And today was the day that the 1920's Racer hit the water for the first time – well over a year since I bought the plans. All went well apart from several learnings:
1. At full throttle the boat climbs gently out of the water – a lovely sight
2. But the small port holes down the side that are supposed to keep the motor cool manage to collect quite a bit of water! And they don't cool the motor either. Cleverly (luckily) no damage from the water as the electronics are all well out of the way.
3. The electric 600 motor gets quite hot and is really noisy. Turns out most of this noise is coming from the relatively cheap steel motor mount I used which vibrates. Not sure how to tackle this one as a replacement motor mount would require quite a bit of re-fixing.
4. I managed the classic mistake of not adjusting the frame rate in the Spektrum DX3R Tx for the analogue servo I'm using for the rudder. By the end of three battery packs the rudder was twitching really badly and it seems I've managed to cause enough damage to mean a replacement digital servo is required.
5. I've come home planning my next build – already looking through the plans and checking balsa stocks!!
Fantastic hobby 
