![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
poniedziaÅ‚ek, 11 stycznia 2021 oÂ*21:21:38 UTC+1 Martin Gregorie napisaÅ‚(a):
On Mon, 11 Jan 2021 10:42:56 -0800, George Haeh wrote: 40 hours before flying an LS-4?! It has to be the easiest flying glider I've ever been in. I've heard that some European clubs put students in it for their first single seater. Club rules etc....do differ between countries My post-solo experience is, I think, fairly typical for anybody learning to fly in one of the bigger UK clubs. I was sent solo on an ASK-21 at 16 hours (80 launches - almost all winched - I got my spin sign-off off winch launches followed by thermal climbs in an ASK-21 WITHOUT tail weights - with an instructor who taught me to spin it in normal W&B. After soloing in the ASK-21 I converted to the SZD Junior at a bit over 17 hours and 10 more launches, which I flew for another 33 hours and 100 launches - quite a lot of those being 6 min sled rides during two liftless British winters. I got my Silver C flying the Junior in my second solo summer. I'd gotten an aero-tow sign-off that summer (7 of those launches) and flew another 9 aero tows at Boulder and Williams before converting to a nice Pegase 101 at Williams. Back at the UK ranch again, I started to fly the club's high-performance fleet - Discus B and Pegase 90, together with a variety of gliders at other sites, which included UK hill sites, Paraparaumu and Omarama in NZ and Die Wasserkuppe, adding another 100 launches and 170 hours, mainly in the Pegase, before I bought my own glider. In reading the above, bear in mind that my club has a pair of Juniors flown by immediate post-solo pilots in summer and by anybody who wants to stay current in winter as well as three decent Standard-class gliders. There's also a tradition of organising expeditions to hill sites in early October when thermals have quit for the year. Both of these factors tend to lengthen the time most pilots spend in club gliders before thinking about buying one. -- -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org Yes, I see your point, but the reality of clubs in my country (Poland) probably differ quite much. To be honest I am sick and tired of queueing for a club glider, being at the mercy of whimsical instructors and wasting time when I am not lucky enough to "deserve" a glider. I am by no means an experienced pilot, but with near 600 take-offs/landings in powered planes/ultralights/gliders I guess I am not completely ignorant?... |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
FS: Nimbus 3-25.5 | JS | Soaring | 0 | February 19th 08 07:49 PM |
FS Nimbus 3 | Roy Bourgeois | Soaring | 0 | December 26th 07 07:47 PM |
Nimbus down? | [email protected] | Soaring | 2 | November 21st 06 02:10 PM |
Nimbus 4 | Ray Gimmey | Soaring | 0 | May 17th 04 06:46 PM |
F.S. Nimbus 3DM | Tom Stowers | Soaring | 0 | October 18th 03 07:06 PM |