![]() Its quite small for the large job that it does. The servos look to be around 9grams and the receiver has a built in electronic speed control on top of having the ACT and X-port features inside it. You can also see the pre-installed rudder and elevator control rods protruding from the rear of the fuselage. It's all held in place with 2 small screws. The horizontal stabilizer has 2 holes which line up with the 2 alignment pins in the vertical stabilizer. Vertical stabilizer and also has the steerable tail-wheel bracket already installed on it. The cowling comes already factory mounted and does not require the pilot to mount it for fuselage has a plastic plate on the bottom which aids in aligning the NOTE: I removed the cowling just so I could take the pictures of the motor/gearbox assembly and to show the right and down thrust built into the plane. There is also the X-port connection, X-port add on attachment point on the underside of the fuselage. Notice the right thrust and down thrust installed in the motor - GREAT! and all too uncommon in these RTF models. Factory installed stickers and plastic reinforcements on the leading and trailing edge to keep the rubber bands from cutting into the fuselage is complete in every detail. *8AA batteries for the included transmitter. *instruction manual with instructional DVD, *120vac house charger, AND 12vdc vehicle peak charger (!) *including a 1000mah NiMh 7cell 8.4V battery pack, *fully assembled airframe complete with one-piece wing! *The first photo shows the large parts the kit contains: Jam packed with features, it boasts incredible scale looks, 3-channel control, a ready-to-fly design, and X-Port expandability." "No other teach-yourself-to-fly airplane on the market offers as much as the HobbyZone Super Cub. Many of these models, perhaps for cost or other reasons, are 2-channel, but this cub is 3-channel, with pitch control separate from throttle, so that it flies more like most RC aircraft, without the complexity of being 4-channel and a beginner trying to understand the difference between yaw and roll control. One of the great challenges for manufacturers in this hobby is to make a GOOD looking model that's also easy to learn to fly, particularly one that has a reasonable pricetag and is durable and quick to assemble, to boot. I really hope this might be a known issue.| Wingspan: | Wing Area: | Weight: | Length: | Wing Loading: | Servos: | Transmitter: | Receiver: | Battery: | Motor: | ESC: | Prop: | Manufacturer: |HobbyZone If you need any more info, I'm happy to give it to you. Googling for "PKZ1080 Problems" or "servo only pulling in one direction" didn't help me. ![]() I hope you get an idea of my Problem and my English is not too hard to understand. The servo doesn't even pull when there's nothing attached in the back. There were no obstacles and changing the angle for them didn't help. I checked the servo-cords in the back of the plane. I don't have a programming cable for the DXe, since I just started and thought I might be fine with the Standard Setup first. I tried re-binding the Transmitter/Receiver outside of my Appartement, bc someone suggested GPS problems… On top of that, I switched the cables for the servos and then I can control the elevators in full range of motion, but the rudder only moves to one side.įor me it seems, that when I want to push the Right Control stick on the DXe up (so usually making the elevator moving down) there is some Kind of (Software?) restriction. But when turning on the DXe both servos move in the full range of motion. Meaning that in the standard setup I can fully control the rudder left and right, but the elevator will only go up and not down.Īt first, I thought this might be a (mechanical) servo-issue and I might have to replace it. Well - almost ! One of the PKZ1080 doesn't use the full range of Motion. ![]() The binding-process with the DXe worked fine and I can Control the Propeller/thrust as well as the servos for Rudder/Elevator-Control. Now, I set everything up as explained in the manual. HobbyZone Super Cub S as RTF-Version (with built-in receiver) I recently bought the following setup since it got great reviews and seems to be a good beginners choice (panic button! ): I am new to RC and pretty excited to get started.
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