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#21
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I think you're quite wrong on this, Michel. The cost of a glider is mainly
man hours and development; materials count for something like a third. And it's fairly easy to sell a glider 1/3 cheaper than competing models if you take the design and the structure from a competitor and build it with a different airfoil... although I must admit that I'll prefer the Pégase over the LS4 anytime. DG and others already switched the man hours to the cheaper countries like Slovenia, but it's still hard to make a profit in this small market even though price tags are high. And the reality is: if there is no profit to be made, nobody will manufacture any gliders. And no, Michel, instruction is not for free in France. Most medium and large clubs in France have one or more instructors which are payed (and numerous instructors who are not payed) - and even though the student doesn't pay a fee by the hour, where do you think do the salaries come from ?! -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Michel Talon" a écrit dans le message de ... Bill Daniels wrote: Looking hard at the yearly costs of participation, air tow looms large. The 50-75 flights required to attain a glider certificate will likely cost something like $3000. Glider rental cost won't come down until the prices do and I wouldn't ask the instructors to reduce their fees since we need them badly. If 50 of the 75 flights were by winch instead of airtow, the $3000 drops to $300. That's a pretty significant drop in up front cost for a student pilot. From what i can see here, winch launches don't make a big difference in the total cost. Maybe you can hope a 20% gain in the total cost, which is good but not sufficient. Fortunately in our country instructors instruct for free ... Airports are more or less subsidized, hence don't cost much. The real burden is the cost of new gliders if you want to maintain your fleet current. You all assume that it is impossible to cut on glider prices. In my opinion it is false. Let me just mention the Pegase which has been built in France approximately at the same time as the German LS4 and with basically the same performances. The Pegase was 1/3 cheaper, and you can be sure that the factory was extremely far from efficient. Now where Lennie is perfectly right, the snobism and elitism occurring in the soaring community was such that the Pegase has always been badmouthed compared to the LS4, while they are both excellent gliders. The clubs which have bought a large quantity of Pegase have been able to offer modern gliders to their members (Buno-Bonnevaux is an example) at reasonable price, and the result has been excellent soaring performance for these clubs. Now wonder the price at which a glider could be built in India, for example! -- Michel TALON |
#22
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There are still hundreds of gliders sold at reasonable prices. You can also
buy a car for the price of a house if you want, but you can go for a Golf (or a Peugeot 307 :-) which does a fairly good job. Why do the Germans and all the Nordics come to the South?? Wheather conditions. It's that simple - I've been living and flying in Germany, and I'm VERY happy to live and fly in the Alpine region. -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Michel Talon" a écrit dans le message de ... Asbjorn Hojmark wrote: I'd say anyone can afford the above prices. I agree, these prices are very correct. Now my point is that, even in the cheapest clubs in France, even when absolutely everyone works for free, prices are closer to the double of what you mention. So i would like to understand ... I would like also to understand why a lot of people from Nordic countries, Germany and England come flying in France or in Spain when they can fly for half the price staying at home (and as far as i know prices in Spain and Italy are *not* cheaper than in France). When a convincing explanation is given for these discrepancies, then perhaps i can agree that the prices of gliders are not killing the sport. At present i still consider that a glider which is sold the price of a house is purely and simply a scandal, and a complete waste of money except for the very rich ones. -A -- Michel TALON |
#23
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tango4 wrote:
