I am working on an atmospheric flyer that will be space capable... and cheap... the pulse jet is the only way to cross the van Allen belts... it's using the a different method to obtain lift... it's spherical... with two seats gimbaled to a compressed air tank of my own creation... the tank and pulse jet fire from the center top and bottom.... one pulls you up... the other pushes... and at 25 kilometer altitude there's no longer sufficient air to fly in... but the actual pull of gravity is inversely proportional to the square of the distance... so I can light the pulse jet and head on out... it's got built in radiation shielding... and does not have much mass... spheres have only one moment of inertia... I can obtain level flight with a gyroscope type switch to direct the flow of air or fuel... To the moon and back again... with Dr Punkin Pie Carew... and Yoda the cat... so he can sing the Song of his People... all the way there... and back again
@@richardcarew4708 .... Now look what you've done .. you've reignited my interest in these little manic bonkers machines. When do you plan to launch? Because I want to be there ;-) This one seems very quiet? Maybe it's the microphone. I only know the old dynajet and that sounded like a screaming banshee x 10 .... so maybe you need to incorporate some sound insulation. Also .... a lot of people run them static ... they tend to melt the steel welded tube after 30 secs or so. So you will need some sort of heat dissipation? Hope that all helps in your endeavor! But ... not that different from a scram jet? And govs pushing billions at that tech? Great post!
@@richardcarew4708 plenty of craft have crossed the Van Allen belts with all manner of propulsion tho. they actually aren't as much of a problem as they're stated to be by conspiracy theorists.
@@stephensalt6229 please explain how the onboard camera is of an assistance in determining the jets orientation? They aren't using fpv goggles and it doesn't appear to have any fpv monitors set up, leading me to think that it's only got a regular (non fpv) camera that can be used to record footage to be reviewed post flight.
+Paul Amarante Nazi Germany used pulsejet bombs to terrorize the British and destroyed much of the British landmarks. The Spitfires and Hurricanes usually flipped them (wingtip under buzzbombs) off of the coast to avoid casualties. The V1 buzzbombs were actually the first cruise missles, and the V2 rockets were the first to reach space making them the first : EDIT: IBCMs (not to be cofused with nuclear ICBMs, as these were non-nuclear and had no nuclear warheads at the time). Three years later....my bad...and yes, the Hurricanes COULD catch them when they were intercepted early enough, and the engines on a plane don't matter, a Spitfire is a Spitfire, and most people don't know about the Rolls-Royce Griffon for the later models, let alone the bubble canopy versions. And the Tempest and the Typhoon came so late in the war, they were barely sufficient enough to form a squadron at the time.
Story about the V1 told by my recently passed grand-mother : As a kid during the War, she lived in Polincove, a small French village located just under the straight line between Éperlecques and London. Éperlecques was the main base from which the Germans launched their V1 missiles, and she heard one flying over her head daily. One day, one flew very close to the churche's tower and nearly crashed into it.
My old man lived in London during the blitz. He collected bits of V1's and 2's to trade with his mates in the school yard. Heard many tales of the receiving end of those machines. Quite a weapon of war. Wouldn't want them aimed at me!
Pressure jets are KILLER. My first experience seeing one in action was as Desert Blast. Bob Lazar had a big Gluhareff attached to a gokart. The thing was loud as hell.
Also called a "buzz bomb", the Brits knew that when the buzzing sound stopped, the flying nazi bomb was out of fuel and was about to dive to the ground and explode. Time to duck and cover! What a horrible time to live through.
My Grandmother was in London during the war and told me when she heard them coming in her direction she would say to her self "keep going, keep going" referring to the engine, it was a relief when it passed over head.
While it's true that with the buzzing stopping, impact was imminent, it wasn't due to the fact that it was out of fuel. It was due to the fact that the dive caused the fuel flow to cease, but this was unintentional. The dive was triggered by a distance counter, not by running out of fuel. Eventually, the design was modified so that the fuel would keep going, and powered dive was achieved.
To the best of my knowledge this is the first thing using a pulse jet that I have seen fly, with the obvious exception of Hitler's Vengeance weapons on archival film. Great aircraft! Kudos to the builder, and pilot.
Wow! Great flying with a pulse jet going so fast!! Looks like it might have come close to hitting a bird that flew across its path near the end. Good landing. Thumbs up!
Holy--!! I can't imagine how one flies this um, 'rocket...' That is about the most excitement a human being can stand! I almost fell out of my chair just watching the video!
