Edmonds Aerospace Geminee Thunder

Edmonds Aerospace - Geminee Thunder {Kit}

Contributed by Frank G. Whitby

Construction Rating: starstarstarstarstar
Flight Rating: starstarstarstarstar_border
Overall Rating: starstarstarstarstar
Manufacturer: Edmonds Aerospace

Brief:
Geminee Thunder is an upscale version of the Edmonds Geminee twin glider.

Edmonds Gemini Thunder

Construction:
As with other Edmonds gliders, the kit comes complete with detailed instructions and well designed, precision cut balsa parts ready to be assembled. All of the parts were in perfect condition and high quality balsa was used throughout.

The assembly was very simple. Rob Edmonds justifiably prides himself on producing kits comprising the minimum number of parts and requiring no re-fitting of pieces prior to assembly. All pieces were dry fit and then glued with very small amounts of 5-minute epoxy. The instructions suggested using wood glue, but I did not have any on hand. I used epoxy sparingly so as to prevent unnecessary addition of weight.

The motor mount and coupler that joins the two halves of the glider required some careful adjustment during assembly. Alignment of the fin tips was aided by laying out the pieces on wax paper for gluing. The instructions recommend balancing the gliders with clay, but I could not lay my hands on any. I used some lead shot and masking tape to weight the nose of each glider instead. I did not measure the final constructed weight of the gliders.

The construction can be accomplished in an hour or so, but I spread out the construction over a few days. Construction is well within the ability of novice builders and the gliders have a very nice, stout feel to them. The biggest problem I faced was transporting the gliders to the launch site without inadvertently sitting on them in the car or other rough handling.

Finishing:
I did not paint the glider.

Construction Rating: 5 out of 5

Edmonds Gemini Thunder

Flight:
The instructions suggest using a D12-3, so that is what I used. I made a small thrust ring of masking tape and then taped the motor securely in place. The glider boosted very nicely to 200 feet or so and separation was very near apogee or just a bit past. The two gliders fell away from each other, began to descend, turned gently away from each other and came back up wind in a beautifully symmetric pair of spirals. The two gliders nearly met at the middle of their long sloping turns and then touched down at almost exactly the same moment about 100 feet apart traveling in opposite directions. The rear glider snagged a 12 inch tall clump of weeds at the last moment, causing it to twist as it hit the ground and caused the nose piece to break off. The front glider landed gently with no damage.

Recovery:
The motor mount tube was badly scorched by the heat of the D motor. The tube is crusty and slightly misshapen. I think I will have to replace it before the next flight. The nose of the rear glider can be glued back on and should be just fine. I think the noses of both gliders have slightly too much weight in them, so I could probably achieve a slightly shallower and more stable glide path if I removed a gram or so of nose weight from each glider.

Flight Rating: 4 out of 5

Summary:
Construction and flight of all Edmonds kits that I have built to date have been very satisfying. The Geminee Thunder is simple to build and would be an excellent choice for a beginner modeler wanting to show off with a beefy glider. It looks to me like the gliders should be able to withstand boost on an E impulse motor, so I plan to try this next. Despite the damage to the motor mount from the engine, the design appears to be flawless.

Overall Rating: 5 out of 5

Other Reviews
  • Edmonds Aerospace Geminee Thunder By Hank Helmen

    Brief: The Edmonds Geminee Thunder is a twin glider with a single 24mm rear engine. The gliders are supposed to boost up on D12-3 and then separate using the ejection charge. Glider should then circle slowly back to earth! Construction: Included in the kit is one balsa nose cone, one balsa "plug" (to join the glider body tubes), two 25mm body tubes, four sheets of ...

Flights

Comments:

avatar
H.W.H. (January 28, 2006)
Interesting review. Accurate in that my forward glider's glider to body tube balsa broke every time I flew it. I did not have a good boost on a C11-5 engine. I got a St. Louis Arch to a lawn dart with the engine ejecting out of the back with a loud Bang! I'm wondering what diameter and length launch rod to use? I did not paint mine either.
avatar
H.W.H (March 11, 2006)
Follow up to above review: Repaired Geminee Thunder glider fuselage and nose cone. Re-balanced both glider with hand toss test flights. March 11, perfect clear, no wind day. Made a new launch gantry consisting of 3/16" steel launch rod 4.5 feet long. Two 24 inch crossed two by fours for a base and a two foot extention post to hold the gliders up off the ground. Geminee Thunder on D12-3 launched well but began to arch over at 75 feet altitude. Looked like a classic nose dive into the ground but the gliders pulled out of the power dive at 30 feet and flew horizontally at Mach 2 for 50+ yards when it began yet another strange turn then... Exploded Spectacularly from the ejection charge! Balsa rain! Trailing edges of both glider's wings were badly burned from the engine exhaust. Had to extinguish wings with water bottle. Nose cone is Gone and balsa joiner piece is black and shredded. Probablly the most exciting rocket launch I have ever witnessed~! Repairable? Have to wait and see, Geminee is currently in a deep coma, on operating table (workbench) ... Hmmmmmm Hmmmmmm ... tick tick tick. What if it comes back to life and then goes back to its same bad habits?

comment Post a Comment