An RC Plane Made From a Red Bull

by JamesWhomsley in Workshop > Science

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An RC Plane Made From a Red Bull

Red Bull Airplane!? - Giving Red Bull Wings
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Hey chaps! Here's a fun little Instructable showing you how I built a flyable RC airplane from a Red Bull. This was originally published as an article on Flite Test.

Original Article - Check out more great content about RC on www.flitetest.com

Flight Video - Here's the video of the airplane flying!

YouTube Channel - If you like this project, you should go and subscribe.

Step 1: Drink Red Bull

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  • Take a Red Bull from your fridge
  • Drink it
  • Get hyped for the build ahead

Step 2: Prepare Electronics

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This aircraft uses simple 3-channel airplane electronics, so you're only going to need the bare essentials. If you've built any sort of RC airplane before, this stuff will be second nature to you.

  • Locate 2x 5g servos and center them with a servo tester.
  • Grab a receiver, motor, and ESC and make sure that the motor is spinning the right way when powered by a small 2s battery - I used an 800mAh.
  • Modify the firewall at this stage. It will need to be shaped to fit the rounded Red Bull profile.

Step 3: Assemble Internal Frame

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A great way to both strengthen the empty Red Bull and allow yourself to mount your electronics inside the plane is to create a tray, or frame, that can be slid in and out of the main body.

  • I went about opening the Red Bull by carefully slicing open the can along the bottom.
  • Trace circles onto foam board. These can be used as strengthening bulkheads.
  • Glue together a 'floor' for the battery, ESC and Reciever. I also added a verticle rectangle of foam glued above the floor for strength. At this point, you can also glue the motor firewall to the empty Red Bull whilst routing the ESC cables through a small opening cut into the front of the cylinder.

Step 4: Cut Tail

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At this point, you can cut out your tail surfaces and add a boom to the internal structure.

  • Using a dowel or some other lightweight yet sturdy tube, extend the fuselage by first finding a way to secure it to the internal structure. I cut holes and simply glued a carbon tube in place. Cut foam horizontal and vertical stabilizers. The dimensions of these should be proportioned to the size of your wings, but my elevator was around 12" wide and the rudder 6" high.

Step 5: Cut Wings

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The plane I came up with had extremely simple airfoiled wings. The style isn't all that dissimilar to the FT Simple Scout. The wing includes polyhedral which helps to keep the aircraft stable in flight. You can create this by gluing extra sections to the ends of the wings.

  • Simply measure out seperate rectangles of foam board that are around 10x8" long each. This will be folded in half to create a wing.
  • Score in the center to divide the 10x8 into 2x attached 5x8" rectangles. This makes the top and bottom sides of the wing.
  • Measure 1" back from the centre score line on one side and score another line. This will make your basic airfoil shape.
  • Bevel each of the edges of the center score line. This allows the wing to be folded back on itself.
  • You can add extra sections to the wings that are angled upwards to create polyhedral.

Step 6: Attach Wings

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I did this with dowels, but this is probably not the best idea. You could cut a wing slot all the way through the can, but this would make it difficult for the structure to be slid in and out of the aluminum cylinder. It could also be mounted above the can with help from a few struts.

  • Drill holes
  • Insert dowels
  • Drill holes into wing profiles
  • Slide foam wings onto dowels

Again, you may want to come up with a better solution than this!

Step 7: Hook Up Pushrods

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This is a simple process of connecting your control rods from the servos to the control surfaces.

  • Run rods from the servos to the surfaces.
  • Locate control horns.
  • Create a 'z' bend to attach rod to horn.
  • Glue horn in place on surface.

Step 8: Maiden It!

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By this point, you'll have a fairly finished airplane. The only thing left to do is to balance it out, test glide the plane and go fly for the first time. After programming a little expo (30 percent or so on the rudder and elevator), I hopped the plane into the air. It flew perfectly adequately right from the start. With some trimming, the plane flew hands-off. Admittedly, the un-aerodynamic fuselage and draggy wings didn't make the aircraft a superb flyer, but it was a decent one.

I hope you enjoyed this Instructable! If you did, comment down below to let me know. Thanks!

Visit my YouTube Channel - ProjectAir