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#1
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Somebody posted on this topic a while back, but I can't find it now.
So my apologies for repeating it: For how long is the PW-5 the official glider of the World Class? Are there any provisions in the FAI or IGC rules for the eventual retirement of the design and a switch to a second-generation WC glider? Just wondering... Thanks, and best regards to all Bob K. http://www.hpaircraft.com |
#2
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AFAIK since about 1995, and I think there is at least ten years interval
between any changes. Regards, Janusz. For how long is the PW-5 the official glider of the World Class? Are there any provisions in the FAI or IGC rules for the eventual retirement of the design and a switch to a second-generation WC glider? |
#3
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"Janusz Kesik" wrote:
AFAIK since about 1995, and I think there is at least ten years interval between any changes. I think there was a proposal to extend the time interval to 15 years (2010); I am just not sure that it was approved. Aldo Cernezzi |
#4
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The original IGC committment was for 15 years taking the class to
2009. However at a recent IGC meeting there was discussion regarding what to do in 2006 and there might be changes for that year. Some in the committee consider the 15 year committment to be firm. There is no clear idea as to how they would replace the WC. Hope all is well with you and your family Bob. Happy Holiday & see ya next June! "Janusz Kesik" wrote in message ... AFAIK since about 1995, and I think there is at least ten years interval between any changes. Regards, Janusz. For how long is the PW-5 the official glider of the World Class? Are there any provisions in the FAI or IGC rules for the eventual retirement of the design and a switch to a second-generation WC glider? |
#5
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#6
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The original IGC committment was for 15 years taking the class to
2009. However at a recent IGC meeting there was discussion regarding what to do in 2006 and there might be changes for that year. Some in the committee consider the 15 year committment to be firm. There is no clear idea as to how they would replace the WC. I wonder if the IGC would consider something like the Centrair Pegasus 101D for the new WC. Maybe a slightly shrunk wingspan version? It sure would be nice to have a retractable main wheel... |
#7
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#8
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Andreas Maurer wrote:
On 26 Nov 2003 10:25:05 -0700, (Mark James Boyd) wrote: I wonder if the IGC would consider something like the Centrair Pegasus 101D for the new WC. Maybe a slightly shrunk wingspan version? It sure would be nice to have a retractable main wheel... I fail completely to understand why a smaller span (and crippled performance) should lower production costs significantly. Why no outgrown glider with up-to-date performance? Changing wing span to, say, 14 meters will cost about 5 points of L/D, and I doubt that it will safe more than $500 (slightly less material needed, and three man-hours saved for finish). I like the Pegase, but there are gliders out there that are easier to fly with better performance, e. g. the LS-4. Such a decision should have been taken earlier in order to have some success. Centrair stopped the production of Pegases one year ago as they had only one order for the year, Schneider stopped the production of the LS-4 when DG took them over. Anyway if one of these gliders could be built in a country of low cost, licensed from the original manufacturer, it would probably have a better chance of success of success than the PW5 for a similar cost, as all initial investments (design, molds, tools, certification) are already done. Reducing the wingspan will just re-introduce such investments and related costs, and nobody is going to take such a risk with a number of produced units difficult to foresee. On the question of which of Pegase and LS-4 has the better performance, opinions vary. In my club, almost everybody including myself consider them as equivallent in performance, although the LS-4 is considered as a little easier to handle, and some people think than in strong days with max water, the Pegase is slightly better. The Germans, like Andreas, prefer their own production and this is reflected in the handicap tables made by them. This is probably the reason why in the National French Club Class Championship almost only Pegases are persent, although LS-4 are also well spread in France, because the German handicap is used and so Pegases have a little advantage. |
#9
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Andreas Maurer wrote:
I fail completely to understand why a smaller span (and crippled performance) should lower production costs significantly. Why no outgrown glider with up-to-date performance? Changing wing span to, say, 14 meters will cost about 5 points of L/D, and I doubt that it will save more than $500 (slightly less material needed, and three man-hours saved for finish). There's design, and then there is design for manufacture. If you look at models for manufacturing costs of things, airplanes included, the biggest factors are the choice of materials, the mass of whatever it is you are making, and the complexity. The big things that affect complexity are parts count and the ease/difficulty of working with the material. Drops in parts count can have *big* impact on touch labor. Think fixed wheels, for example. After that, there are big learning curves for how many you make, with the cost per unit dropping significantly. Aerospace thingies typically have about an 80% learning curve, which means each time you double the number of things you make, you drop the cost of manufacture by 80%. So if it costs $10K to make the 20th plane, it will cost $8K to make 40th. That's not saying the manufacture will pass on the savings, of course. There are probably enough gliders out there against which to do build a semblance of a cost models for gliders. |
#10
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