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It is sad to report that Raouf Ismail, developer of the
Cambridge variometer and founder of Cambridge Aero Instruments and Cambridge Aeroflow, died on Nov 12th. He was lifelong friend and will be missed by many. ( private communication.) John Firth |
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On Sunday, November 16, 2014 10:00:10 PM UTC-5, firsys wrote:
It is sad to report that Raouf Ismail, developer of the Cambridge variometer and founder of Cambridge Aero Instruments and Cambridge Aeroflow, died on Nov 12th. He was lifelong friend and will be missed by many. ( private communication.) John Firth Raouf was a great friend to Soaring and a big part of the avionics scene. He came up with the first variometer with a really stable zero, at reasonable cost - earlier types had to be manually re-zeroed often (kinda hard in the air). Personally Raouf was a friend for 40 years. When I was a student, he encouraged my interest in avionics and kindly provided parts and guidance for me to rebuild our club's old Crossfell vario. In the late 70's, Raouf called me: "Dave, you need a modern glider, and Schempp-Hirth is going to build a new world-beater called Ventus. You need to order one." Raouf was for some years the USA Schempp-Hirth dealer. "But Raouf, I've been thinking about buying a house.." "Dave, you can't fly a house!" "OK" Thus I ordered the Ventus, which eventually led to the infamous "Two gliders, no house, angry fiancee, must sell one of..." advert in Soaring. To which I got zero calls (nobody believed I'd sell a glider), but my fiancee's Dad did fall off the toilet reading the Soaring adverts... In the late 1980s, Raouf provided much encouragement and feedback on my ideas about instrumentation, as I started what led to the B100 and ILEC SN10. For this I'm ever grateful. For many years, Raouf flew with us at Sugarbush, and was a good friend to many of us in that group. He was variously partners in a Janus, LS-4, and SZD among others. Raouf sold the vario business in the late 70's to concentrate on larger commercial markets, where he accomplished much, building and selling a couple of companies. Raouf gave up gliding for health reasons a few years back, but stayed friends with many of us. It's hard to believe that we were gossiping and reminiscing about gliding and instrumentation at our health club just last week. Life is too damn short. We'll really miss Raouf. |
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On Sunday, November 16, 2014 10:00:10 PM UTC-5, firsys wrote:
It is sad to report that Raouf Ismail, developer of the Cambridge variometer and founder of Cambridge Aero Instruments and Cambridge Aeroflow, died on Nov 12th. He was lifelong friend and will be missed by many. ( private communication.) John Firth Sad to hear this.... UH & I were talking about Raouf a few months ago. I had crewed for him at a contest at Harris Hill, NY in the late 70's(?). That Christmas he shipped me a electric development vario that was old but refurbished as a "Thanks for the help" from the contest. It resided in our 1-26 (SN 002) for many years. Still have both (the vario & 002). When cleaning out part of my house, I found the original paperwork from when he sent it to me. I met him a few times after that, always a nice person to talk to and willing to help out. Condolences to all that knew him better than I, but I will miss him as well.. Charlie. |
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