like the Sima
> helis are ok, they only run around 30 bucks or so on Amazon last time I
> checked.  That way if you crack one up it isn't the end of the world.  You
> can get better micros from companies like Eflight for instance, I am just
> about ready to upgrade to one of these, if you want strictly indoor flying
> then I am considering something like the MCX2.  If you want something that
> you can fly outside too then maybe the CX2 would be worth looking at. There
> are of course way more expensive ones, you can spend hundreds and thousands
> of dollars on this hobby but since I don't have that kind of money to spend
> the ones I am talking about and the ones I buy are probably considered the
> less expensive ones, the bigger one, the CX is around 150 or so last time I
> checked.  One nice thing about the better ones from Eflight, while the
> cheapy ones I have are really pretty much toys and if you break them that's
> it, the Eflight ones are really closer to an true RC model and you can get
> pretty much any spare parts you need if you do crash one.
>
> In short, RC stuff is loads of fun and there are definitely things that we
> can do in that hobby without sight.  Besides my two helis I also have a
> bigger quadrocopter called an x-ufo and a couple of 1/24 scale rc tanks. RC
> hovercraft are something I'm really interested in but have not done much
> research on which ones are good to get so would be glad for any info on
> that.  If anyone is interested in getting into this hobby I'd certainly be
> happy to talk about it further but we probably oughta do it off list since
> this isn't really gaming.
>
> Game on.
>
> Tom

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