The canary yellow airplane glides in a smooth circle, picking up speed as it gently dips its nose and begins its descent.
But there’s no runway in sight.
The plane, a model powered solely by a lone rubber band, is coming in to land on the floor of the gymnasium inside the Hockessin Police Athletic League.
It’s an example of indoor freeflight model airplane flying, a pastime made popular in the 1930s during the Golden Age of Flight and resurrected today by a group of Hockessin enthusiasts.
They call it freeflight because the pilot has no control over the plane once it takes off, explained Newt Bollinger of Little Falls Village.
Each airplane, painstakingly built from balsa wood and tissue paper, is powered by a propeller that is attached to a tightly coiled rubber band that unwinds to spin the propeller and move the plane, he said.
| Indoor Freeflight Demonstration
Expert flyers will show and explain freeflight model airplanes Thursday, Jan. 28 from 11:30 a.m. to 1 p.m. Hockessin Police Athletic League, 7259 Lancaster Pike, Hockessin For more information, call 302-239-8861 |
But a pilot must prepare the plane to fly a certain way before it takes off in a process called trimming, explained Hockessin resident Eric Teder.
Trimming involves twisting, turning or bending the plane’s wings, tail and rudder so that it flies in a circle once it’s released in the air, he said.
“It’s really all experimentation,” Teder said. “A lot of people in this are engineering types who have a lot of fun trying to solve problems.”
Trim a plane the wrong way and it’ll crash into the ground shortly after takeoff or soar too high into the air so it stalls, he said.
But he said there is another element to freeflying that makes the hobby challenging – the motor.
Instead of being powered by a pair of double A batteries, these planes fly by rubber band, so making sure that band is the proper length and width is vital to an airplane’s flying time, he said.
Pilots use a device that resembles a miniature spaghetti maker to grind rubber strips into thinner pieces, Teder said. The number of winds determines how long the plane will fly, he said - unless it smacks into the wall mid-flight.
For an average one-minute flight inside the gym, the band must be wound 1,500 to 1,800 times, Bollinger said. But he uses a special tool with a crank that counts the number of winds, instead of twisting it each time with his fingers.