Was the flying Dutch team in the ‘80’s the first to have flown this model? Still gives me chills down to my spine, uttermost respect for pilots being able to fly this speed bullet! Saw one crash in Germany, collected a little peace of the wing, amazing structure!
Did you include the onboard view of that left to right pass at 2:45 where it appears that you pulled up right before the trees from about 3 feet off the deck? I really wanted to see that one... or was it just not as close as it looked?
I saw the first flight of the Concord over London in 1969 as a boy. As a slightly older boy though my father saw the first VI Doodlebugs fall on London. My mother's house was damaged severely by a later buzzbomb and she and her mother were rescued from a hole in the roof. Pulse Jet too like this modern RC version. Dad is now dead but mum is still alive and both told me the sound they made and the horror of hearing them cut out. If they cut out too close you knew you were a gonna.
Fantastic camera work by the way! Very little shudder and the plane flew beautifully with superb control! Despite Dad's childhood experience he was very interested in aircraft and spent an early year or two starting as an apprentice etc, working on Aircraft engines ( Canberra, Vulcan (?) etc). He got a Spitfire scholarship to study engineering at Southampton University for his BSc. Somewhere I have a copy of the Walter Doernberger book on V1,V2's at the Peenemunde site. Great vid! He would have loved seeing it.
Even back in 2016, I didn't think that anyone still used those ear buster pulse jets any more The lost time i actually saw a Dyna Jet in action was in a U control speed model at a small local airport in the early '70s , It was incredibly fast and loud to say the least
Very impressive. I like the way she did her hair, very sassy. I like that aircraft, too. It takes a certain skill to handle spacial relationships with RC airframes, but the great speed that this thing moves at means there is NO margin for error.
That was exciting! At the rate the thing gains altitude, I wonder how high it could fly. "No throttle"? No problem! Just put it into a vertical climb. It may not slow it down much; but at least it won't run into anything.
1960, a Shipmate at Cheltenham Md talked about an incident involving an RC jet he and a friend had built and flown in Germany. (rudimentary compared to these). Somehow they let it get out of their transmitter range. You can guess the rest... Somehow it was traced back to their base and the powers that be to THEM, and they "experienced a conference" with the CO!! It had crashed thru the side of a house some 60 miles away and they were liable for a considerable number of marks in damages. The jet wasnt like the McCoy 50 they had been flying.
Great footage, and great piloting! Amazing that it even glides quite well... OK, just learned that two team members have German first names, that explains the good construction... ;-)
Supper Nice job! I SAW ONE OF THOSE RAM JETS 09-11-2011 FLYING OVER ALASKA DURING THE NO FLY TIME THE US HAD DECLARED. IT WAS FLYING REALLY HIGH OVER ANCHORAGE ALASKA HEADED WEST. I COULD SEE THE PULSES IN THE EXHAUST
Great build ! After the pulse jet got shut off/ran out of fuel I was suprised on how well it glided in . I know they're noisey but considering on how simple the engines are I'm suprised there arent more of them being made,
Quite impressive -- the smaller pulse jet operates fast enough that it doesn't really sound like the V-1 and more like a conventional single engine AC owing to the higher pulse frequency. This has to be a crap ton less expensive than a turbine based jet even if the fuel costs are higher. 250kph is pretty fast though it didn't look like it exceeded more than about 200kph in this demo.
@@kojack635 seen a vid where someone cut the two halves of a puls jet with a pattern welded the seems and used pressurized water to shape it think it was colinfurze edit :it is ⚠️warning ⚠️ little bit shocking
A pulse jet can be made with a jar and some holes in the lid that's how simple the operating principle is. Obviously to make it useful for flight the geometry needs to be optimised a bit but most of the cost is just R&D then it can be replicated quite easily (and cheaply replaced once it wears out)
Exactly! It looked so cool heading for the trees then suddenly shooting skyward, but the onboard camera seemed disappointing every time. Granted there would not be much besides clouds to look at, but it really spoiled the moment by cutting out too early.
I watched a video of another man who is playing with pulse jet technology... and he started with a small jar and a smallish puddle of fuel in the bottom... and a 10 mm hole in the lid... he lit the fuel through the hole and got it to fire for a few seconds... one attempt got a very high pitched scream out of a 250ml jar with methanol fuel or something like that... instead of coughing and sputtering... it started screaming.... and he thought it was not working... it was oscillating at a very high frequency... Tesla would have loved it 😍... I did
How fast is it? Did you measure that? A very simple way to do that is let a simple handheld GPS (Garmin 62 or similar) as a payload record a track and then read out the max speed from that file. Just a suggestion! ;-)
well i have a jetster 20 kit and a old dynajet pulsejet.. i was getting ready to build it for spring. now im not so sure i could fly it... if it would even hold together
Ah, the sound of pulse jets over England, you gotta love it.
the old age pensioners would argue differently i think
Werner von Braun apparently once commented - we aim for the moon but sometimes we hit England !
