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#21
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On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 00:49:52 UTC, Bruce Hoult wrote:
: f the sport was growing then there wouldn't be enough older high : performance gliders to go around Only if it was growing faster than people bought new gliders. Basically, wooden gliders rot away and plastic ones don't, so it's inevitable that cheap old plastic gliders dominate the budget end of the market. I find the comparison with sailing interesting: hardly anyone makes entry-level 21 footers in the UK market, because there are just so many second hand boats to choose from at the same price. Ian -- |
#22
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Ian Johnston wrote:
On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 00:49:52 UTC, Bruce Hoult wrote: : f the sport was growing then there wouldn't be enough older high : performance gliders to go around Only if it was growing faster than people bought new gliders. Basically, wooden gliders rot away and plastic ones don't, so it's inevitable that cheap old plastic gliders dominate the budget end of the market. It is inevitable, but not because of rot: the factories stopped making wooden gliders about 35 years ago, so their number decreases as they are crashed or neglected. Plastic gliders also suffer from crashes and neglect, but they are still being built, so there is a ready supply of "new" old ones. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#23
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In article cCUlhtvFIYkV-pn2-ItubrYhRIIMd@localhost,
"Ian Johnston" wrote: On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 00:49:52 UTC, Bruce Hoult wrote: : f the sport was growing then there wouldn't be enough older high : performance gliders to go around Only if it was growing faster than people bought new gliders. Basically, wooden gliders rot away and plastic ones don't, so it's inevitable that cheap old plastic gliders dominate the budget end of the market. Not in NZ, as far as I can see. I see ads for airworthy Oly's and K6's and the like for NZ$6k - $12k. I don't think you've get anything much glass for under $20k and I include PW-5's in that. -- Bruce -- Bruce | 41.1670S | \ spoken | -+- Hoult | 174.8263E | /\ here. | ----------O---------- |
#24
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I personally liked the retract Russia polar so much, and the low weight,
and the assembly, that I'd consider buying one, but I'd like to see how the "ruggedness factor" plays out first with the ones at the field. Mark, You should look into the Apis line of gliders, www.apisgliders.com. Better engineered and built than the Russia and more bang for the buck than the Sparrowhawk. There is one Apis 13 based in San Diego. Robert Mudd Apis Saiplanes inc. |
#25
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Jacek, you,re so right.
3 years ago a polish junior was invited to our world class national comp. He did not have a glider for 2 (1000pts ea) days....and you know what happened. The same kid won world championships in PW-5 next year. And the same "kid"(he is not a junior now) won this year's club class world championship. Lets look at the american champion. U.S. is a nobody on the world's arena for the last 20 years. There is no role model. In his life time ,US average instructor did not fly further from airport than his L/D would alow ( off duty, his glider has to have min 40 L/D).This is why a american pilot would be afraid of the PW-5.(Germans just don't want to lose the customers buying expensive fiber). U.S. average junior gets discounts (great start) on flying but nobody (except his father or his uncle) will coach him in cross country flying. Juniors here don't deserve to have their own regionals or nationals. Instructors wannabes don't have yearly camps to get their licence and be new soaring leaders/cross country promoters for juniors. Lately the only bright star in the U.S. sky is Garret Willat and his friends from New Mexico and Colorado, whose successful struggle to form and unite U.S. junior's commiunity. Juniors don't mind flying PW-5 or Libelle, they are not afraid. They don't cry if they get a 7 hour task like most comp pilots in US. US World Class pilots support fully every year juniors (paying for tows and entry fees and for the glider) at PW-5 competitions. Ryszard Krolikowski |
#26
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On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 23:53:31 UTC, Bruce Hoult wrote:
: In article cCUlhtvFIYkV-pn2-ItubrYhRIIMd@localhost, : "Ian Johnston" wrote: : Only if it was growing faster than people bought new gliders. : Basically, wooden gliders rot away and plastic ones don't, so it's : inevitable that cheap old plastic gliders dominate the budget end of : the market. : : Not in NZ, as far as I can see. I see ads for airworthy Oly's and K6's : and the like for NZ$6k - $12k. I don't think you've get anything much : glass for under $20k and I include PW-5's in that. I don't doubt that there may be special situations - places a long shipping charge away from glider manufacturers - where things are different. In the UK, the 8 grand which it would have taken to buy a nice Ka6E ten years ago will now buy you something quite respectable in the Astir line. Ian |
#27
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I'm a big fan of light aircraft with light wings. So yes, the
Apis is interesting. Unfortunately, there aren't too many around. It's easier for me to research accident reports and prices of the PW-5 and Russia because there are so darned many of them. There are at least 3 Russias at Avenal alone. I'm just not sure there's enough market for the half-dozen or so light gliders designed in the past ten years. Silent and PW-5 and Apis and Russia and Sparrowhawk and L-33 and Junior...hmmm...it will be interesting to see the competition for the next World Class glider. I'm still not decided on side opening canopy or front. The PW-5 was a bit "athletic" to get into, but at least if one left the canopy unlocked, there was no issue with it (ask me how I know). The PW-5 and the Russia also both have inadequate ventilation for 100+ degree heat. If the thermals couldn't get to 4K, it was just a freakin' sauna. I guess most European test pilots fly in the winter, eh? Robertmudd1u wrote: I personally liked the retract Russia polar so much, and the low weight, and the assembly, that I'd consider buying one, but I'd like to see how the "ruggedness factor" plays out first with the ones at the field. Mark, You should look into the Apis line of gliders, www.apisgliders.com. Better engineered and built than the Russia and more bang for the buck than the Sparrowhawk. There is one Apis 13 based in San Diego. -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#28
