Definition of common RC Airplane terms
As you find out about the RC Airplane hobby, you will encounter numerous of the following terms:
Engine - This is most often an internal combustion (IC) engine. Somewhat just like your vehicle or lawnmower engine in that fuel is burned inside a cylinder, which drives a piston, which turns a shaft. However, there are some markedly important differences.
Motor - from time to time used instead of "engine". Also refers to the increasingly common electric motors used instead of the IC engine.
Nitro - Refers to fuel containing Nitro methane. From time to time refers to just the nitro methane ingredient itself, as in: "this fuel contains 15% nitro".
Glow Fuel - Same as nitro fuel. It's called "glow" because the engine uses a glow plug rather than the spark plug realized in gasoline engines.
Glow Plug - A heated element that causes the fuel to burn. The plug has a steady glow rather than an intermittent spark.
Battery - May refer to the power battery of an electric motor, or the battery for the radio receiver.
Receiver - Much like your vehicle radio, the receiver gets radio waves sent through the air. These waves contain instructions for the servos that move the RC airplane's controls.
Transmitter - This is the box with joysticks that you hold, and use to send commands to the RC airplane.
Servo - Each servo is a small motor that is wired to the receiver. If given instructions to do so by the transmitter, the servo moves a definite amount, which also moves the aircraft control surface that is mechanically connected to it.
Servo arm - Connects the servo motor to the pushrod
Pushrod - Connects the servo arm to the control horn
Control Horn - Connects the pushrod to the control surface or device, e.g.: rudder, elevator, aileron, throttle, speed control
Rudder - The movable part at the back of the vertical fin. Causes the airplane to rotate left or right (yaw) about a vertical axis.
Elevator - The movable part at the back of the horizontal stab. Causes the airplane to rotate up or down (pitch) about a horizontal axis.
Aileron - The movable part at the back of the wing. Causes the airplane to roll left or right.
Vertical Fin - Part of the airplane's tail piece. Stabilizes the aircraft against yawing motions.
Horizontal Stab - Part of the airplane's tail piece. Stabilizes the aircraft against pitching motions.
Center of Gravity (CG) - The balance point of the plane. An unbalanced RC airplane will fly poorly and could crash.
Stall - Airplane fly's too slowly for the wing to produce upward lift. The plane will start to fall from the sky. A bad stall near the field is a common type of crash.
Spin - A stall combined with rotational motion. Could create a crash, or if done correctly, a fun aerobatic maneuver!
Propeller - Attached to the engine or motor, this constructs thrust that pulls the aircraft forward.
Electronic Speed Control (ESC) - On an electric RC airplane, device that regulates the battery voltage going to the motor. When the transmitter stick is moved, increases or decreases the motor and propeller speed, additionally as the thrust.
Brushed Motor - A type of electric motor where current is supplied by a mechanical sliding contact.
Brushless Motor - A type of electric motor where current is supplied without a mechanical sliding contact. Tends to be more powerful, longer long time, and more costly than comparable brushed motors. Also requires a specialized controller.
Two-stroke - type of internal combustion engine. The fuel is burned (power is supplied) on every second stroke of the piston. Most common and affordable type of RC engine.
Four-stroke - type of internal combustion engine. The fuel is burned (power is supplied) on every fourth stroke of the piston. Quieter, more fuel efficient, but typically more costly that comparable two-stroke.