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United States, OH, Strongsville
Joined Jan 2011
8 Posts
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Discussion
OMP Extra 300 100cc (35%) wing blew apart in mid-air.
This happened back in Sep 2017. I was flying my OMP Extra300 100cc (35%) with a DLE111 and flying about 75% throttle. I moved the sticks hard (all the way) simultaneously on two surfaces aileron and I think elevator. At that moment the left wing blew apart in mid-air. I was able to fly her with minimal control for about 5 seconds with one wing lol.
Did I do something stupid or should a plane like this be able to handle that type of stress? I never pushed the plane like that before. The airframe was in excellent shape with probably 25 flights. You will notice in the pictures the wing tube is perfect after the crash. Perhaps the covering blew apart and started the failure? Thanks. |
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United States, MN, Eagan
Joined Jun 2008
170 Posts
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I have that OMP extra and have 100s of flights and set up about the same as yours. You didn't say anything about 3D rates but if it happened in that condition any brand model can and will disintegrate. If it was a factory defect that will be problematic at best.
3/4 quarter throttle and full low rate deflection is probably stressing the airframe and I wouldn't admit to doing it and maybe getting away with it. Get into High Alpha or Post stall stuff, less stress and a lot more fun. Good Luck |
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Canada, ON, Kingston
Joined Sep 2015
129 Posts
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Dont know about the “Any brand model can and will disintergrate.” I have done numerous crankshafts, blenders and knife edge spins on Pilot models...one is even 8 years old. Not one issue with them thus far. |
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either the covering came off or the wing tube broke threw the wing
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Quote:
Planes have changed so much in design and strength over the year that most modern airframes can handle stresses like that. This aircraft was designed I believe about 10 years ago and at the time was on par with most other aircraft on the market. Back then you could not push a plane of this size that hard. There were limiting factors other than airframes back then that dictated this. One was engine size. 75-100's were all that really existed. The other was the fact that standard case size servo's hadn't really come up on power or killer gear trains yet. So back when this plane was designed it was a more common knowledge that you were really not supposed to fly a 35%+ size plane at 3/4 or so throttle around in level flight unless it was setup for pure mechanical advantage for IMAC type flying. Back then if you were to just fly a straight level pass with an aircraft setup for 3D at 3/4+ throttle you would have very likely lost your plane just due to flutter because the servo's did not have enough power to hold center like they do today. Hope that helps Any modern aircraft from a reputable brand will take pretty much anything you can throw at it. |
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Sorry for your loss, Steam, I had a similar one with my Edge 540 30cc although not comparable to yours in terms of cost.
I fly my planes very hard and never had experienced anything like that in thousands of flights. My Edge (which never crashed) had a major structural failure during a parachute maneuver (no power) so I believe it had a built-in construction failure point. You can see the details and video of the crash here Colton has a valid point, older planes were not designed with XA in mind. Ronaldo |
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