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![]() It strikes me as odd that the most vocal argument against the PW-5 seems to be the "unconventional" aesthetics. Compared to some of the Schweizer designs or old European mixed construction types, I can't see the problem. If you compare it with our usual sleek plastic machines, I agree the high tail boom and conventional tail seem strange, but there is a logical explanation: a T-tail needs to have a much stronger tail boom to absorb the torsion loads. To have a conventional tail with sufficient ground clearance for field landings in crops, it has to be high-mounted. This design feature thus helps to keep the price down. Handsome is as handsome does, or? The second argument is the low performance and high price compared to some older club class gliders. In a monotype contest, absolute performance should not really be a point. And financially, I think it is totally unjustified to compare the price of a new or near new PW-5 with that of a 30-year old club class glider. Their philosophies are also completely different. You can let a low-hour solo pilot fly the PW-5 (easy flight characteristics were part of the World Class design, in order for a young pilot to be able to fly it as his first solo glider, and fly his first competition in it while being on equal footing with the other competitors), but I sure wouldn't advocate putting him in a Standard Cirrus, to name but a very popular club class glider. And I have seen enough cases of sloppy repairs camouflaged under a "complete respray" to be very cautious when evaluating such an old composite glider. The World Class project was a contest with a deadline; some interesting projects never left the drawing board, others had an unfinished or unsatisfactory prototype (for example, I remember the Russia 1 prototype being structurally weak, and the stronger Russia 2 being not completely up to standard at the time of the testing), others had less than desirable flight characteristics. At the time, the PW-5 was the one corresponding most to the letter and spirit of the contest. You have to take these limitations into account. But from the start of the project, the top manufacturers (all German) refused to believe in it, because performance-wise, it was a big leap backwards. The lack of interest of most of the known competitors (there were some who played the game, participating at least at the first World Class contest, like Karl Striedieck and Bruno Gantenbrink) sealed the fate of the World Class. If FAI itself had really been convinced of the value of a monotype contest, perhaps it should have decided that only the World Class Champion could be "World Champion". I bet the attitude of some competitors would have been completely different. Aesthetics where not taken into account in the World Class contest. Perhaps this was a mistake. But I seem to remember that not everybody was convinced at first that the Discus-wing was appealing to the eye. It's only when the glider started to win every contest that it suddenly looked right to everybody. -- stephanevdv ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Posted via OziPilots Online [ http://www.OziPilotsOnline.com.au ] - A website for Australian Pilots regardless of when, why, or what they fly - |
#29
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Ian Johnston wrote:
On Sat, 21 Aug 2004 23:53:31 UTC, Bruce Hoult wrote: : In article cCUlhtvFIYkV-pn2-ItubrYhRIIMd@localhost, : "Ian Johnston" wrote: : Only if it was growing faster than people bought new gliders. : Basically, wooden gliders rot away and plastic ones don't, so it's : inevitable that cheap old plastic gliders dominate the budget end of : the market. : : Not in NZ, as far as I can see. I see ads for airworthy Oly's and K6's : and the like for NZ$6k - $12k. I don't think you've get anything much : glass for under $20k and I include PW-5's in that. I don't doubt that there may be special situations - places a long shipping charge away from glider manufacturers - where things are different. In the UK, the 8 grand which it would have taken to buy a nice Ka6E ten years ago will now buy you something quite respectable in the Astir line. Wouldn't 8 grand in the UK be about $20K in NZ? But the answer was about relative prices, really: What would it take to buy something respectable in the Ka6 line in the UK? And do you think the used glider prices have fallen because of reduced demand (less people that want gliders) or increased supply (more people are buying new ones)? -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#30
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![]() "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:412874c6$1@darkstar... I'm still not decided on side opening canopy or front. The PW-5 was a bit "athletic" to get into, but at least if one left the canopy unlocked, there was no issue with it (ask me how I know). You just touched on my pet peeve. At least one Russia has come to grief after a typical unlocked canopy incident. Unlocked side-opening, (and front-opening back) canopies represent a continuing source of glider accidents that could easily be "designed away" by manufacturers. We insist on automatic control hookups on new gliders because they prevent accidents, so I don't understand why we tolerate those crappy canopy latches that are so easily left unlocked or accidentally unlocked in flight. The L-13 canopy latch is a better (though far from perfect) example of a side-canopy latch. If properly maintained, it is almost idiot proof because it latches automatically, much like your car door or the hood of your car. Your basic cam-acting door latch was probably invented hundreds of years ago; why can't we have this "space-age" technology in our gliders? Vaughn |
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