( PS: It might also have something to do with beautiful mountains, wide open spaces, cheap petrol, good food, passable wine, reasonably priced accomodation, lots more sunshine and really nice people ) Please, i didn't want to be provocative, i sincerely try to find an explanation why prices seem to be half in some German clubs that in France. Since i am convinced of the perfect honesty of the people managing all these clubs, and they do it for free, the only explanation i have found, and that you seem to confirm, is that the soaring conditions are better, hence the average flight is longer, so that you need more gliders per member of the club. In my experience, you can count on only one person using a glider in a good day, and average flights during = 5 hours, whence you are entitled to flying LS4, Pegase or similar. Obviously if you count 2 people for glider for day, you can divide price by 2, but this is completely fallacious. As you can see from many other answers a lot of people think that "evrything goes well in the best of worlds", that soaring is a sport for the happy few who want to dedicate a lot of time and money to the activity, etc. etc. Be sure that with such arguments you will observe less and less midairs in the future... -- Michel TALON |
#24
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Lennie the Lurker wrote:
Higher performance and lower cost do not go together, one forbids the other unless you want to sacrifice something like structural integrity to reach it. In which case, you shouldn't be building airplanes, maybe lawn chairs. I don't agree with that. It doesn't cost one further cent to build a wing with good aerodynamical qualities, as with poor qualities. Here clubs have bought large quantities of ASK23 which are flying bricks compared to LS4s and at similar prices. But i agree with you if you are speaking of top performance gliders, since then you need to be absolutely perfect everywhere, and this costs much. Hence i was advocating a very good, but not top class glider. Other people have mentioned the possibility to build a large quantity of cheap LS4 for example, this fits perfectly. -- Michel TALON |
#25
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Bert Willing wrote:
And no, Michel, instruction is not for free in France. Most medium and large clubs in France have one or more instructors which are payed (and numerous instructors who are not payed) - and even though the student doesn't pay a fee by the hour, where do you think do the salaries come from ?! This is perhaps the case of the clubs you are used to, but not the clubs i am used to. Of those only Buno-Bonnevaux has payed personel, but who does many other things besides instruction, such as taking care of gliders in winter, reparations on broken gliders, etc. Most of the instruction is delivered by people who do it for free. At the nearby club of Moret, which is also a quite large club, absolutely nobody is paid, and in my experience the prices are basically similar as those in Buno, if you fly a reasonable number of hours per year. I also flied at Montpellier when there was no paid personel, and in the Pyrenees, the same. I suppose that the situation is different in the Alps, where there are huge clubs, but i don't know them. -- Michel TALON |
#26
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Yes the situation is very different in the Alps - there are a lot of clubs,
few habitants so these clubs (especially in the South) rely on foreigners coming for visits - and that's only possible with payed staff. Even if you take French prices, I still think that soaring is not more expensive than a season of skiing or whatever. Only, people rather tend to want all of it... What also drives prices high is a bit the attitude of club members which I sometime observe. People look at a Pégase and say "not very exciting, I'd prefer a LS8"... whereas they come nowhere towards the performance limit of a Pégase. I certainly don't advocate Fauconnets or Wassmer gliders, but you can buy a second hand Pégase for about 1/5th of the cash you have to put down for a LS8, and you still have a L/D of 40+. -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "Michel Talon" a écrit dans le message de ... Bert Willing wrote: And no, Michel, instruction is not for free in France. Most medium and large clubs in France have one or more instructors which are payed (and numerous instructors who are not payed) - and even though the student doesn't pay a fee by the hour, where do you think do the salaries come from ?! This is perhaps the case of the clubs you are used to, but not the clubs i am used to. Of those only Buno-Bonnevaux has payed personel, but who does many other things besides instruction, such as taking care of gliders in winter, reparations on broken gliders, etc. Most of the instruction is delivered by people who do it for free. At the nearby club of Moret, which is also a quite large club, absolutely nobody is paid, and in my experience the prices are basically similar as those in Buno, if you fly a reasonable number of hours per year. I also flied at Montpellier when there was no paid personel, and in the Pyrenees, the same. I suppose that the situation is different in the Alps, where there are huge clubs, but i don't know them. -- Michel TALON |
#27
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Bert Willing wrote:
Yes the situation is very different in the Alps - there are a lot of clubs, few habitants so these clubs (especially in the South) rely on foreigners coming for visits - and that's only possible with payed staff. Yes, i understand. Even if you take French prices, I still think that soaring is not more expensive than a season of skiing or whatever. Only, people rather tend to want all of it... You know, there are less and less people who can afford skiing. I am a researcher in Paris University, and with this sort of salary it is out of question to go skiing a lot, or buy an expensive glider or similar things. The little money i can put aside, has been diverted into buying a house, and it would be completely irresponsible doing otherwise. What also drives prices high is a bit the attitude of club members which I sometime observe. People look at a Pégase and say "not very exciting, I'd prefer a LS8"... whereas they come nowhere towards the performance limit of a Pégase. I certainly don't advocate Fauconnets or Wassmer gliders, but you can buy a second hand Pégase for about 1/5th of the cash you have to put down for a LS8, and you still have a L/D of 40+. Your comments are completely coherent with what i have heard many times. And it is more justified to prefer flying an LS8 than a Pegase, compared to an LS4. This is exactly the form of badmouthing and snobbiness Lennie was speaking about and which is so prevalent in the people practising this sport. With any glider of the class of LS4 or Pegase, almost anybody with reasonable training can do very nice flies, XC, etc. I think it is the aim when thinking about a widely available and cheap glider (or a good second hand one). -- Michel TALON |
#28
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Michel Talon wrote:
... Here clubs have bought large quantities of ASK23 which are flying bricks compared to LS4s and at similar prices. ... This is not the exact reality. The total number of ASK23 registered in France is 6, 3 of them (F-CGCV, F-CGCZ and F-CHAS) are in my club (Centre Aéronautique de Beynes), the 3 others are at Moret/Episy. Of coures their performance is not competitive compared to LS4s or any other standard ship of the same generation with retracting gear. But calling it a flying brick is execessive. The performance is similar to the ASK21 (I agree the ASK21 is a little better), the problem is mainly in their low wing loading, which is also one of the purpose of their design, in order to make them easy to handle and very similar to the ASK21. I agree that the price is excessive, as almost everybody probably does, this is what made Schleicher stop the production. However this is a good illustration of the fact that the price is not directly related to performance. These gliders are very well built, with expensive materials (honeycomb sandwich), in order to withstand to the mishandling of beginners, and this has a cost that can't be reduced. |
#29
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tango4 wrote:
... We put up with having to talk in French when everyone else in the world of aviation talks English ... Everyone in the world of aviation talks his native language and in some cases English is also used as an international language. France is not an exception, I remember when I spent a few days flying in Spain I had to learn how to make my downwind radio call in Spanish. As you have the chance that your native language was choosen as the international one, you should not complain about it. |
#30
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Robert Ehrlich wrote:
Michel Talon wrote: ... Here clubs have bought large quantities of ASK23 which are flying bricks compared to LS4s and at similar prices. ... This is not the exact reality. The total number of ASK23 registered in France is 6, 3 of them (F-CGCV, F-CGCZ and F-CHAS) are in my club (Centre Aéronautique de Beynes), Well i have just taken a look at Beynes site. It appears that all beginner gliders are ASK23, this is quite a lot. I also see you have 21 gliders and the flat tarif is 1700 euros per year, that is more than Buno. But the range of your gliders is very nice, indeed! the 3 others are at Moret/Episy. Moret was proud of having very affordable conditions. With their 3 ASK23, a serious hole had been digged in the budget. Since the chief was an horrible snob (*), he also sold the Pegases and bought as many LS4, a second occasion to throw money by the windows. Of coures their performance is not competitive compared to LS4s or any other standard This is an understatement. However this is a good illustration of the fact that the price is not directly related to performance. Perfectly right, hence my assertion that for the same price it is best to have good performance. These gliders are very well built, with expensive materials (honeycomb sandwich), in order to withstand to the mishandling of beginners, and this has a cost that can't be reduced. Come on, "prices cannot be reduced" is a petition of principle. I am sure that your salary, and mine, has been reduced very effectively in the last ten years, in absolute value. And you can build a glider as a bulldozer, it will crash exactly the same if you spin when landing. -- Michel TALON |
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