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Karl Striedieck wrote:
The original Duo (can't speak for the new X model with the drag flap) definitely requires more attention to energy management when landing than your garden variety 750 pound glider. Any excess coming over the trees won't go away by diving with full spoilers. This is a consequence of increased weight and relatively smaller spoilers and is common to all "large" gliders. The problem can be magnified by improperly adjusted spoilers. It is possible that owners who have readjusted their wheel brakes have inadvertently reduced the travel of the spoilers. Also, the Duo spoilers are heavier to extend than smaller gliders and it takes extra muscle to hold them fully open during the approach and flare. And as the airspeed decreases they get heavier because the dynamics of airflow don't help hold them open. As to the assertion that the DG-1000 has more effective air brakes than the Duo, this is not so. While flying a DG-1000 I had the opportunity to do a formation "test dive" comparison with a Duo. We (Tom Knauff in a Duo) got in tight formation with me on the wing and at 65 knots pushed over while deploying full spoilers. The two ships stayed exactly even in a descent of 500 plus feet. Many US pilots I've noticed landing at various contest sites like to stick the glider on the ground at speeds 20 and 30 knots above stall and then roll thousands of feet to their trailers. This is poor preparation for the time precise energy management is needed to get into a small outlanding field. As the size and weight of the gliders increase the problem of stopping magnifies, so unless you are flying a Sparrowhawk or 1-26 you should make every landing a tail dragger touch down at an intended spot. Karl Striedieck Great info on the comparison, and excellent advice on the landings. I couldn't agree more. Pick a spot and grade yourself on each landing as to how close you came to sticking that spot. |
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