Goehring once commented after a V2 crashed onto a Luftwaffe base next door, destroying some planes "It lacks range".
I caught the reference.
HA HA...😅
I love pulse jets, simple things. Two settings, all out madness and off.
Just like my love life
V1 bomb has ran out of fuel.
Watch your back
I am working on an atmospheric flyer that will be space capable... and cheap... the pulse jet is the only way to cross the van Allen belts... it's using the a different method to obtain lift... it's spherical... with two seats gimbaled to a compressed air tank of my own creation... the tank and pulse jet fire from the center top and bottom.... one pulls you up... the other pushes... and at 25 kilometer altitude there's no longer sufficient air to fly in... but the actual pull of gravity is inversely proportional to the square of the distance... so I can light the pulse jet and head on out... it's got built in radiation shielding... and does not have much mass... spheres have only one moment of inertia... I can obtain level flight with a gyroscope type switch to direct the flow of air or fuel...
To the moon and back again... with Dr Punkin Pie Carew... and Yoda the cat... so he can sing the Song of his People... all the way there... and back again
@@richardcarew4708 .... Now look what you've done .. you've reignited my interest in these little manic bonkers machines. When do you plan to launch? Because I want to be there ;-) This one seems very quiet? Maybe it's the microphone. I only know the old dynajet and that sounded like a screaming banshee x 10 .... so maybe you need to incorporate some sound insulation. Also .... a lot of people run them static ... they tend to melt the steel welded tube after 30 secs or so. So you will need some sort of heat dissipation? Hope that all helps in your endeavor!
But ... not that different from a scram jet? And govs pushing billions at that tech?
Great post!
@@richardcarew4708 plenty of craft have crossed the Van Allen belts with all manner of propulsion tho. they actually aren't as much of a problem as they're stated to be by conspiracy theorists.
The pilot's skills and his aircraft are phenomenal. Thanks for posting tbobborap1.
thanks mountain
Love how it maintains the sound of a steady speed propeller
Except for the parts when it flies by the viewers
There is no prop. It's a pulse jet
@@dingo8babym20Yes, but it sounds like one.
Can somebody tell me how the hell do you know when it's upside down when it's at a distance and going trillions of miles per hour.
Pilot has good spatial thinkting abailities and eyesight I guess
Camera....on board.
Bottom is black top is red white. Plus like tons of practice, many crashes, and a little bit of money
@@stephensalt6229 please explain how the onboard camera is of an assistance in determining the jets orientation? They aren't using fpv goggles and it doesn't appear to have any fpv monitors set up, leading me to think that it's only got a regular (non fpv) camera that can be used to record footage to be reviewed post flight.
@@cflin4637 a smart phone...the same way a phantom drone works...hope that is good for you...it can attach to the controller.
imagine flying this with a vr head set
so much lag
been done fpv
tell that to the pilots in langly lol
just put a big ass pulsejet on a plane and fly that
FLYINGTAMKS You would need like a thousand..
Great control and great pictures from the onboard camera.
Moments later, shot down by an RC Hurricane
Or... flipped...
lol
Kj16V buzzbomb ?
That is sooo wrong, but funny....
+Paul Amarante Nazi Germany used pulsejet bombs to terrorize the British and destroyed much of the British landmarks. The Spitfires and Hurricanes usually flipped them (wingtip under buzzbombs) off of the coast to avoid casualties. The V1 buzzbombs were actually the first cruise missles, and the V2 rockets were the first to reach space making them the first : EDIT: IBCMs (not to be cofused with nuclear ICBMs, as these were non-nuclear and had no nuclear warheads at the time). Three years later....my bad...and yes, the Hurricanes COULD catch them when they were intercepted early enough, and the engines on a plane don't matter, a Spitfire is a Spitfire, and most people don't know about the Rolls-Royce Griffon for the later models, let alone the bubble canopy versions. And the Tempest and the Typhoon came so late in the war, they were barely sufficient enough to form a squadron at the time.
That was radical! Wow! Am I the only one that wants to see the entire flight through the planes perspective? Awesome, awesome RC plane. Great job.
