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J a c k wrote:
I think the Duo's airbrakes are better than many people think. The Duo is a big heavy glider with lots of inertia. It doesn't like to change direction quickly. That includes its behavior on sudden airbrake deployment. You don't get a lot of sink right away. My first reaction was that the airbrakes were weak but a little more experience showed me that with a little patience, the brakes took effect and produced a respectable decent rate. The Duo just makes you plan ahead a little more than with a light single seater. I don't understand the physics here. Consider an analogy: when the VW-beetle came out it had a reputation of 'turning over easily', based on the false logic that you need less men to 'turn it over' than to 'pick up & turn over a bigger car'. Of course the forces while driving, that tended to 'turn it over' were less for a VW, but so too were the forces that resisted 'turn it over'. A heavy pendulum is 'eqivalent' to a lighter pendulum. So too for the BIG glider. What doesn't scale up is the pilots strength. Or is reynolds number significant ? == Chris Glur. |
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