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#1
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At 02:43 16 March 2017, gotovkotzepkoi wrote:
;940545 Wrote: What we need in soaring is a new glider built for a reasonable price. $150,000 for a new glider is just not even a consideration for mos people. Let's face it, you can get a low mileage Ferrari for half tha price! The PW-5 was a terrible failure. The engineers made the wingspan to short, without a common T-tail and failed to have the gear retract. What we really need is something that looks like an ASW-19 bare bone that is brand new for $25,000. It needs to have only the basics: -15 meter wingspan -T-tail -Retractable landing gear -Hinged canopy -Airspeed -Altimeter -Basic VSI (no audio) -Tube trailer -Mag compass With a basic tube trailer similar. If the PW-5 can be made for around that price, so could something lik this. Just to get a basic sailplane for $25,000 that has a 35:1 to 40:1 glid ratio, pilots could once again afford this sport and it would be on less reason for pilots to not get into soaring. Cheap launch is more important than somebody selling a new sailplane fo $25k. Until winch launch becomes wide spread, as it is in Germany, yo can kiss this sport goodbye. It will never totally die out but it wil atrophy to near nothing. That's a fact. Aero tows are simply to expensive -- gotovkotzepkoi They have winch launching in Europe -there is still a decline in numbers. Interestingly in the UK there as been a strong move for a lot of clubs to use the 100/115hp Eurofox for towing -halving the cost of a tow and being more environmentally acceptable -even clubs that where solely winch based before now have a Eurofox. As for the general decline -I don't think their is a one stop solution - there is a lot more competition for peoples leisure time and generally in the west I believe over the last 10-20 years for the average working joe 'disposal income and time for leisure' has been on the decline. The thing is is to look at the successful growing (or not declining as rapidly clubs) and see what they are doing. |
#2
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Cost is not a problem of gliding. You can buy decent used glider for 10-20k and now matter how much you fly, annual aerotows do not cost thousands. All these costs are comparable and in line with other middle-aged men hobbies such as owning motorcycle, classic car or boat.
Problem of gliding is that it is horrible time-consuming and difficult. |
#3
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Wonder if the 2/3 of new gliders being self launchers is going to take resources away from club launching assets? If the majority of club members own self launchers will the club go extinct?
Cheap launch is more important than somebody selling a new sailplane for $25k. Until winch launch becomes wide spread, as it is in Germany, you can kiss this sport goodbye. It will never totally die out but it will atrophy to near nothing. That's a fact. Aero tows are simply too expensive. -- gotovkotzepkoi |
#5
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On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 03:50:02 -0700, Bruce Hoult wrote:
It would be interesting to know the true cost of winch launch. Last year we charged GBP 11 for a winch launch. IIRC which launches have a small tug subsidy included in that charge. We do a lot of winching: our winches are used every flying day provided bad weather doesn't cause cancellation. That is 5 days/week in winter and 7 days/week in summer. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#6
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On Thursday, March 16, 2017 at 2:59:28 PM UTC+3, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 03:50:02 -0700, Bruce Hoult wrote: It would be interesting to know the true cost of winch launch. Last year we charged GBP 11 for a winch launch. IIRC which launches have a small tug subsidy included in that charge. We do a lot of winching: our winches are used every flying day provided bad weather doesn't cause cancellation. That is 5 days/week in winter and 7 days/week in summer. That's NZ$20. I hope that's where the charge will be in five years. In fact you can already get winch launches for $30 each (17 GBP) if you pay for 40 of them in advance (which must be used within two years). |
#7
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On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 06:39:04 -0700, Bruce Hoult wrote:
On Thursday, March 16, 2017 at 2:59:28 PM UTC+3, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Thu, 16 Mar 2017 03:50:02 -0700, Bruce Hoult wrote: It would be interesting to know the true cost of winch launch. Last year we charged GBP 11 for a winch launch. IIRC which launches have a small tug subsidy included in that charge. We do a lot of winching: our winches are used every flying day provided bad weather doesn't cause cancellation. That is 5 days/week in winter and 7 days/week in summer. That's NZ$20. I hope that's where the charge will be in five years. In fact you can already get winch launches for $30 each (17 GBP) if you pay for 40 of them in advance (which must be used within two years). The only way I can think of to get a better cost estimate that asking round is to total costs over a year and divide that by the number of launches. Here's quick guess at what needs to be included: - one set of new Spectra cables (or two if using steel) - the cost of strops lost - fuel used - items consumed in routine maintenance - any external maintenance costs - depreciation, interest on loans, etc I've probably missed some items, such as a share of the operating cost of the tow vehicle used to move the winch round the airfield, but hopefully that list is a reasonable starting point for anybody wanting to calculate actual winch costs. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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