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#11
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On Thursday, February 1, 2018 at 9:02:24 PM UTC-6, Kirk Robertson wrote:
Hello everyone, I'm a new pilot looking for a decent affordable glider that's suitable for a newbie that I won't outgrow within the first year or two. I'd appreciate all suggestions and info of gliders for sale. I'm currently flying my clubs 1-26 until I get the time in to move up to the DG101. I'd like something with a decent trailer also as I'd like to drive around the west to fly at lots of different places. Thanks in advance for any information. Kirk. My Libelle is going up for sale. Based out of Dallas, TX. A great first glass ship with an upgraded Komet trailer. New control stick from manufacture in Germany with good PU finish on wings and some slight aging on the fuselage. Mountain high EDS with oxygen bottle, this ship flew in Hobbs, NM at 15,000 feet no problem. It was an awesome first ship to me but now that I am 6'2 pushing 6'3, I no longer fit. Curse you hormones... I'm asking $16,500 but willing to negotiate. Give me a call @ 817-914-0689 or email for more information |
#12
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On Wednesday, February 7, 2018 at 12:01:56 PM UTC-8, wrote:
On Thursday, February 1, 2018 at 9:02:24 PM UTC-6, Kirk Robertson wrote: Hello everyone, I'm a new pilot looking for a decent affordable glider that's suitable for a newbie that I won't outgrow within the first year or two. I'd appreciate all suggestions and info of gliders for sale. I'm currently flying my clubs 1-26 until I get the time in to move up to the DG101. I'd like something with a decent trailer also as I'd like to drive around the west to fly at lots of different places. Thanks in advance for any information. Kirk. My Libelle is going up for sale. Based out of Dallas, TX. A great first glass ship with an upgraded Komet trailer. New control stick from manufacture in Germany with good PU finish on wings and some slight aging on the fuselage. Mountain high EDS with oxygen bottle, this ship flew in Hobbs, NM at 15,000 feet no problem. It was an awesome first ship to me but now that I am 6'2 pushing 6'3, I no longer fit. Curse you hormones... I'm asking $16,500 but willing to negotiate. Give me a call @ 817-914-0689 or email for more information If you can fit in a Libelle, you can't beat it! The sweetest handling glass ship in it's class, and the best looking too.... |
#13
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I have a Libelle 301, flaps & thinner wing than 201, on W&W Will sell to new pilot for $10,000 or?
Wayne at Walker . org 619-888-6119 |
#14
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I agree with everyone who suggests the trailer is as important as the glider. Easy rigging and transport is paramount! Most will stear you away from a glider that has only flaps. I would guess those who say a newer pilot shouldn't start with a flapped ship haven't spent much time in one, they have many advantages and can be purchased at better prices and are no more difficult to fly than spoilers. They are just a little different. A PIK 20 B is a stellar ship that can be bought pretty cheap and you won't ever outgrow it unless you just want 3% more performance for 3 times the money.
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#15
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At 02:58 12 February 2018, Blake Seese 3Y wrote:
I agree with everyone who suggests the trailer is as important as the glide= r. Easy rigging and transport is paramount! Most will stear you away from a= glider that has only flaps. I would guess those who say a newer pilot shou= ldn't start with a flapped ship haven't spent much time in one, they have m= any advantages and can be purchased at better prices and are no more diffic= ult to fly than spoilers. They are just a little different. A PIK 20 B is a= stellar ship that can be bought pretty cheap and you won't ever outgrow it= unless you just want 3% more performance for 3 times the money. Some poor advice been given here. Libelle and Pik 20b - two ships that Derek Piggot advises a low time pilot to stay clear of for various reasons. Unless you have way above average skills I would advise you stay clear of them as well until you have built up several hundred hours.. Suggest you read Derek Piggott on Gliding. A & C Black ISBN 0- 7136-5799-5. Lots of sound advice on what ship to choose for a first glider from one of the worlds most experienced and respected instructors. |
#16
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![]() I agree with everyone who suggests the trailer is as important as the glider. Easy rigging and transport is paramount! Most will steer you away from a glider that has only flaps. I would guess those who say a newer pilot shouldn't start with a flapped ship haven't spent much time in one, they have many advantages and can be purchased at better prices and are no more difficult to fly than spoilers. They are just a little different. A PIK 20B is a stellar ship that can be bought pretty cheap and you won't ever outgrow it unless you just want 3% more performance for 3 times the money. Some poor advice been given here. Libelle and Pik 20b - two ships that Derek Piggot advises a low time pilot to stay clear of for various reasons. Unless you have way above average skills I would advise you stay clear of them as well until you have built up several hundred hours.. Suggest you read Derek Piggott on Gliding. A & C Black ISBN 0- 7136-5799-5. Lots of sound advice on what ship to choose for a first glider from one of the worlds most experienced and respected instructors. Here's "another country heard from..." Believe it or not, there's only one sentence between both the above posts with