Crashes…
September 9th, 2008 by
David
Sig Kadet Senior before the crash.
On August 29th we were performing some long range testing with the UAV (Sig Kadet Senior) and everything appeared to be going smoothly. It was navigating beautifully and maintaining altitude and airspeed very well. When slowly the link quality started to decrease, it then lost the communication link, but not without the notification that it was “landing now.” It ended up landing in a tree, which did not bode well for the UAV.
It turns out that the failsafes had been programmed incorrectly so instead of “flying home” it immediately tried to “Land Now” since the trigger time was set to 0 seconds instead of a couple minutes. This was a rather unfortunate fact, and could have easily been avoided. The decision then had to be made of whether or not to rebuild, with only 18 days left until we left for Australia. If we were to rebuild we also had to decide whether or not to stick with the Sig Kadet, which was quickly ruled out due to the fact that the stock wing could not handle our payload. So instead we selected an ARF Senior Telemaster, which had a much stronger stock wing and more spacious fuselage, this also meant that we needed to upgrade to a larger 1.20 O.S. Four-Stroke engine.


Remains of the Sig Kadet Senior
We scrambled to order the parts and to get the Telemaster together. Fortunately all of the electronics survived the crash and we were able to get the Telemaster flying within a week. Leaving a little more than a week to test the new airframe and UAV configuration.
The new Senior Telemaster UAV
Then to add even more to the drama, during early testing with the Telemaster, it was getting late and visibility was quickly diminishing so we decided to bring it in to land. As the pilot came in for the approach, the airplane was much further out than expected and it dropped below the horizon and control was lost. We feared for the worst, we expect the airplane to be in thousands of pieces, with no time for us to rebuild once again. We quickly hopped in the car and tried to find it. As we drove to the adjacent field we found the Telemaster sitting in the grass as pictured below (the wing was attached when we arrived, but was removed to inspect the internal damage):
Senior Telemaster after minor crash
This was probably the best crash we could have hopped for, one broken wheel hub, bent landing gear, and a few broken bulkheads inside the fuselage. The repairs were quickly performed later that evening and we were back to testing within a day.
Note: This post has been backdated to reflect the order of actual events.
Posted in Construction, Flying |
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