Fall Flying Checklist: Pre-Winter Inspection & Tune-Up for Your RC Airplane

By York R/C Club


Introduction

Cooler, denser autumn air is great for lift—but it also stresses motors, shrinks covering, and shortens daylight. Run through this pre-winter checklist now and you’ll finish the season flying strong while storing your model “mission-ready” for spring.

TL;DR — Give your airframe, power system, radio gear, and support kit one thorough afternoon of fall maintenance and you’ll avoid dead-stick landings, swollen LiPos, and cracked covering next year.


1 — Why a Fall Checklist Matters

  • Denser air loads engines and ESCs harder.
  • Batteries and balsa both dislike prolonged cold-soak.
  • Field hours shrink; repair time gets tight.
  • A final tune-up now means the model can be stored ready to fly.

2 — Airframe Health

Task What to Do Why
Visual once-over Remove wing; inspect spars, firewall, landing-gear block, tail group. Small glue failures become fractures in cold.
Covering check Iron down bubbles & seams, especially near exhaust and wingtips. Cold shrinks covering; loose film flutters.
Hinge test Tug each control surface; wick thin CA if any gap opens. Dry air cracks hinge glue.
Hardware torque Verify clevis keepers, wheel collars, prop nut, engine-mount bolts. Metals contract—fasteners can loosen.

3 — Power System

3.1 Electric Set-ups

  1. Balance-charge every pack to storage voltage (≈ 3.80 V/cell).
  2. IR measurement — retire any pack > 25 mΩ per cell or > 30 % rise since spring.
  3. ESC temp check — one WOT climb, land, shoot with IR gun (≤ 150 °F is safe).
  4. Prop sanity — switch to a lower-pitch or smaller-diameter “winter prop” if amps were near ESC limit in summer.

3.2 Glow / Gas Engines

Step Action
Idle-mixture tweak Denser air = richer burn; lean ⅛-turn on low-speed needle after warm-up.
Plug & gasket Replace glow plug or spark-plug gasket if > 20 hrs runtime.
Fuel tubing Flex-test; replace any hardened lines.
Post-flight wipe-down Exhaust residue attracts dust that wicks moisture into balsa.

4 — Radio & Electronics

  • Full & half-throttle range check.
  • Firmware updates — TX, receiver, gyro.
  • Antenna re-route if you moved batteries or added FPV gear.
  • Confirm fail-safe (throttle cut, neutral surfaces) by switching TX off.

5 — Support Gear

  • Set field-box batteries to storage voltage.
  • Charge starter, driver, glow igniter, Li-ion station pack.
  • Inspect straps & Velcro — cold makes adhesives brittle.

6 — Optional Winter Upgrades

Upgrade Benefit Cost
LED nav lights Safe early-sunset flights $15
Fiberglass cowl reinforcement Prevents cracks in cold landings $10
Larger battery-tray rails Lets you test 4-cell packs off-season $5 scrap balsa

7 — Pack-Away Procedure

  1. Wipe airframe with microfiber & silicone-free polish.
  2. Mist metal parts with Corrosion-X or light machine oil.
  3. Store LiPos in fire-safe box at 40–50 °F (off the garage floor).
  4. Keep model off concrete—shelf it or hang upside-down to avoid tire flat spots.

8 — Before Your Next Flight

  • Bring a freshly charged pack or primed fuel—cold lowers output.
  • Let electronics acclimate for five minutes on the flight line.
  • Re-check control throws—servo grease thickens below 40 °F.

Conclusion

A single afternoon of fall maintenance guards against months of winter damage and gives you a head-start on next season. Check it off now, log your notes, and greet spring with nothing more to do than fuel up, plug in, and fly.

Happy flying! — York R/C Club

Published October 17 2025

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