Interesting.
I recall a technical discussion a long time ago asking whether there was a
"natural best wingspan" imposed by the nature of soaring weather. The
question was this: "Ignoring competition classes, is there a single best
wingspan that is suited for the widest range of soaring conditions? The
answers converged around 18 meters. Larger spans were considered too slow
in strong conditions and smaller spans suffered in weak conditions. It's
interesting that the "most cost effective wingspan" is about the same.
This makes me wonder if eventually the 18 meter class will become dominant.
It also makes me wonder if the selection of 15 meters for the two most
popular classes was an error.
Bill Daniels
If this was true, why do the 25m gliders win the Open class
competitions? Why aren't the LS8-18's and V2C's etc. cleaning up on
the ASH-25's?
Maybe I'm missing something... but maybe not - didn't a Ventus win
open in SA recently (I could be mistaken).
Jim
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