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#1
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Hello all! I am trying to gather information on replacement options for my club's aging Grobs. So far I have reached out to SZD for the SZD-54-2 (probably not a factor with no US certification or dealer), the HpH Twin Shark, Shempp-Hirth Duo Discus XL, Schleicher for the ASK-21B and DG for the DG1001 Club Neo.
The club prime purpose for this new glider(s) would be a combination of basic flight training, advanced training (beyond Private) and club member dual cross-country flying. A 40:1 or better best L/D would be preferred, for cross-country training. While many of the options listed are at the upper end of the price range, I need to add more in the lower/middle range. Any recommendations on other options I have not considered? How are other clubs approaching this common problem? Thanks, Mark |
#2
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On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 12:56:54 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Hello all! I am trying to gather information on replacement options for my club's aging Grobs. So far I have reached out to SZD for the SZD-54-2 (probably not a factor with no US certification or dealer), the HpH Twin Shark, Shempp-Hirth Duo Discus XL, Schleicher for the ASK-21B and DG for the DG1001 Club Neo. The club prime purpose for this new glider(s) would be a combination of basic flight training, advanced training (beyond Private) and club member dual cross-country flying. A 40:1 or better best L/D would be preferred, for cross-country training. While many of the options listed are at the upper end of the price range, I need to add more in the lower/middle range. Any recommendations on other options I have not considered? How are other clubs approaching this common problem? Thanks, Mark Where are you located...assuming USofA. ASK-21 has support and I like it. It has longer legs than a 2-33. |
#3
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On Monday, 24 May 2021 at 18:23:28 UTC+1, Charlie M. (UH & 002 owner/pilot) wrote:
On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 12:56:54 PM UTC-4, wrote: Hello all! I am trying to gather information on replacement options for my club's aging Grobs. So far I have reached out to SZD for the SZD-54-2 (probably not a factor with no US certification or dealer), the HpH Twin Shark, Shempp-Hirth Duo Discus XL, Schleicher for the ASK-21B and DG for the DG1001 Club Neo. The club prime purpose for this new glider(s) would be a combination of basic flight training, advanced training (beyond Private) and club member dual cross-country flying. A 40:1 or better best L/D would be preferred, for cross-country training. While many of the options listed are at the upper end of the price range, I need to add more in the lower/middle range. Any recommendations on other options I have not considered? How are other clubs approaching this common problem? Thanks, Mark Where are you located...assuming USofA. ASK-21 has support and I like it. It has longer legs than a 2-33. You can't buy a better glider for training than K21b As a former Duo owner they are beautiful gliders, but not a primary trainer, you would not want to send some one on their first Solo in one. The K21 is easy to fly and safe for clumsy pilots, but it now has the "B" option which allows the C of G to be moved back for spin training. In my experience K21 are very tough, and can always be sold on because some one wants one. |
#4
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We did the same evaluation a few years ago, comparing the DG1001 club neo, ASK21B and Perkosz. We ended up buying a new winch instead of a new glider, though.
The costs for all three were basically the same. DG gave us their factory ship with fixed gear for an evaluation weekend and the club members were very pleased with it. The wings were quite light for such a ship and it was easy to rig. But the rudder pedals for the backseat were not adjustable. Flight performance was comparable to an LS4 and it was very silent in the glider during flight. It was not possible to get a Perkosz for testing purpuse. It has been out of production for a while since they changed the factory producing the glider. But it should become available soon. Our conclusion was, that if you consider a ship for anything else than basic training, the ASK21 is out of the game. The Perkosz and DG1001 club neo have significantly better performance, good flight characteristics and are suitable for spin training. If basic training is the most important thing for you, the ASK21 might be the better choice, because it is probably the toughest twoseater available. It can take a lot of punishment. Christoph |
#5
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On Tuesday, May 25, 2021 at 4:31:14 PM UTC+10, Christoph Barniske wrote:
We did the same evaluation a few years ago, comparing the DG1001 club neo, ASK21B and Perkosz. We ended up buying a new winch instead of a new glider, though. The costs for all three were basically the same. DG gave us their factory ship with fixed gear for an evaluation weekend and the club members were very pleased with it. The wings were quite light for such a ship and it was easy to rig. But the rudder pedals for the backseat were not adjustable. Flight performance was comparable to an LS4 and it was very silent in the glider during flight. It was not possible to get a Perkosz for testing purpuse.. It has been out of production for a while since they changed the factory producing the glider. But it should become available soon. Our conclusion was, that if you consider a ship for anything else than basic training, the ASK21 is out of the game. The Perkosz and DG1001 club neo have significantly better performance, good flight characteristics and are suitable for spin training. If basic training is the most important thing for you, the ASK21 might be the better choice, because it is probably the toughest twoseater available.. It can take a lot of punishment. Christoph The ASK21b is probably the best training-only glider ever made - the DG1001 is a great compromise between training and early XC, but slightly too slippery to be a perfect trainer. Never flown a Perkoz. |
#6
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On Mon, 24 May 2021 23:31:12 -0700, Christoph Barniske wrote:
Our conclusion was, that if you consider a ship for anything else than basic training, the ASK21 is out of the game. The Perkosz and DG1001 club neo have significantly better performance, good flight characteristics and are suitable for spin training. Don't believe anybody who says the ASK-21 can't be spun without tail weights: my pre-solo spin training was done in an ASK-21. Flown off the winch, thermalled up to safe height and went spinning. It doesn't spin easily unless the instructor know the magic, absolute minimum energy at initiation, formula, but it can be spun and recovery is normal. It may or may not be relevant, but neither that instructor or myself were above average weight: I normally fly the '21 solo with a parachute, the seat back in the rear notch and no weights. I've never flown a 21b so have no idea whether it can also be spun without tail weight. If basic training is the most important thing for you, the ASK21 might be the better choice, because it is probably the toughest twoseater available. It can take a lot of punishment. Agreed. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#7
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On 5/25/2021 2:31 AM, Christoph Barniske wrote:
... Our conclusion was, that if you consider a ship for anything else than basic training, the ASK21 is out of the game. ... The ASK-21 (and other gliders of similar performance) can be flown XC quite well. And perhaps learning to do that is better training than jumping right into a glider that has higher performance than the first single seater the student is likely to buy? See what UH has done in XC mentoring in his ASK21. I am writing this as somebody who flys XC in a "Russia" AC4 in the NE US. Similar (or slightly lower) performance to the ASK-21. |
#8
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On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 12:56:54 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Hello all! I am trying to gather information on replacement options for my club's aging Grobs. So far I have reached out to SZD for the SZD-54-2 (probably not a factor with no US certification or dealer), the HpH Twin Shark, Shempp-Hirth Duo Discus XL, Schleicher for the ASK-21B and DG for the DG1001 Club Neo. The club prime purpose for this new glider(s) would be a combination of basic flight training, advanced training (beyond Private) and club member dual cross-country flying. A 40:1 or better best L/D would be preferred, for cross-country training. While many of the options listed are at the upper end of the price range, I need to add more in the lower/middle range. Any recommendations on other options I have not considered? How are other clubs approaching this common problem? Thanks, Mark Mark - if you can lay your hands onto a straight DG500 (18m wing w/o winglets or extensions, retractable gear), I would give it a serious consideration. I flew one of them here in SC for a bit and found it to be a very well behaved and pleasant to fly glider without any bad habits. Uli 'AS' |
#9
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On Monday, May 24, 2021 at 9:56:54 AM UTC-7, wrote:
Hello all! I am trying to gather information on replacement options for my club's aging Grobs. So far I have reached out to SZD for the SZD-54-2 (probably not a factor with no US certification or dealer), the HpH Twin Shark, Shempp-Hirth Duo Discus XL, Schleicher for the ASK-21B and DG for the DG1001 Club Neo. The club prime purpose for this new glider(s) would be a combination of basic flight training, advanced training (beyond Private) and club member dual cross-country flying. A 40:1 or better best L/D would be preferred, for cross-country training. While many of the options listed are at the upper end of the price range, I need to add more in the lower/middle range. Any recommendations on other options I have not considered? How are other clubs approaching this common problem? Thanks, Mark Perhaps not the most popular idea, but how about a 2-33 as a trainer, and a two place glass bird as a glass transition/xc bird. Both the Dou and 505 are outstanding birds, but if the price is too high for the budget, consider a Janus. I have seen many Janus'at a reasonable prices in Europe. Full disclosure I have flown Dou, 505 and Janus on xc flights. While the Janus is a bit more difficult to fly than the Dou or 505. Best of luck and keep them fly'n |
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