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#21
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![]() when the chinese start building them they will sell like candies!!! No......let's make them in the U.S. Get this economy going again, even tho it would represent a drop in the bucket. I subscribe to a few Composites trade magazines and it is amazing the progress that is being made in the U.S. composites industry. This country is a leader in composites technology. Once you realize you're not going to get rich building gliders, but in doing so you provide a product that can be purchased by economically similar folks, it's a good thing. Brad |
#22
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Why not just make a one design, mass produced 15m glider (preferably with
optional plug in 18m tips). Needn't be all that much more expensive and would actually give some performance, so people would buy them as long as they looked like a sailplane. The problem with the PW5 is that people are embarrased to fly something that looks like a baby buggy with wings and a tailplane attached. There is no substitute for span (TINFOS)...! Derek Copeland At 16:38 28 January 2009, Brad wrote: when the chinese start building them they will sell like candies!!! No......let's make them in the U.S. Get this economy going again, even tho it would represent a drop in the bucket. I subscribe to a few Composites trade magazines and it is amazing the progress that is being made in the U.S. composites industry. This country is a leader in composites technology. Once you realize you're not going to get rich building gliders, but in doing so you provide a product that can be purchased by economically similar folks, it's a good thing. Brad |
#23
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![]() There is no substitute for span (TINFOS)...! There is no substitute for getting your acronyms correct (TINSFGYAC) |
#24
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At 16:07 28 January 2009, Surfer! wrote:
In message , Dan Silent writes going straight is boring........... particularly when high! It is? I loved flying along at 3,000' agl under a cloud street at 80 knots without going down. Ditto flying along a wave bar. -- Surfer! Email to: ramwater at uk2 dot net I loved flying along at 3,000' agl under a cloud street at 80 knots without going down. me too............... particularly on a november 18 in Kebec with a little snow on the gound............. and then I was expelled from the club!!!! Maybe because I had to much fun!!! I mentioned this as "dolphining" very very exiting!!!! Surfer! wrote: Ditto flying along a wave bar. How high? |
#25
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At 16:34 28 January 2009, Bob Kuykendall wrote:
Short Wings Gliders: much less expensive to tow In theory, yes. In practice, this hasn't been the case yet. Certainly not in North America! But in France sometime they charge tows by the minutes and not by the feet............ Then it makes a big difference! PS: always very very interesting to read your writing...... looking forward to see the HP24 flying soon!!! Daniel Scopel Silent 2 Targa C-GODY serial 2027 Volez souvent et soyez prudent. http://pages. videotron. com/dscopel/ |
#26
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At 16:07 28 January 2009, Surfer! wrote:
In message , Dan Silent writes going straight is boring........... particularly when high! It is? I loved flying along at 3,000' agl under a cloud street at 80 knots without going down. Ditto flying along a wave bar. -- Surfer! Email to: ramwater at uk2 dot net I loved flying along at 3,000' agl under a cloud street at 80 knots without going down. me too............... particularly on a november 18 in Kebec with a little snow on the gound............. and then I was expelled from the club!!!! Maybe because I had to much fun!!! I mentioned this as "dolphining" very very exiting!!!! Surfer! wrote: Ditto flying along a wave bar. How high? |
#27
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On Jan 28, 9:30*am, Derek Copeland wrote:
Why not just make a one design, mass produced 15m glider (preferably with optional plug in 18m tips)... Root bending moment scales something like exponentially with span, regardless of whether the span is part of the orignial wing or added later. So if you want to add 3m of span, you'd better design the wing structure for it from the get-go. We've already seen that even in what passes for mass production in the glider world that the per-unit cost and price of a 15m ship are great enough to severely limit the potential market, driving down production rates and driving up per-unit costs. This is driven to some degree by the complexity of the aircraft and the materials that go into it. It is driven by a greater degree by the cost of the tooling, the amount of floor space and volume it occupies, and by business expenses relating to maintaining, heating, and lighting commensurate shop space, and by wages and other labor costs. Big gliders require big tools, and big tools