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Mark
A good perspective -- I think the whole thing suffers from the "I'd do it for free!" syndrome. Same thing in flight instructing. Flying is something even the professionals think is fun. There are so many competitors who are willing to work for such a low price (because it is fun) that there is little financial incentive for production. Look at the APIS, Sparrowhawk, PW-5, Russia, Silent. Have the makers, I mean the actual workers on these gliders, made anything close to the amount of money they would if they were employed in a regular job? $80k/year for 4 years for Greg Cole's skills pretty much wipes out any possible profit on a Sparrowhawk with a production run of 20 at $30k. So there's a bunch of folks innovating and making gliders for charity. If you approached them with the same profit prospects and told them they'd be manufacturing innovative urinals, they'd run, not walk, away from the project. So what do we see? A lot of innovations and great ideas. The downside is so many competitors chipping away at the fairly small market that there is little chance for a Henry Ford type operation to succeed. Are we going to see one patentable "killer" glider? Maybe. A turbine self-launch Sparrowhawk would be very hard to compete with based on weight and the non-recurring engineering costs. But will we see a "killer" design for a larger market? I suspect not. I think gliding will continue to see a lot of low production run charitable innovators, each chipping away at buyers. Well, at least this is the case in the USA, where "experimental" gliders are allowed... In article , smjmitchell wrote: Which means, more than anything else, that one has to concentrate on one model and only one, because there is no room for high volume production of several models. As a consequence, any discussion wether 13m gliders are better than 15m gliders, wether DG gliders are better than the LS4, or any such futility may have only one consequence, distract people from the aim. Obsolutely ... in essence what you are saying is the same as Henry Ford 100 years ago when he said 'you can have any colour so long as it is black'. If the price was a lot lower and there was only one choice I don't think people would have anything to debate. They would just buy the thing. -- ------------+ Mark J. Boyd |
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