Glad you enjoyed it!
Story about the V1 told by my recently passed grand-mother : As a kid during the War, she lived in Polincove, a small French village located just under the straight line between Éperlecques and London. Éperlecques was the main base from which the Germans launched their V1 missiles, and she heard one flying over her head daily. One day, one flew very close to the churche's tower and nearly crashed into it.
scary memories
My old man lived in London during the blitz. He collected bits of V1's and 2's to trade with his mates in the school yard. Heard many tales of the receiving end of those machines. Quite a weapon of war. Wouldn't want them aimed at me!
@@bashkillszombies she told me she would hear them several times a day. I can't imagine how scary it would've been to hear them coming.
Perfect! 👍👍👍 can someone please tell me where to buy a ready-made model airframe for this engine? Time is my enemy 😉
Ok Hans, we get it bro, she's beautiful.
Hah I thought when I saw the image on the tail “damn she died young, such a tragedy”
Rob Graham same here mate, seems like a tribute memorial
She was very beautiful indeed.
Fantastic video. Great piloting !
*thumbs up*
is that snake at 1:31?
RCScaleAirplanes I
InstaBlaster...
Badass. And respect to the pilot. I don't think I'd fly it that close to so many people. It looks wicked dangerous!
its a bit scary filming it as well !
Incredible fast and with on board camera! It is beautiful!!!
It sounds like an old airplace but moves and looks like a jet plane.
It's a pulse jet. They make that noise
The bigger the engine the lower (and louder) the pulses get!
And has no moving parts.
well the fron has some "moving" parts to only allow airflow in one direction
Abrar Borno - depends- some pulse jets have some kind of a lamella valve which wears out after a while, depending on which kind of pulse you use
Gracious that was fun.
Nice long tube pulse Jet modifies the sound to a Exciting Level.
😉
Awesome! What type of fuel is used?
No idea
Pressure jets are KILLER. My first experience seeing one in action was as Desert Blast. Bob Lazar had a big Gluhareff attached to a gokart. The thing was loud as hell.
V-1 flying bomb :-D
yep
Also called a "buzz bomb", the Brits knew that when the buzzing sound stopped, the flying nazi bomb was out of fuel and was about to dive to the ground and explode. Time to duck and cover! What a horrible time to live through.
doodlebug.
My Grandmother was in London during the war and told me when she heard them coming in her direction she would say to her self "keep going, keep going" referring to the engine, it was a relief when it passed over head.
While it's true that with the buzzing stopping, impact was imminent, it wasn't due to the fact that it was out of fuel. It was due to the fact that the dive caused the fuel flow to cease, but this was unintentional. The dive was triggered by a distance counter, not by running out of fuel. Eventually, the design was modified so that the fuel would keep going, and powered dive was achieved.
To the best of my knowledge this is the first thing using a pulse jet that I have seen fly, with the obvious exception of Hitler's Vengeance weapons on archival film. Great aircraft! Kudos to the builder, and pilot.
thanks doug - check out our playlist of ten pulse jet videos dating back to 1989 - th-cam.com/video/gKrojC8CJ2c/w-d-xo.html
Wow! Great flying with a pulse jet going so fast!! Looks like it might have come close to hitting a bird that flew across its path near the end. Good landing. Thumbs up!
Since, like, 15 years, I'm thinking about buying a metal lathe to make pulsejets......
Back in the '70's we flew these on control lines with 70' of wire. 200+ mph. Fun stuff.
True!! You could get dizzy trying to keep up.
3:47 oh man, I was very worried when I saw the bird!
Pulse jets never fail to amaze me. Brilliant
How much TNT it takes?)
Wow that is amazing , no landing while that beast of an engine is roaring away !!!
Holy--!! I can't imagine how one flies this um, 'rocket...' That is about the most excitement a human being can stand! I almost fell out of my chair just watching the video!
Was the flying Dutch team in the ‘80’s the first to have flown this model? Still gives me chills down to my spine, uttermost respect for pilots being able to fly this speed bullet! Saw one crash in Germany, collected a little peace of the wing, amazing structure!
Whoever is flying that is brilliant! Top effort! Great plane! Loved the vindaloo reference :)
It's like the Formula-1 of RC flying. I bet anything else would feel really slow after flying these for a while.
