RC hydrofoil
thingiverse
June 2017: Big News!!! The rudder assembly has been reworked to enable a change in pitch angle. I installed two servos and combined them (V-tail program on the transmitter). You need two 624ZZ 4mm x 13mm x 5mm ball bearings. I added new back foils (symmetrical) as well. The boat is much more stable now! If you don't want to add the complexity of mixing servos, it should work by setting up the proper angle and securing it in place. Thanks for your comments and I hope you guys will build it - it's a fantastic project! https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FkvLngxzD9I https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wZ5s8Pop9LE https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=rXsFfcyyV-E July 26th, 2015: This is my latest attempt at a RC hydrofoil. The profile is a Naca 63-412 (both front and back foils). The back foil has a 5deg dihedral for lateral stability. It's in two parts, glued together to print the part without support. The foiler is actually flying but on a very narrow speed range. Enough to lift itself and not too fast or the propeller reaches the surface and starts to cavitate. I would really appreciate any suggestions to improve it. As mentioned previously, I’m working on a new hull in four parts of max 15 cm so it would be printable on a variety of printers. Keep you posted. Penny Express – Not 1898 pennies, but just one riding in style! This is my entry to the MakeItFloat challenge. I always wanted to make a RC hydrofoil, so what a great opportunity. This is my first real project with 123D Design and 3d printing and I can tell you that I learned a lot. This boat can theoretically carry 1’898 pennies, but I decided that only one would ride, so I had to find a very special place. After 6 weeks of endless nights and weekends, about 100 hours of total printing time three prototypes and almost 40 iterations, what I expected to be a simple project finally started to lift up two days ago (video here; https://youtu.be/DgALh0y2N18). I tried everything that I can think of; changing the foil profile, size, angle without much success. I truly experimented Thomas Edison quote: “I have not failed. I've just found 10,000 ways that won't work.” I wanted to do a simple boat with an air propeller as propulsion with basic RC equipment, but my first prototypes acted more like fast diving submarines than flying boats. They were too heavy, too unstable and too small. I finally went for a more conventional marine setup. The hardware is easily available in any boat hobby shop. In my latest prototype I reduced the thickness of the hull from 3mm to 1,6mm and almost double the overall size. It looks great and flies well. This model is easily modifiable; the foils just interlock in the hull and can be easily removed and changed. There are 15 parts altogether and they can be printed without rafters or supports (PLA) in any printer that can print in a volume of 18cm x 18cm x 18cm. I will update the files to be printable on a 15cm height printer. The hull of the latest version is in three parts glued together using 5 minutes epoxy. The front foil is in four parts allowing to print a large foil (modified Naca 4412-33 profile). There are almost no RC hydrofoil models or plans available and very limited info on them, so I hope that this project will serve as a base for anyone interested in pushing it further. Thanks’ a million for the learning experience and having make an old dream come true!
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