which I would quibble, and it's the lead-in to the bottom post. So how do I reconcile what at first blush appears outright contradictory inputs? Disclosures: - I've not had the pleasure of meeting Derek Piggot, but I have great respect for his experience in, and judgments concerning, all aspects of soaring. - I am not a CFIG. - I (and my ship partner at the time) transitioned into a 15-meter glass 1st-generation landing-flap-only-equipped glider (Concept 70 - think flapped G-102-ish), me from 1-26 with ~125 logged total hours (he from a Ka-8 with, I seem to remember, ~the same total hours, maybe slightly more). Our first exposures to flapped gliders... - Since that low-time transition I've acquired 2K+ hours in 3 different types of landing-flaps-only single-seaters. Both our transitions were of the "nothing to see here" sort for our peanut galleries. Why? Because - it seemed important to me then, and so I still believe - we both had spent considerable time discussing/researching/pondering our impending "step up in performance" and we both flew with "sensibly developed plans." By "plans," I mean both hopes for success and contingency plans in the event some of our thinking proved less than spot-on. It was the best we could do at that time and place - no 2-seat training gliders with similar flaps (or *any* flaps) existed, and no instructors with flapped time were known/available to us. Mental prep matters. YMWV depending upon situation, attitude, inclinations, etc. I presume the asking of this question on RAS is part of your planned self-education process. Tangentially, just in case you've not already begun doing so, use the self-education process to hone your critical thinking skills. In short, try to get inside every advice-giver's head to the extent of being able to gain some insight into *why* they are offering you their advice. It, too, matters. When Derek Piggot initially offered the advice referred to above, he was an active, full-time instructor in Great Britain, a smallish country (by comparison to the U.S.), with a relatively high density (compared to the U.S.) of available used gliders, but a glider population even less dense that the U.S.' with flapped single-seat gliders available for new pilots. (Over here, Dick Schreder had been proselytizing flaps by creating flapped ships for over a decade before the PIK-20 appeared, and even Schweizer was so bold as to develop the 1-35 at roughly the same time as the PIK 20.) Piggot's advice was both understandable and sensible. But I'd bet Real Money Mr. Piggot would also readily agree "one size doesn't fit everyone" when it comes to new ship purchase decisions. What I've personally experienced many times, over 3+ decades of being a soaring nut, is many soaring pilots offering "anti-flaps advice" have "less than first-hand knowledge/experience with them." That's entirely understandable, given the relatively low percentage of flapped gliders, and the even *lower* proportion of landing-flap-only equipped gliders, and every glider pilot's willingness (eagerness, ha ha!) to talk gliders/gliding at the slightest excuse. Depending upon one's personal flavor of internal cynic, an argument could be made that all advice from 2nd-hand sources should be outright dismissed. OTOH, an argument could be made that those with 1st-hand experience have axes to grind. I submit "actionable reality" lies somewhere between those extremes. ![]() New Ship Purchasing Rule No. 1 (even though many people fail to understand this) is: Know Thyself!!! Have fun in your quest. Dreaming about - and going about - selecting a new-to-you glider is only slightly less fun than owning and flying it! Bob W. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com |
#17
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At 16:21 12 February 2018, BobW wrote:
I agree with everyone who suggests the trailer is as important as the glider. Easy rigging and transport is paramount! Most will steer you away from a glider that has only flaps. I would guess those who say a newer pilot shouldn't start with a flapped ship haven't spent much time in one, they have many advantages and can be purchased at better prices and are no more difficult to fly than spoilers. They are just a little different. A PIK 20B is a stellar ship that can be bought pretty cheap and you won't ever outgrow it unless you just want 3% more performance for 3 times the money. Some poor advice been given here. Libelle and Pik 20b - two ships that Derek Piggot advises a low time pilot to stay clear of for various reasons. Unless you have way above average skills I would advise you stay clear of them as well until you have built up several hundred hours.. Suggest you read Derek Piggott on Gliding. A & C Black ISBN 0- 7136-5799-5. Lots of sound advice on what ship to choose for a first glider from one of the worlds most experienced and respected instructors. Here's "another country heard from..." Believe it or not, there's only one sentence between both the above posts with which I would quibble, and it's the lead-in to the bottom post. So how do I reconcile what at first blush appears outright contradictory inputs? Disclosures: - I've not had the pleasure of meeting Derek Piggot, but I have great respect for his experience in, and judgments concerning, all aspects of soaring. - I am not a CFIG. - I (and my ship partner at the time) transitioned into a 15-meter glass 1st-generation landing-flap-only-equipped glider (Concept 70 - think flapped G-102-ish), me from 1-26 with ~125 logged total hours (he from a Ka- 8 with, I seem to remember, ~the same total hours, maybe slightly more). Our first exposures to flapped gliders... - Since that low-time transition I've acquired 2K+ hours in 3 different types of landing-flaps-only single-seaters. Both our transitions were of the "nothing to see here" sort for our peanut galleries. Why? Because - it seemed important to me then, and so I still believe - we both had spent considerable time discussing/researching/pondering our impending "step up in performance" and we both flew with "sensibly developed plans." By "plans," I mean both hopes for success and contingency plans in the event some of our thinking proved less than spot-on. It was the best we could do at that time and place - no 2-seat training gliders with similar flaps (or *any* flaps) existed, and no instructors with flapped time were known/available to us. Mental prep matters. YMWV depending upon situation, attitude, inclinations, etc. I presume the asking of this question on RAS is part of your planned self-education process. Tangentially, just in case you've not already begun doing so, use the self-education process to hone your critical thinking skills. In short, try to get inside every advice-giver's head to the extent of being able to gain some insight into *why* they are offering you their advice. It, too, matters. When Derek Piggot initially offered the advice referred to above, he was an active, full-time instructor in Great Britain, a smallish country (by comparison to the U.S.), with a relatively high density (compared to the U.S.) of available used gliders, but a glider population even less dense that the U.S.' with flapped single-seat gliders available for new pilots. (Over here, Dick Schreder had been proselytizing flaps by creating flapped ships for over a decade before the PIK-20 appeared, and even Schweizer was so bold as to develop the 1-35 at roughly the same time as the PIK 20.) Piggot's advice was both understandable and sensible. But I'd bet Real Money Mr. Piggot would also readily agree "one size doesn't fit everyone" when it comes to new ship purchase decisions. What I've personally experienced many times, over 3+ decades of being a soaring nut, is many soaring pilots offering "anti-flaps advice" have "less than first-hand knowledge/experience with them." That's entirely understandable, given the relatively low percentage of flapped gliders, and the even *lower* proportion of landing-flap-only equipped gliders, and every glider pilot's willingness (eagerness, ha ha!) to talk gliders/gliding at the slightest excuse. Depending upon one's personal flavor of internal cynic, an argument could be made that all advice from 2nd-hand sources should be outright dismissed. OTOH, an argument could be made that those with 1st-hand experience have axes to grind. I submit "actionable reality" lies somewhere between those extremes. ![]() New Ship Purchasing Rule No. 1 (even though many people fail to understand this) is: Know Thyself!!! Have fun in your quest. Dreaming about - and going about - selecting a new-to-you glider is only slightly less fun than owning and flying it! Bob W. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. http://www.avg.com If you wish to ignore the sage advice of one of the most professional and experienced instructors in the world, (plus display pilot, film stunt pilot ect. ect.), who has probably flown more types of aircraft than most pilots (including flapped only ships) - your choice. Sorry don't know Bob W's credentials apart from what he's posted here. |
#18
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Well Paul T, I've read all of Derricks written works, no doubt good info there, but when it comes to his opinion of flapped sailplanes, I'll go with others with just as much if not more experience than his. Guys like Moffatt. You would get a very different opinion of the ease and safety of landing flapped ships if you read his flight evaluation of the HP-14.
All that is needed is a proper understanding/briefing of how flapped ships are handled in landing (much different than spoilered birds). If a newer pilot is desirous of getting into cross country flying, a flapped ship is a very very good choice and a confidence builder, knowing that even in the hands of a less experienced pilot , they can be safely shoe horned into very small fields. |
#19
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I just read the article from Derek Piggot and am curious on staying away from Libelles' Everyone seems to love them, do the spoilers just not provide as much drag as others?
Frank Whiteley, thanks for the offer but I'm still just doing reading/research, I'll call when I get a few prospective gliders I need to narrow it down to one. For now I'm staying away from flap-only ships, I have no misconception about my piloting ability and don't really want to make it any easier to do anything dumb and hurt myself or my glider. Kirk. |
#20
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On Tuesday, February 13, 2018 at 9:18:52 AM UTC+3, Kirk Robertson wrote:
I just read the article from Derek Piggot and am curious on staying away from Libelles' Everyone seems to love them, do the spoilers just not provide as much drag as others? Std Libelle spoilers are ok. Not as powerful as some, but better than some, such as (unmodified) Cirrus. I've seen new Cirrus pilots approach just a little too fast and float waaaaaay down the runway. The Libelle spoilers are perfectly adequate for a normal approach. If full spoiler isn't doing enough then adding a slip certainly will. The sharp spine of the fuselage means you get huge amounts of drag in a slip. As an exercise (on a long field), I've deliberately turned final at 1000 ft in a Std Libelle at the same place as you'd normally turn final at 300 ft. A slip (including slipping turn) got it down to a normal approach angle and speed well before crossing the fence. Of course a one-lever solution is simpler, but everyone should be comfortable with using slips on approach anyway. |
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