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#1
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The Discus 2 is now well over 15 years old - why is there nothing better in
Standard Class? Has glider design reached a plateau in terms of performance in the Standard Class? |
#2
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On Friday, January 3, 2014 2:24:27 PM UTC-5, Paul T wrote:
The Discus 2 is now well over 15 years old - why is there nothing better in Standard Class? Has glider design reached a plateau in terms of performance in the Standard Class? Nobody is buying new Std class gliders, in part because it is a quietly shrinking class. There is no market incentive for manufacturers to develop a new glider, especially when they can put their effort into the popular 18 meter gliders that the wealthy glider buying class seems to want while generating susstantially more revenue per sale. For racers, this is actaully a good thing because there are plenty of D2's,28's LS-8's, etc that can be had reasonably and allow a pilot to be competitive. One view UH |
#3
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Same is pretty much true in all the "smaller" classes
15m class there's not really anything "better" than the V2a or ASW27, both of which are pretty ancient designs 18m class, the new kid on the block is the JS1, the V2cx & ASG29 are still pretty close - JS1 has "Open class" option The newest gliders seem to be appearing in open class. But Schempp & Schleicher has now produced their offerings. 2-seat XC class seems stable with the Duo, Arcus & soon ASG32 Not sure I'd want to be starting a career in glider design right now. The only opening I can see is for a competitor for the K21 Relatively low cost, strong, reasonable performance, fly the whole training curriculum including spinning. A bit like the fixed wheel DG1000 PF At 20:16 03 January 2014, wrote: On Friday, January 3, 2014 2:24:27 PM UTC-5, Paul T wrote: The Discus 2 is now well over 15 years old - why is there nothing better in Standard Class? Has glider design reached a plateau in terms of performance in the Standard Class? Nobody is buying new Std class gliders, in part because it is a quietly shrinking class. There is no market incentive for manufacturers to develop a new glider, especially when they can put their effort into the popular 18 meter gliders that the wealthy glider buying class seems to want while generating susstantially more revenue per sale. For racers, this is actaully a good thing because there are plenty of D2's,28's LS-8's, etc that can be had reasonably and allow a pilot to be competitive. One view UH |
#4
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Duckhawk???
Cookie On Saturday, January 4, 2014 4:22:06 AM UTC-5, Peter F wrote: Same is pretty much true in all the "smaller" classes 15m class there's not really anything "better" than the V2a or ASW27, both of which are pretty ancient designs |
#5
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On Saturday, January 4, 2014 4:22:06 AM UTC-5, Peter F wrote:
Same is pretty much true in all the "smaller" classes But for 13.5 M lightweight: http://windward-performance.com/sparrowhawk-r/ GP-10 https://groups.google.com/forum/#!to...ng/dMK7spGOnaU |
#6
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On Friday, January 3, 2014 1:24:27 PM UTC-6, Paul T wrote:
The Discus 2 is now well over 15 years old - why is there nothing better in Standard Class? Has glider design reached a plateau in terms of performance in the Standard Class? Paul, flying an LS8-18, I have of course to take issue with your premise of the "best Standard Class Glider". However, UH is right on all points, manufacturers concentrate on higher revenue classes. Also, the development potential of unflapped 15m wings (and maybe the flapped ones as well) is minuscule and does not warrant a new design. Rolladen Schneider basically took the LS6 fuselage and wings (sans flaps) and optimized those components for a "new" model they called LS8 - and it is still competitive. ASW-28, Discus 2 and LS8's are very much in demand with prices of $70-$80k and with new 18m ships costing $150k+ I can see why: you get about the same enjoyment and OLC miles for half the price. So yes, Standard Class has peaked and there's not too much wrong with that. Herb |
#7
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On Saturday, January 4, 2014 4:22:06 AM UTC-5, Peter F wrote:
Same is pretty much true in all the "smaller" classes 15m class there's not really anything "better" than the V2a or ASW27, both of which are pretty ancient designs 18m class, the new kid on the block is the JS1, the V2cx & ASG29 are still pretty close - JS1 has "Open class" option The newest gliders seem to be appearing in open class. But Schempp & Schleicher has now produced their offerings. 2-seat XC class seems stable with the Duo, Arcus & soon ASG32 Not sure I'd want to be starting a career in glider design right now. The only opening I can see is for a competitor for the K21 Relatively low cost, strong, reasonable performance, fly the whole training curriculum including spinning. A bit like the fixed wheel DG1000 PF At 20:16 03 January 2014, wrote: On Friday, January 3, 2014 2:24:27 PM UTC-5, Paul T wrote: The Discus 2 is now well over 15 years old - why is there nothing better in Standard Class? Has glider design reached a plateau in terms of performance in the Standard Class? Nobody is buying new Std class gliders, in part because it is a quietly shrinking class. There is no market incentive for manufacturers to develop a new glider, especially when they can put their effort into the popular 18 meter gliders that the wealthy glider buying class seems to want while generating susstantially more revenue per sale. For racers, this is actaully a good thing because there are plenty of D2's,28's LS-8's, etc that can be had reasonably and allow a pilot to be competitive. One view UH " "The only opening I can see is for a competitor for the K21 Relatively low cost, strong, reasonable performance, fly the whole training curriculum including spinning. A bit like the fixed wheel DG1000 PF And SZD 54-2 Perkoz is exactly what you desire http://www.windpath.ca/index.php?opt...=35&It emid=8 Jerzy |
#8
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#9
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On Saturday, January 4, 2014 3:19:15 PM UTC-5, Paul T wrote:
-as for the Duckhawk it has yet to prove itself on the international scene. Someone should step up, buy one, and win a few international races in it. Or put a promising youngster in it as their proxy. |
#10
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It's worse/better, even, than UH details. In my admittedly personal experience, there's very little if any difference in performance between the D2/ASW 28/LS 8 and the previous generation ASW 24, a design that goes back more than TWENTY-FIVE years! The caveat, of course, would be "with the right winglets", for which UH has a lot of responsibility (his winglets are on my 24 and many others).
In addition to claimed incrementally higher performance, what the later designs offered were optional 18m wingtips (although I'm not sure how many owners opted for these), more crashworthy cockpits (in the case of the D2 and LS 8; the ASW 24's already outstanding design was the basis for the ASW 27, ASW 28, and ASG 29 fuselages) and perhaps a bit easier, though not necessarily better, thermaling. But when you look back over the preceding decades, the advances in performance have been minuscule. Is this because the technology ceased to advance, or because of lack of demand, or--in a sort of chicken-and-the-egg fashion--both? Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" U.S.A. |
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