Which RC planes are best?
Kids start flying with paper gliders they make themselves, then move on to balsa wood gliders that go farther and stay aloft longer. When kids first get into powered flight, some begin with tethered aircraft they fly in circles around themselves, changing only speed and altitude. Radio-controlled airplanes cut the cord and replace it with radio waves sending flight instructions from a handheld controller.
If you are looking for an RC for a beginner, take a close look at the HobbyZone Carbon Cub RC Airplane. This plane is capable of loops, rolls and upside-down flight when pilots become more skilled.
What to know before you buy an RC plane
Airplanes and drones are both capable of flight, but each has a different purpose. Therefore, don’t buy one or the other thinking they are the same thing.
Airplanes
Airplanes are fixed-wing aircraft with horizontal and vertical stabilizers at the rear. Airplanes use puller or pusher propellers to convert forward thrust into speed.
Drones
Drones are hovercraft that use the downward force of three or more propellers to allow the drone to hover in place. This is what makes them excellent video camera platforms.
How much experience does the pilot have?
When flying a powered aircraft hundreds of feet away from you, things can go wrong even when the pilot is an experienced one. The package on that good-looking RC plane may say “ready to fly”, but is the pilot ready too? Before your RC airplane starts its first flight, make sure you:
- Understand the rules and regulations governing the flying of RC planes where you live.
- Ask the company that insures your home and cars what sorts of policies will protect you in the event your RC plane damages someone else’s property.
- Find a large open