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#1
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I intend to buy a state of the art new glider and I was looking at this
choice. My main priority is to enjoy the flying and so I want good performance, nice handling and safe behaviour (no incipient spin tendency to keep me on edge). I am not sure if I will loose a lot of climb performance if I go for a self launcher as they are clearly heavier than a turbo, is the convenience worth loosing the advantage of the low min weight? I Am flying in the UK mainly and so small feeble thermals are the rule. Can those who have flown these aircraft please let me have their comments and help with my decision. Thanks. |
#2
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John is going to fly in the UK where altitude is not
an issue and a turbo can be flown by any glider pilot, unlike an SLMG, so that was the relevant market for his posting. Turbos sell very well in Europe. BTW I didn't notice any problem with our Duo turbo engine in test runs at 6,500 ASL in the Pyrenees with airfield (2300 feet elevation) ground temperature in the mid 30s C. That can't be very different from the likely altitude and temperature of saves in your area. Its climb rate is under 2 knots at STP and it drops off as you get hotter and higher but a pilot would have to fly totally irresponsibly to get into a situation he could not get out of with the turbo. It won't stop someone from flying into a mountain side or crashing at low level in a microburst but not much else will either. The true climb rate advantage of a motor glider is the rate of climb (poor in the Duo but OK in the single seat turbos) plus the sink rate of the equivalent non-powered glider at around best LD. Our previous Discus BT had a still air climb rate of about 290 fpm so it was gaining about 420fpm compared with how things would have been without the engine. A 10 minute burn would make me relatively 4,200 feet better off than without the engine - whatever the sink rate of the air. Less in the Western USA no doubt but it is surprising how little engine time is needed to utterly transform a situation. Many single seat Schempp-Hirth turbos have the little exhaust outlet restrictors removed and that makes a big difference to the performance - not that I would put that in writing. Oops. John Galloway At 20:48 06 October 2003, Marc Ramsey wrote: 'John Galloway' wrote... Another major consideration is that when you come to sell your glider the market for a SLMG is very much smaller than that for a turbo. This depends on what market you're talking about. In the western US, for instance, there is essentially no market for turbos (given the altitudes and the common sink rates, they just don't work), but there is a very strong market for SLMGs... Marc |
#3
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I would not know how to address the "turbo" sustainer vs Self Launch
decision making process. For me it was a no brainer... here in Hawaii I have no option it is either self launch or shuffleboard. I had many of the same questions that you had... I joined the users group for the design and followed the comments of the users. Also I spoke with High Country Soaring which has become known as specializing in repairing motor gliders. The technician mentioned that for a number of reasons that stuff falls off of the 2 stroke engines mostly from vibration issues. All of the designs work well from what I can see, some designs will need constant maintenance or more tweeking to keep flying than others. It appears from what I was able to research that the ASH 26 E with the wankle engine is quite a bit less trouble. Probably part in due to less vibration, it does have some heat issues in some conditions but overall seems to be best of breed from what research I have done. I was told that when you see the quality of an ASH 26 E you will "Know"... and yes I saw the design and for me it was apparent. I ordered one. By the way... when I was at Minden recently I saw a lot of self launchers take off while I was waiting for a tow plane. I think that they may know something. All the ships look beautiful from the air... the closer you get to the -26 E the prettier it gets in fact I think it is the second most beautiful sight I have seen "my better half being the first". Back to the sustainer issue... in marginal conditions you do have the option of taking out the engine. I hear it takes about an hour. But in real life I have a feeling that in light air the thermalling speed difference of 47 kts to 51 for the higher wing loading with the engine in place that the extra weight would not be the end of the world. I also think that 10 minutes of power to get back up... for every down cycle would be worth the price of admission. Steve "John Mason" wrote in message ... I intend to buy a state of the art new glider and I was looking at this choice. My main priority is to enjoy the flying and so I want good performance, nice handling and safe behaviour (no incipient spin tendency to keep me on edge). I am not sure if I will loose a lot of climb performance if I go for a self launcher as they are clearly heavier than a turbo, is the convenience worth loosing the advantage of the low min weight? I Am flying in the UK mainly and so small feeble thermals are the rule. Can those who have flown these aircraft please let me have their comments and help with my decision. Thanks. |
#4
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"John Mason" wrote in message ...
