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I spent several days in Tehachapi, mainly to attend the workshop, but
also to do some flying. I did miss some good talks on Sunday afternoon, when the best flying day of the week occurred. Like last year, the talks demonstrated that the SHA has really outgrown it's name, and has morphed into something more akin to an experimental motorless aircraft (full size and model) organization. Saturday: My favorite talks of the ten on Saturday were by Mike Sandlin and Doug Fronius, but also quite interesting to me was the progress report on the self-launch Carbon Dragon and the instrumented R/C sailplane model used to get dynamic soaring data. Mike described the advances in his "Bug" biplane and similar sized monoplane. These look a bit like primary gliders, but perform on par with hang gliders, and it's usually hang glider sites that he flies these at. Cheap, easy to build and fly. It looked like fun, even though the cross country ability is very limited. Doug talked about the Global Hawk spy plane (he works for the company that builds it). A fascinating piece of technology, with better performance than the U2 but at much less cost. It features autonomous operation (it flies itself from takeoff to landing), high aspect ratio composite wings, and sensors with incredible resolution (optical, radar, and others). Sunday: I only got to the morning talks because I flew in the afternoon. I particularly liked Bob Gaines' talk on fabric covering to museum standards versus normal techniques. If you are really _restoring_ something, you have to resist the urge to use modern materials and techniques, even though it would make a better aircraft, because it won't be like the original. Bob was followed by his son, Paul, who talked about improving the sealing and other aspects of your glider. I got some good ideas from it. The afternoon talks were very tempting, so I was sorry I missed them. They covered micro lift soaring, Kuykendall's HP-24 project, the SparrowHawk progress (SN 5 completed and delivered, I believe, with SN 6 almost out of the molds; and an exotic 15 meter racer design described), and a couple others. The SHA website is www.sailplanehomebuilders.com -- !Replace DECIMAL.POINT in my e-mail address with just a . to reply directly Eric Greenwell Richland, WA (USA) |
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