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Sorry Bill, the ATC world is not specialised, it just
teaches people the basics, enough to fly solo, that is all it sets out to do and it achieves it with the Grob Acro. My point was that it is no more difficult to be taught to fly in an Acro than it is in a K13. The Acro is nearer to most GRP single seaters which your soaring members will fly. One question, as an instructor you are given the choice between sitting for 8 hours in the back seat of a K13 or a Grob Acro. Which would you choose, for me there is no contest, sitting for any length of time in the K13 would require a large spend on an osteopath. The question was not about a fleet but which was more suitable for a clubs only 2 seater. For my money, and I have flown most the Acro is the most suitable. I learned to fly in a T31 and instucted in them for many years, I would not recommend them for training today. As an aside the best and most effective 'glider' I have flown for teaching is without doubt the Venture, so I am not against wood or metal and fabric per se. Of course the CAA rules do not allow their use in that way in the wider world. DJ 401 At 14:48 28 April 2004, W.J. \bill\ Dean \u.K.\. wrote: It may well be that in the rather specialised world of the Air Training Corps the Grob Viking does a good job for your pupils aged under 21. Of the over 100 pupils you solo'd in the Grob, how many went on to get their Silver 'C'? However, Lasham has had in their fleet a K21 and a Grob, in fact I think they have had two successive Grobs. Nevertheless, Lasham still continue to use the K13 as their main training glider, they have no plans to replace them and are re-furbishing them. They currently have 1 Duo-Discus, 1 ASK21, 1 Grob Acro and 9 K13s. They have paid a deposit on a DG1000, this is not to replace a K13, they are thinking of changing the order to a turbo DG1000. Lasham have operated the K21, the Grob and the K13s quite long enough to evaluate them as training machines, and from the maintenance point of view. Lasham not only sends pupils solo, they also teach them to soar, fly cross-country and win competitions at world level so they must be doing something right! W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove 'ic' to reply. 'Don Johnstone' wrote in message ... The original post was asking for an opinion on the relative suitability of a Grob Acro versus a K13 from someone with experience. I would have thought that was sensible. Whether it was sensible to seek that on ras is perhaps open to debate. To answer the original question, as always it depends. I have instructed extensively on both with over 2500 launches in a Grob Acro and sending over 100 students under the age of 21 solo in it. It is probably one of the best ab initio training gliders I have even flown. Its main rival, the ASK21 is, like all Scheicher gliders, better harmonised and probably slightly easier to teach in, however the Grob is far more robust. (I have never seen the disappearing nosewheel syndrome in a Grob). If you just want to teach people to fly solo and not go off soaring then either glider will do. If however you want to teach beyond that the Grob is the proper option. If you are teaching people and are expecting them to go straight into a GRP glider as their first single seat machine then the Grob is the best option. If you want to reduce your long term maintenance costs then the Grob is the best option (You don't have to recover a Grob every few years, and the gelcoat is almost bomb proof). If you want to reduce your insurance bill then the K13 may be the way to go. If you want a much wider and larger cockpit loading option then the Grob is the answer. In my opinion there really is no contest. The K13 was a fine glider, in it's day, and still is in some ways but for overall robustness, suitability for training for GRP flying, and the ability to provide realistic xcountry training it has had it's day. The Grob is the best option even if you have to find a trailer for it. |
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