I intend to buy a state of the art new glider and I was looking at this choice. My main priority is to enjoy the flying and so I want good performance, nice handling and safe behaviour (no incipient spin tendency to keep me on edge). I am not sure if I will loose a lot of climb performance if I go for a self launcher as they are clearly heavier than a turbo, is the convenience worth loosing the advantage of the low min weight? I Am flying in the UK mainly and so small feeble thermals are the rule. Can those who have flown these aircraft please let me have their comments and help with my decision. Thanks. John, Turbo in my opinion is good for most requirements. It will get you home if you miss the last thermal in the evening. It will get you across a blue patch or will get you to those Cu you can only see in the distance. No use in strong winds or downwinds you may have in mountains or in wave, getting you through rainshowers but neither will the SLMG. With the comps rules now changed in the UK you are no longer penalised when having a Turbo. Increase in Wingloading is negligible in a 18m ship and if the thermals are so weak that you are not able to climb you still can pop out the Turbo. If you are looking at buying a new glider my practically new ship is for sale http://www.tcw.ie/for_sale.htm Regards Bruno |
#5
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John,
The Discus 2CT isn't intended to improve on the Ventus - they are different model lines, one derived from the 15m racing class Ventus, and the other from the standard class Discus 2. The Discus 2 is not 'club class' but winner of the first three places in the recent world championship standard class. You already have a non-flapped standard class derived 18m glider in your list (LS8t) so the D 2CT would be directly comparable to that. All of these 18 meter gliders have such good performance and handling that unless you are at world championship standard the differences in performance are unimportant and the glider that feels best and most comfortable to you and does the things you want it to do would be best. It sounds like the Antares electric self launcher might interest a man of your means if you want the absolute leading edge of technology: http://www.lange-flugzeugbau.de/english/english.html John Galloway At 12:48 07 October 2003, John Mason wrote: 'John Galloway' wrote in message ... ? add Discus 2CT (18m turbo) to your list. Of course it hasn't flown yet but will do fairly soon and deliveries start next year. The D2CT basically seems to be a single seat Duo in that it shares very similar wing design in wing section, swept plan form, and polydihedral and there seems to be every reason for it to share the Duo's exceptionally sensitive and benign handling characteristics. It also seems to have the new Maughmer winglets that seem pretty successful on the Ventus 2CX. These are my own thoughts and not based on any comments from the factory. Thanks for this information. The question does follow though: What improvement the Discus 18m can give on the flapped Ventus and why if it is a better aircraft than the Ventus that the factory consider it worth developing a new model rather than improve the Ventus? I suspect it is the case that the new Discus is really made to be a 15m club class option and they thought they could just stick on some wing extensions for those people who don't like flaps or for those 15m pilots to have the option of 18m as a low cost extra. If this is the case it doesn't sound like a solution designed for the job I need, which is a no compromise top performing ship. IMHO the benefits of a self launcher over a turbo are far outweighed by the extra cost, weight and maintenance demands of the SLMG. In the UK just take a winch launch and pop the engine out if you need more height instead of wasting money on an aerotow. For me weight is the only issue. I can afford the extra costs and can pay the extra for maintenance, I am not too bothered by the resale issue. I have a current PPL and so the SLMG PPL is no big deal. I do like the idea of being independent and not needing a club launch with its inevitable waiting around. For me this is the main trade off. Does the weight disadvantage of a self launcher compared to a turbo offset the advantages of time saving, independence and climb rate that you have with the self launcher? So really I have a two part question. 1. Turbo vs Self Launcher? 2. Which ship? Cheers, John |
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Ventus C vs B | tango4 | Soaring | 6 | September 10th 03 03:29 AM |