Did you include the onboard view of that left to right pass at 2:45 where it appears that you pulled up right before the trees from about 3 feet off the deck? I really wanted to see that one... or was it just not as close as it looked?
hand on Hart... This is the best soundtrack I have heard on Rc areoplain. full stop....👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍👍
THANKS FOR THE DETAILED DESCRIPTION. IT WAS EVEN A LITTLE BIT LOUDER THAN THE PULSE JET.
good
The onboard Cameras are great!
thanks kev
now thats a plane worth building and flying love it, and probably the best landing of the day
Those are some very strong wings. The early delta wing jets make a lot more sense to me now.
I saw the first flight of the Concord over London in 1969 as a boy. As a slightly older boy though my father saw the first VI Doodlebugs fall on London. My mother's house was damaged severely by a later buzzbomb and she and her mother were rescued from a hole in the roof. Pulse Jet too like this modern RC version.
Dad is now dead but mum is still alive and both told me the sound they made and the horror of hearing them cut out. If they cut out too close you knew you were a gonna.
many thanks for your comments rick, i have similar stories from my parents as well
Fantastic camera work by the way! Very little shudder and the plane flew beautifully with superb control! Despite Dad's childhood experience he was very interested in aircraft and spent an early year or two starting as an apprentice etc, working on Aircraft engines ( Canberra, Vulcan (?) etc). He got a Spitfire scholarship to study engineering at Southampton University for his BSc. Somewhere I have a copy of the Walter Doernberger book on V1,V2's at the Peenemunde site. Great vid! He would have loved seeing it.
Even back in 2016, I didn't think that anyone still used those ear buster pulse jets any more
The lost time i actually saw a Dyna Jet in action was in a U control speed model at a small local airport in the early '70s ,
It was incredibly fast and loud to say the least
That plane sounds like an old airplane, even though its jet powered.
That's because combustion of the gas happens in pulses much like in piston engine, not continuously like in turbojet.
Make me think about the v1 rocket
MrAshley160486 you mean the doodlebug, v2 was an ethanol rocket, doodlebug was pulsjet powered
Vengeance rocket 1
Good ole German tech
the V1 was a pulse jet.
Very impressive. I like the way she did her hair, very sassy. I like that aircraft, too. It takes a certain skill to handle spacial relationships with RC airframes, but the great speed that this thing moves at means there is NO margin for error.
This is awesome. Nice flying for sure. I love the onboard shots.
Brilliant! Great Job! Retro power plant for a modern style airframe. Awesome! Thanks!!!
Great show and amazing speed for RC
thanks doug
@3:52 he's out of fuel, take cover.........
V1 references?
@@Bren.nto6971 duh
I think Ukraine shoud licence the tech.
what is 250 KPH in description? means 250 km/h?
Kph (kilometers per hour) = km/h
Ya think?
Nice, I just wish my brain could think fast enough to fly one of those. Most impressive.
You and me both!
Fantastic, expert piloting! 👨🏼✈️
Thanks a lot Q !
The KISS concept at work! Love it!
That was exciting! At the rate the thing gains altitude, I wonder how high it could fly.
"No throttle"? No problem! Just put it into a vertical climb. It may not slow it down much; but at least it won't run into anything.
Does it works only by gas, that was on the start???
It has a gas container to keep the combustion. After initial start it starts burning and generating thrust.
WOW very impressive, with a camera? damn son!
Can i buy this or is this one unique?
i think its a one off unique build LP
well done! just wondering what is the top/avg speed?
And I hope its only BUZZ with NO bomb!?
the pilot told me it was clocked just over 200 mph somewhere else !
@@tbobborap1 Thank you! Im imagining to fly a rc plane with that speed must be exceedingly difficult. especially so close tothe ground
1960, a Shipmate at Cheltenham Md talked about an incident involving an RC jet he and a friend had built and flown in Germany. (rudimentary compared to these). Somehow they let it get out of their transmitter range. You can guess the rest... Somehow it was traced back to their base and the powers that be to THEM, and they "experienced a conference" with the CO!! It had crashed thru the side of a house some 60 miles away and they were liable for a considerable number of marks in damages. The jet wasnt like the McCoy 50 they had been flying.
Simply bloody AWESOME ... in every sense of the word.
1:12 *"Good shot. Good engines. Good end speed. Gear up"*
Don't worry, London, it's just a plane, not V-1. :D
Any veterans would get a far away look in their eyes hearing this.
wow coolest plane on youtube !!, realy love the flight
I love these pulse jets and the incredible skill of their pilots.
thanks
Does this burn more fuel than an equivalent rc turbine engine?
no idea scott
Great footage, and great piloting! Amazing that it even glides quite well...
