May 22, 2024
Description
This is my first upload here – I spent a huge amount of time over the last few weeks designing and perfecting this, and in the end I decided to share it. This is a working, balanced, aerodynamic glider that can be thrown, or launched from a straw.
It flies like a paper airplane and is designed using similar principles. The tail provides stability and the wings provide lift.
It works decently enough to fly across a living room. It's like a paper airplane; there is a bit of hit/miss -- sometimes you get the angle wrong and it just flops over. Works better indoors; it's too light to hold stability against random wind.
You get more power and aiming accuracy if you launch by holding your finger on the plane while the pressure builds up, and then launch by releasing your finger.
Keep your aim horizontal – it's a plane, not a rocket; it was designed to fly horizontally. It actually flies smoother if you aim slightly down. If the angle is too high it will nose up and stall.
Instructions:
I have scaled the model so the INSIDE of the tube is exactly 10mm. You will need to measure your straw, add 0.5 - 1.0 mm, and scale the model before you print it. The straw should be snug but slide in & out smoothly.
Printing tips:
I printed with .2mm layer height and a .4mm nozzle. You will need some supports for the wings, but the basic “snug” or “organic” will suffice. Print at least 2 at a time to give the layers sufficient time to cool.
Turn on “avoid crossing perimeters” so that you don't get stringing inside the tube.
For material I recommend ABS – it is cheap, lightweight, and you can strengthen it in post-processing by applying acetone or nail polish.
Other materials I've tried:
Dimension Guidelines:
| Straw Type | Diameter | Scale Factor | Final Weight (ABS) | Final Height |
| Cheapest supermarket straw | 5mm | 55% | 1.57 g | 101 mm |
| Coffe shop / fast food straw | 7mm | 75% | 3.02 g | 138 mm |
| Fat Juice Straw | 8mm | 85% | 3.96 g | 156 mm |
This is just a guideline, estimates are from a .4mm nozzle, .2mm layer height, as given by PrusiaSlicer – but in practice mine came out about 10-15% heavier. It's still good though. For reference, a piece of paper is 5g.
License:
Creative Commons — Attribution — Noncommercial