Henry Bowman wrote:
Its not a set angle, think of it more like the relationship of a gas pedal and clutch.
The faster the blades spin up the sooner your off the ground, that can be a head wind, or blades back and throttle or blades forward and forward movement.
For now just try to work on bringing the blades up to speed, get the front wheel off the ground then slow down,by cutting throttle, till nose is back on deck, then try again. I used to have to go up and down the whole runway a few times both directions before Jim would let me move to crow hops. Be aware that in the opposite direction with the wind at your back it takes much much longer. Also watch your speed when you drop the nose wheel.
Use the rotors as your brakes...
Yes I was referring to keeping the angle of the retreating blade as low as possible by going as slow as possible relative to the wind. Only just as much airspeed as is required to get the blades to get to the next stage. I like your analogy of much slower than you think. I used to get my direct drive VW off in about 1/2 the strip of guys with much longer blades and powerful pre-rotators. They climbed out better once off because they had 583's but I got off in much less distance. Our time to clear an obstacle was thus the same. It wasn't just that I'd been well trained and had spend so much time in the gyroglider hand winding and winding up rotors and could tell by looking at tip path if they were starting to hinge it was also things like axle position many machines have too much weight on the nose so their machines are delayed in lifting the nose those extra 3 degrees make a HUGE difference in blade acceleration.
On brakes, my old VW didn't have brakes I Fred Flintstoned it (toes on nosewheel). I've built brakes for this current powered machine as I would spin them up downwind and would usually get the timing right so I could slow on the grass strip and still have enough blade speed to turn into wind and wind up without getting up but I almost got caught a couple of times. Once landing on a tarmac strip at Chinchilla that was slightly downhill I was picking up too much speed and eased off into the grass only to see an 8ft brown snake in my path I didn't have time to avoid him so I just closed my eyes and ran over him. Thunk, thunk I was then rubber necking to see if he'd gotten caught up around the undercarriage. I didn't need in an open gyro to have an angry brown snake wrapped around my gyro pissed at me ;)