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#1
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Anybody out there got a low time Grob 102 hiding somewhere they would
like to sell? |
#2
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How about a Speed Astir? Very similar to the 102, but with flaps and
retractable L/G. Excellent XC ship in good condition with good trailer and towout gear. Decent price. Call Fred or Tony at Soar Minden, 1 800 345 7627. Fred uncletrees wrote: Anybody out there got a low time Grob 102 hiding somewhere they would like to sell? |
#3
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At 05:12 23 April 2006, Fred wrote:
I'm glad somebody brought this up. I've just gotten back into soaring after a 15 year hiatus. CFI A&G, Commercial A&G, 145 flights, all in G103 since I started back last fall, except for last 3 in 102. I've got the itch to get my own glider _bad_. I have noticed a few attractive ads for 104s, seem to be reasonably equipped, at what seems to be a reasonable price. Guys in the club say 'Don't do it. All the problems of flaps but no performance gain. Wait until you find a deal on a good German glider.' What's the group concensus? BTW, I saw a 102 on Wings&Wheels, down on page 4, for 18.5K. Thanks in advance, Ed How about a Speed Astir? Very similar to the 102, but with flaps and retractable L/G. Excellent XC ship in good condition with good trailer and towout gear. Decent price. Call Fred or Tony at Soar Minden, 1 800 345 7627. Fred uncletrees wrote: Anybody out there got a low time Grob 102 hiding somewhere they would like to sell? |
#4
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The G104 does not seem to have a good reputation. The flaps were
created with a "hinge" being a flexible top surface, very experimental and the results were not good. Also the 104 is only good for small pilots. The 102, especially the later G102 Std III version are great gliders. As a new (effectively) glider pilot, buy something well known, with decent perfromance and an easy to rig trailer, and fly alot ! Todd Smith Grob 102 Std III 3S |
#5
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Hi Todd,
I am interested to find out more about it as it relates to the flex seal. I know about the cam mechanics but I have no Idea how it played out in the past. The Eppler airfoil was not working as well as one was hoping for but it got resolve some time ago with turbulator on the top surface. Maybe that was the problem, the flex seal got a bad wrap due to the glider not performing a swell as it should have. Regards Udo "toad" wrote in message oups.com... The G104 does not seem to have a good reputation. The flaps were created with a "hinge" being a flexible top surface, very experimental and the results were not good. Also the 104 is only good for small pilots. The 102, especially the later G102 Std III version are great gliders. As a new (effectively) glider pilot, buy something well known, with decent perfromance and an easy to rig trailer, and fly alot ! Todd Smith Grob 102 Std III 3S |
#6
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Edward Winchester wrote:
At 05:12 23 April 2006, Fred wrote: I'm glad somebody brought this up. I've just gotten back into soaring after a 15 year hiatus. CFI A&G, Commercial A&G, 145 flights, all in G103 since I started back last fall, except for last 3 in 102. I've got the itch to get my own glider _bad_. I have noticed a few attractive ads for 104s, seem to be reasonably equipped, at what seems to be a reasonable price. Guys in the club say 'Don't do it. All the problems of flaps but no performance gain. Wait until you find a deal on a good German glider.' What's the group concensus? WRT "All the problems of flaps but no performance gain," insert here a dry chuckle. Having owned nothing but flapped gliders since 1975 (after transitioning from a 1-26, with 200 hours logged time), I'm all ears regarding flaps' implicit endemic problems. Mine have proved trouble-free in 2400 hours logged time. WRT "Wait until you find a deal on a good German glider," I suppose the comment could be offered/taken in a number of ways. 1) Grobs in general tended to be leave the factory with a lot of aluminum castings (read: brittle, weak) in their control systems, as their AD history shows. Poor design choice on the factory's part. Additionally, Grob gliders in general were/are sneered at from a craftsmanship perspective by many Germans and Americans. If this is what your club buddies are referring to, there are elements of truth in their aspersions. OTOH, Grobs have no history of coming apart in the air, so looks/emotion more than composite strength/pilot safety would appear to he the implicit issues behind the aspersions. 2) If the comment reflects unthinking bias FOR "good German glass" and AGAINST "everything else that isn't," then give it all the respect it deserves, wich IMHO is darned little. My advice is know yourself, know your flying skills, define your soaring mission, and find the least expensive/best-all-around ship/trailer that will help you meet your personal goals. If you buy a decent used glider at a fair price, you'll not lose your shirt come sale time. If you buy a "non mainstream ship" (as have I several times), you'll be selling into the same non-mainstream pool come sale time, which may make the glider less economically liquid. Whether that's a problem depends on your perspective. Good luck, and have fun!!! Regards, Bob Whelan |
#7
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The problem with the flex seal seems to have been more of a practical
nature than a performance one. I heard a story of somebody's wing sitting ( for some time I believe) in the delected position and freezing in that position ! It seems to me just one of those brilliant (in theory) engineering designs that had a fatal flaw, that it was impossible to implement well. Todd |
#8
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toad wrote:
The problem with the flex seal seems to have been more of a practical nature than a performance one. I heard a story of somebody's wing sitting ( for some time I believe) in the delected position and freezing in that position ! It seems to me just one of those brilliant (in theory) engineering designs that had a fatal flaw, that it was impossible to implement well. Todd There was a Grob 104 at our field, and the flexible seal seemed to work well. It was in excellent condition after 27 years. |
#9
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snip Grobs have no history of coming apart in the air /snip
Didn't a 2-seat Grob have its fuse snap in two on a low inverted pass a few years ago? |
#10
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OTOH, Grobs have no history of coming apart in the air,
Hmmm -- true, generally, but at Waikerie, SA, a long time ago, a cast elevator horn broke on a Grob Twin or 103 during take off and Maurie Bradney was badly injured in the ensuing release / crash. So your comment about the weakness of cast control parts is valid. |
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