Super Sportster 40 Mk-I (ARF)
March 2005
Having wrung out all my enjoyment from this airplane, I gave it away
to someone who was looking to move up to the next level from a basic
trainer.
April 6, 2003
I bought this aircraft used off of Ebay, mostly on a whim. I threw in
a last minute bid, and to my horrer I won. Now what do I tell my
wife?!? :-) I fixed up a number of things such as adding a tail wheel,
putting checkerboard on the bottom of the wing, fixing some shipping
damage, replacing a missing carburator screw on the engine, etc. It is
a very nice aircraft, a wonderful flyer, and looks very cool from
every angle in the air and on the ground. I really like the Super
Sportster lines.
April 22, 2003

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My wife and daughter came out to witness the maiden (for me) flights.
Hoping for the thrill of victory, but expecting the agony of
defeat. :-)

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I flew the aircraft for the first time on Tuesday, April 22, 2003. I
was somewhat apprehensive because this would be my first tail dragger,
and first low wing aircraft. But I figured how hard could it be,
right? But I brought along my bushel basket just in case.
It turns out my nervousness was completely unjustified. This is a
wonderful flying aircraft. The take off run tracked straighter than
any tricycle gear aircraft I've ever flown. Just hit full throttle
and don't mess with anything. It tracks along the ground like it's on
rails. With a little up trim, it will gently rise off the gound on
it's own and head skyward ... it's about as easy to take as a trainer.
(You can mess with the rudder on take off if you want to make it look
like it's a handful, but that is optional.)

SS40-5
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She's also a beauty in the air ... very stable and she "flies like
she's on rails." She's not as fast as I was dreading (which was kind
of welcome.) Full throttle, she flies at a managable speed.
I was worried about stall behavior though, so I tried a few stalls
with plenty of altitude. Look out, this thing drops altitude fast
when you stall it and if you hold a lot of elevator you can hold the
stall longer than you have altitude. But center the elevator and she
flies right out of danger. I've heard of people stalling these sorts
of planes on final approach and that's something you definitely want
to avoid... especially on that last low slow turn.
So for my landings I trimmed back (nose-up) a little on the elevator
to slow the aircraft down and tried to resist the urge to pull back on
the stick. I added some throttle through the turn to base and final
to make sure I kept the speed up (I am getting a lot of nose drop in
turns ... maybe nose heavy with fuel?) and then coasted in.
Update: I found I have much better luck if I push my down wind leg
out further from myself so I can make a much wider/gentler turn to
base and final. With my sweet stick and with a trainer you can really
wind up a tight 180 and be all lined up for the final approach.
However with this higher performance aircraft things work a lot better
if you make wider gentler turns on final ... less nose drop, less risk
of a stall, and everything works out a lot smoother. Today the
sun was in exatly the wrong place for my first landing approaches so I
had to duck "under" it and fly my approach much lower and flatter than
I would have liked to, and remember to keep my speed up, etc. etc.
This resulted in some bouncing and long roll outs, but nothing major.
The successful completion of my landing was never in doubt (at least
not by me.) :-)
All in all this is a very sweet aircraft. I'm not sure I'd
recommend it for a 2nd aircraft -- but definitely a 3rd for after
you've mastered something along the lines of a "stik". Some people
insist that all R/C modelers should have at least one stik. I think I
will now insist that all R/C modelers have at least one Super
Sportster. AWESOME AIRPLANE!!!! I definitely would recommend
this to anyone looking for a fun, great flying airplane.
June 30, 2003
The glue seal around the canopy began to peel away so I had to rip
that off and reattach it.
The main landing gear also needs to be addressed. The stock main gear
is in two pieces with each wheel mounted individual under it's
respective wing, but this aircraft has a more generic one-piece
aluminum main gear mounted just forward of the wing. Unfortunately it
doesn't appear that the person who made this modification, took any
extra steps to beef up that area of the fuselage, so the mounting
screws are just going into weak balsa. I need to beef that up a bit
before my next flight because the main gear has gone all wobbly.
The other remaining issue is that I'm not getting full aileron throw.
I think the aileron linkage is hitting the fuselage inside and
limiting the travel. I may need to hack out a bit more of the wing
mounting plate inside to give better clearance ... that's something I definitely need to address before the next flight.
Finally, the engine get's a little dodgy when I pull inverted g's
(i.e. in an outside loop.) I'm not sure what's going on there, but
the clunk in the tank seems to be free to move and doesn't seem to be
getting hung up on anything. There's something a little dodgy with
the engine anyway ... it has a small leak in the carburater or needle
valve assembly some place and seeps fuel or draws air depending on the
context. Otherwise the engine runs good, so I need to keep my eyes
open for a cheap OS 40 FP carburater.
August 16, 2003
Ok, just for fun, I have converted my "Super Sportster" into a "Super
Splashter," or should I say "Super Floatster", or maybe "Super Sploatster"?
Hopefully not a "Super Splatster." :-)

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I haven't tried flying it yet ... maybe this coming weekend.
August 27, 2003
Pictures from my failed attempt to get airborn off floats. But we
still had a lot of fun. :-)

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March 18, 2005
Having flown this aircraft about all I wanted to fly it, and needing
space for new projects, I opted to give it away to a good home.
Hopefully the next owner can have as much fun with it as I did.
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