A aviation & planes forum. AviationBanter

If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below.

Go Back   Home » AviationBanter forum » rec.aviation newsgroups » Soaring
Site Map Home Register Authors List Search Today's Posts Mark Forums Read Web Partners

Duo Dive-brakes ( Polar with spoilers extended?)



 
 
Thread Tools Display Modes
  #1  
Old November 1st 07, 11:50 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Karl Striedieck
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 71
Default Duo Dive-brakes ( Polar with spoilers extended?)

John,

Thanks for the steer. I'd appreciate some other information if you have the
time.

Is the 20 meter DG-1000 authorized for acro? If it is I'm curious about the
reason. Both ships were designed to meet JAR standards regarding strength
and dive brake performance.

Although the 20 meter DG-1000 and the original Duo have identical speed
brake (spoiler) affectivity, I would love to have a Duo X when it comes to
off field landings, as it is much better than the other two. With 95% of my
flying being in a contest environment the exposure to "rural visitations,"
as Gren Siebels called them, is high. However, the extra $45K added to the
price tag by the sagging Dollar since I bought mine cancels that dream.

Karl Striedieck


"John Smith" wrote in message
...
Karl Striedieck wrote:

Can you refer me to the SH webpage regarding the spoiler/acro issue? All
I can find on the current German version is the Duo X.


http://www.schempp-hirth.com/index.php?id=130&L=1

"Duo Discus XL becomes certified for simple aerobatics!
The improved effectiveness of the airbrake system makes it now possible
for us to apply the approval for simple aerobatics including spinning."



  #2  
Old November 1st 07, 01:56 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
John Smith
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 256
Default Duo Dive-brakes ( Polar with spoilers extended?)

Karl Striedieck wrote:

Is the 20 meter DG-1000 authorized for acro?


With 20m it's authorized for "basic" acro, which means Loops, Turns and
erect Spins. No rolls and no negative g.

With 18m it's authorized for full aerobatics.

If it is I'm curious about the
reason. Both ships were designed to meet JAR standards regarding strength
and dive brake performance.


Because the dive brakes are *not* of equal strenght. I've never compared
side by side, but the DG1000 definitely allows for a much more sloppy
approach. (Not that I would advocate sloppy flying!) I've read that you
compared them and think both are the same, I definitely don't share your
opinion.
  #3  
Old November 1st 07, 08:02 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 82
Default Duo Dive-brakes ( Polar with spoilers extended?)

On Nov 1, 6:56 am, John Smith wrote:
Karl Striedieck wrote:
Is the 20 meter DG-1000 authorized for acro?


With 20m it's authorized for "basic" acro, which means Loops, Turns and
erect Spins. No rolls and no negative g.

With 18m it's authorized for full aerobatics.

If it is I'm curious about the
reason. Both ships were designed to meet JAR standards regarding strength
and dive brake performance.


Because the dive brakes are *not* of equal strenght. I've never compared
side by side, but the DG1000 definitely allows for a much more sloppy
approach. (Not that I would advocate sloppy flying!) I've read that you
compared them and think both are the same, I definitely don't share your
opinion.


Karl's side by side measurement is fascinating, but not what I would
expect.

I've got about 40-50 hours each in DG-1000S and Duo Discus and the
DG-1000S seems much more tolerant to sloppy handling on approach,
seems to wash off energy much more effectively with spoilers than the
Duo Discus and have less run out in ground effect. So why is this,
more effective drag (not lift spoiling) vs. speed in the DG-1000S? I
can't explain it but I definitely believe it is true. Couple this with
a more forgiving undercarriage and landings in the DG-1000S seem much
more tolerant of sloppiness than the Duo. This is not a slam against
the Duo, I like both gliders. I'll give the Duo the benefit in
handling, lighter aileron forces and very nice slow speed behavior as
it floats around a thermal (you can hear that inner wing rumble and
she just floats around).

BTW out of date now with the Duo-X but Karl did write up a comparison
of the Duo and DG-1000S in the June 2003 SSA Soaring magazine.

Since this topic is already all over the place - one thing I see in
the Duo-X collateral is Schemp Hirth still promote the light tail
weight and therefore easier ground handling (I'm sure aimed at the
DG-1000S). I wish they'd actually make the tail a little heavier to
help reduce those little tail raising surprises under brake - not that
I've ever done this but I've seen others do it :-) I suspect that is
a major change in moving the U/C more forward, but with adding the U/C
springs, and later stretched cockpit this is one thing I'd hoped they
would have tweaked as well. Anybody with Duo-X experience - is the
tail at least a little heavier?

Regards


Darryl


  #4  
Old November 2nd 07, 01:39 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Karl Striedieck
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 71
Default Duo Dive-brakes ( Polar with spoilers extended?)

John,

The Duo Tom Knauff was flying when we did our full boards dive off was a
turbo version and thus heavier than a non-motorized ship. The DG-1000 I was
flying had heavier pilots, so the payload was about the same. We agreed to
this test before task opening on a day we had some extra time, because this
notion that the Duo had inferior speed brakes had been floating around for
some time and I wanted to see if it held any water. I joined up on Tom's
right wing, less than a span away, and he pushed over, deploying full brakes
and pushing the speed up to 80 knots. In this stabilized condition I had
full brakes deployed in the 1000 and did not fall back as one might expect
of a ship with better braking.

As to the matter of tail weights, wheel brakes and gear configuration there
are compromises with both approaches (long and short main gear). The old
Duo's short gear was simpler, lighter and farther aft. This makes for easier
ground handling but requires a nose wheel to handle max braking. The longer
gear of the Duo X and DG 1000 keeps the gear doors cleaner, but is more
likely to go on the nose if the brake is good.

Speaking of wheel brake effectiveness, I've spent more time adjusting,
bleeding, modifying and cursing the Duo brake than all other maintenance
matters combined. Maybe my expectations are too high after years of flawless
performance from Schleicher's Cleveland disc brake systems.

Karl Striedieck


"John Smith" wrote in message
...
Karl Striedieck wrote:

Is the 20 meter DG-1000 authorized for acro?


With 20m it's authorized for "basic" acro, which means Loops, Turns and
erect Spins. No rolls and no negative g.

With 18m it's authorized for full aerobatics.

If it is I'm curious about the reason. Both ships were designed to meet
JAR standards regarding strength and dive brake performance.


Because the dive brakes are *not* of equal strenght. I've never compared
side by side, but the DG1000 definitely allows for a much more sloppy
approach. (Not that I would advocate sloppy flying!) I've read that you
compared them and think both are the same, I definitely don't share your
opinion.



 




Thread Tools
Display Modes

Posting Rules
You may not post new threads
You may not post replies
You may not post attachments
You may not edit your posts

vB code is On
Smilies are On
[IMG] code is On
HTML code is Off
Forum Jump

Similar Threads
Thread Thread Starter Forum Replies Last Post
Fun with trailling edge dive brakes Scott Elhardt Soaring 16 May 9th 14 02:52 AM
Polar with spoilers extended? Tim Taylor Soaring 85 October 29th 07 09:16 AM
High on Final, Summary; was Polar with spoilers extended? Steve Leonard Soaring 4 October 27th 07 07:22 AM
Extended GPX Schema Paul Tomblin Products 0 September 25th 04 02:44 AM
L-13 Spoilers Scott Soaring 2 August 27th 03 06:08 AM


All times are GMT +1. The time now is 12:03 PM.


Powered by vBulletin® Version 3.6.4
Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004-2025 AviationBanter.
The comments are property of their posters.