OK, just learned that two team members have German first names, that explains the good construction... ;-)
lol - thanks igor
i think the're dutch
So how long can a pulse jet provide energy to fly this fast? And how fast does this thing fly?
as long as this video and over 200mph
Supper Nice job! I SAW ONE OF THOSE RAM JETS 09-11-2011 FLYING OVER ALASKA DURING THE NO FLY TIME THE US HAD DECLARED. IT WAS FLYING REALLY HIGH OVER ANCHORAGE ALASKA HEADED WEST. I COULD SEE THE PULSES IN THE EXHAUST
Pulsejet: the absolute best way to turn fuel into noise :)
That is just mega. Well done.
thanks tony
Does anyone know the speed it attained. It was going like the clappers by the looks of it!
Great build ! After the pulse jet got shut off/ran out of fuel I was suprised on how well it glided in . I know they're noisey but considering on how simple the engines are I'm suprised there arent more of them being made,
Great point roger !
Excellent piloting!
Omg that is mental! Love the onboard footage
thanks john
Quite impressive -- the smaller pulse jet operates fast enough that it doesn't really sound like the V-1 and more like a conventional single engine AC owing to the higher pulse frequency. This has to be a crap ton less expensive than a turbine based jet even if the fuel costs are higher. 250kph is pretty fast though it didn't look like it exceeded more than about 200kph in this demo.
I was thinking the same thing. It has to be several times cheaper than a traditional jet turbine setup
@@kojack635 seen a vid where someone cut the two halves of a puls jet with a pattern welded the seems and used pressurized water to shape it think it was colinfurze edit :it is ⚠️warning ⚠️ little bit shocking
In a video of another author but the same flight a commenter calculated the speed based on doppler effect: It is 299km/hr
A pulse jet can be made with a jar and some holes in the lid that's how simple the operating principle is. Obviously to make it useful for flight the geometry needs to be optimised a bit but most of the cost is just R&D then it can be replicated quite easily (and cheaply replaced once it wears out)
Could you strap one of these on a wing suit?
You always seem to stop the camera on the ascent!
Exactly! It looked so cool heading for the trees then suddenly shooting skyward, but the onboard camera seemed disappointing every time. Granted there would not be much besides clouds to look at, but it really spoiled the moment by cutting out too early.
Cool... beautiful music to my ears
I watched a video of another man who is playing with pulse jet technology... and he started with a small jar and a smallish puddle of fuel in the bottom... and a 10 mm hole in the lid... he lit the fuel through the hole and got it to fire for a few seconds... one attempt got a very high pitched scream out of a 250ml jar with methanol fuel or something like that... instead of coughing and sputtering... it started screaming.... and he thought it was not working... it was oscillating at a very high frequency... Tesla would have loved it 😍... I did
That jet is amazing!!
thanks - check out ten more here - th-cam.com/video/gKrojC8CJ2c/w-d-xo.html
Thank You for sharing.... 🙂
How fast is it? Did you measure that? A very simple way to do that is let a simple handheld GPS (Garmin 62 or similar) as a payload record a track and then read out the max speed from that file. Just a suggestion! ;-)
Would have liked to see more onboard footage
Que sonido tan hermoso!!! primera vez que lo escucho.
thank you
Can we send one of these into the stratosphere!!!!????? just for fun???
Needed longer clips of on-board..
"Vindaloo gone wrong" lol. Hot damn that thing is fast.
Sweet jeebus that thing is fast. I'm curious as to the scale speed of that bird.
My left ear felt great. Thanks.
ten thumbs up... real impressive and fun to watch.
where would i get a frame for a pulse jet? i have the pusle jet part.
1:33 flashbacks of ace combat 7 aka PTSD from the ADFX-10
Out With John ikr
That one was a nightmare
WOW!! Man, that was awsom! Great job!
Piloting skill is incredible
thanks
You accomplished what I had in mind! Many compliments, the model is awesome! The noise too LOL
Sounds like an Indy race car!! Love the doppler effect as it passes. You don't hear that with RC jets. At least not to this magnitude!! Very cool....
Beautiful flying
Was it a valved or valveless one?
How much flight time can it do?
no idea
How to make........ please tell me how to make a pulse jet
Does it only slow down when it's out of fuel?
well i have a jetster 20 kit and a old dynajet pulsejet.. i was getting ready to build it for spring. now im not so sure i could fly it... if it would even hold together
How fast did it go?
its been recorded at over 200mph before this video