So I dare not try a plane where fast reactions are required, and in a roll even up and down get inverted. I wanted to fly RC-planes, but I can't even drive and park an RC-car: I keep getting left and right mixed-up. The first day at the flight field for sefety inspection of my Sig Kadet, the inspector looking at it said "Some of us are builders and some of us are flyers. I'd still stick it in the occasional tree though. The best I did was to be able to look over my shoulder for landing so the controls wouldn't act reversed. Later in life I got into RC but I didn't fly any better. I kept having to make the those wings shorter and shorter until finally it just wouldn't fly. ![]() They all had "silhouette" fuselages and there was one that would always shear the wings perfectly at the fuselage on a nose plant (I was good at nose plants!). Then I'd spend a couple weeks rebuilding. I'd fly them until they all fit in a 5 gallon bucket. It knows the layer height and line width. Cura knows how far it's traveling and extruding. An internet search comes up with the density of 1.24gr/cm3 the same as Cura uses. I did the math on a hand calculator and came up with the same numbers. If you were to weigh 416mm of filament it should weigh 1.24 grams. I wonder about the 1.24gr/cm3 that is being used as the filament density. Well then there is a calculation error somewhere.
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