require big shops, and the bigness seems to scale with something like the square or the cube of the span. The only thing I'm bringing to the party with my own 15m/18m design is to keep overhead down to the barest of minimums and to offload a bunch of the more labor intensive tasks of assembly, fitting, and finishing to individual kit builders. The RV series of homebuilt airplanes suggests that there is a great deal of manufacturing capacity available in that market. My interest in smaller gliders is chiefly in that they would fit into smaller shops and smaller garages, opening up more potential market for kit sailplanes. I also think that the potential kit market might be more receptive to simplifications such as 90-degree landing flaps instead of airbrakes as we saw with the Schreder HP kits and the Monerai. Thanks, Bob K. |
#28
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At 16:34 28 January 2009, Bob Kuykendall wrote:
with new materials, new technologies, much lower prices and new regulations wingspan of 13.5 metres or less could take off in great number Yup, could be, so long as it's regarded favorably among the youthful. Maybe we can spin it as an extreme sport. It is an extreme sport, at least in Kanada. Gliding is defined as such by insurance companies..... Up here gliding and flying are two different things. And you get no coverage for gliding. Tell the kids................ they will line up to try! light motorgliders are now a big success............ over 300 sinuses sold, a new trend? Among those with $75K of discretionary funds, definitely. With $75K you'll get one wing only and no horizontal stab! unless usd and eur will exchange at par. But the Sinus flies so well with two wings that maybe only one is sufficient.................. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Qd2GT...e=channel_page Daniel Scopel Silent 2 Targa C-GODY serial 2027 Volez souvent et soyez prudent. http://pages. videotron. com/dscopel/ |
#29
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Chris Rollings wrote:
How many gliders with a wingspan of 13.5 metres or less have enjoyed a production run of over 1000? ...over 500? Ask yourself why? That's a hard question to answer, but there are several factors. An important one is the used market. A new glider must compete with used ones. If the number of pilots is not increasing, the price of used, higher performance gliders will be close enough to reduce the market for the new but lower performance glider. If the sport were growing well, there would be plenty of room for the new, lower span, cheaper glider in the market. Another factor is the competition classes. Once instituted, they encourage (even force) the manufacturers to build to that standard, which has been a wing span limit for many decades. I am pleased to see the Apis and Silent deviate from these "class conscious" wing spans, but competition classes still drive a large portion of the market. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#30
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On Wed, 28 Jan 2009 10:01:58 -0800 (PST), Bob Kuykendall
wrote: On Jan 28, 9:30*am, Derek Copeland wrote: Why not just make a one design, mass produced 15m glider (preferably with optional plug in 18m tips)... Root bending moment scales something like exponentially with span, regardless of whether the span is part of the orignial wing or added later. So if you want to add 3m of span, you'd better design the wing structure for it from the get-go. We've already seen that even in what passes for mass production in the glider world that the per-unit cost and price of a 15m ship are great enough to severely limit the potential market, driving down production rates and driving up per-unit costs. This is driven to some degree by the complexity of the aircraft and the materials that go into it. It is driven by a greater degree by the cost of the tooling, the amount of floor space and volume it occupies, and by business expenses relating to maintaining, heating, and lighting commensurate shop space, and by wages and other labor costs. Big gliders require big tools, and big tools require big shops, and the bigness seems to scale with something like the square or the cube of the span. The only thing I'm bringing to the party with my own 15m/18m design is to keep overhead down to the barest of minimums and to offload a bunch of the more labor intensive tasks of assembly, fitting, and finishing to individual kit builders. The RV series of homebuilt airplanes suggests that there is a great deal of manufacturing capacity available in that market. My interest in smaller gliders is chiefly in that they would fit into smaller shops and smaller garages, opening up more potential market for kit sailplanes. I also think that the potential kit market might be more receptive to simplifications such as 90-degree landing flaps instead of airbrakes as we saw with the Schreder HP kits and the Monerai. Thanks, Bob K. Maybe Van's should do a 1-26 style kit! Bob M. |
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