by IcraveAkro » Wed Apr 18, 2007 7:11 am
what type of aircraft do you plan on flying? I've always based my routines on real life performers routines. Taking little snippets from their routines and making it my own. Watch Sean D. Tucker, Patty Wagstaff or Micheal Goulian, you cant really go wrong with finding inspiration from these masters of the sky. Not only do I fly a P51D demo but I also fly a routine in LIC's Christen Eagle II that has a heavily modified config file. I increased the effectiveness of the rudder so now I can accomplish double hammerheads. I also increased the horsepower and effectiveness of the prop. Also the guys at LIC made me a three bladed prop. I increased the effectiveness of the ailerons and lowered the weight of the airplane. Why do all of this? to make it more high performance and in my book, the more high performance something is the more exciting it is. I try to keep all maneuvers in my 8 minute sequence as tightly knit together as I can. I go for precision and symmetry, crisp vertical and 45 degree lines as well as precise stops on hesitation rolls. I competed last year in the 2006 Virtual World Aerobatic Championships and won the 4 minute freestyle event and competing in that event has made me a much more competent virtual aerobatic pilot. The "key" to flying a performance to me is to keep it exciting and keep it precise, and honestly you will get a lot of enjoyment out of your display flying.
Bill
Pilot
American Virtual Airshows
www.myspace.com/americanvirtualairshows
Last edited by
IcraveAkro on Wed Apr 18, 2007 7:17 am, edited 1 time in total.
"Oh, I have slipped the surly bonds of earth,
Put out my hand, and touched the face of God"
-HIGH FLIGHT
By John Gillespie Magee, Jr.
September 3, 1941