Most numerous sailplane type and model in the world?
On Feb 5, 9:04*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 2/5/2011 6:41 PM, Tim Taylor wrote:
On Feb 5, 7:17 pm, Whiskey *wrote:
On Feb 5, 8:36 pm, Jamie *wrote:
I would certainly participate in one design racing if the Discus or
the LS-4 was the design.
Jamie Shore
I would as well.
WD
I think we tried to talk the IGC into using the LS-4 as the single
glider for the World Class. *You can see how well that worked out;
there are nearly as many PW-5's around as LS-4's, Not! *Logic is not
something that happens at IGC meetings, the herd mentality somehow
takes over and we now have seven classes. *Next month I am sure they
will want to add 14M and 17M classes for those that have been left out
of the 13.5M and 20M classes. *Yes, the LS-4 could have been the World
Class and there would have been no need for the Club class.
Personally, I think a Club Class centered on the LS4 makes far more
sense than a World Class based on the LS4. There were many more the
gliders in the Club Class already existence than LS4's and they would be
much cheaper than a new LS4.
My fading recollection from being an SSA Director during the World Class
development is no way did the manufacturer want to let go of the still
very valuable LS4 design so that other companies could build it. I'm
sure they would have been delighted to be the only manufacturer for the
World Class, but the other companies would have been hugely upset.
--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to
email me)- Hide quoted text -
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Are any of the owners of numerous glider types already organized? I
think there is a libelle organization? The LS-4 design is over 20
years old. Could the glider be legally copied?
Bill Snead
6W
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