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Eric Greenwell maintains, and I am sure he is right,
that increased performance adds cost and smaller size reduces cost, and that many potential owners would be 'happy' with LS-4 performance in a smaller and more modern design. What about a modern 1-26 ? Could it be made affordable and attractive enough to sell 800-1000 copies ? Would the reduction in performance goal from 40:1 to 23:1 really reduce the selling price a lot ? Or are we at a point in the performance/cost curve where a reduction in L/D [for any size of glider] does not save a bunch of cost but an increase [whether by refinement of an existing design or a clean-sheet new design] costs a whole bundle ? I suspect that the economics of sailplane production are not driven by material costs or design sophistication, but by issues of labor costs, marketing costs, certification and insurance - and above all, the achieved market share. Anyone know some real-world figures to argue from ? Ian |
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