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#16
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What killed the World Class was the World Class.
When the PW5 was awarded the World Class against a lot of opposition to the design the proponents of the PW5 sat back fielding criticism and smugly snubbed the others even after it was well apparent that few were going to get on their band wagon. Others that contended for the bid to be the world class glider and their followers were shut out and left with no place to compete. There were other good design entrants (most thought better than the committee picked PW5) and rumors of unfair politics deciding on the PW5 clouded the class. How the PW5 was picked over the other designs remains a topic of some controversy but it was and it failed to gather the interest of the masses (it really is homely) but there were however many other gliders that were in contention for the title sold that already meet much the original design criteria. If these models were all lumped together with the existing PW5 gliders the potential is there for a successful competition class to yet emerge.... Call it World Class or whatever you like but stick with the gliders already produced and there is no need to go through the process another time only to end up with the same dismal results. There is no need to start including Grob Astirs, Cirrus, LS4 and the likes of these since they already fit nicely into the Club Class (The USA needs also to finally adopt the rest of the worlds "Club Class" and "Racing Class" rather than continuing to disguise Ventus 2's and ASW27's and the likes as "Sports class" gliders)and there is no reason to start looking for a new alternative "World Class" design... Simply include the L-33's, SZD solo, Russia in with the PW5's and let them fight it out in a fair and balanced contest.....choose your weapon and go into battle..... low cost, lower performance racing.....easy enough. tim -- Please visit the Wings & Wheels website at www.wingsandwheels.com , "Ian Cant" wrote in message ... Soon we will see a very good 13m glider ....for $120,000.-only. And the happy owner will be a World Class Champion. Was that an original idea behind the World Class? If I recall correctly, the major aim of the World Class concept was to make competition soaring more accessible by keeping the cost down. The lower performance level and the single-design concepts arose from this aim [one design to allow mass production and the savings therefrom]. Unfortunately the masses did not buy the PW-5. Perhaps a reasonable class could be built from all the 13m and below sailplanes that are now around, typically with 30 or 35:1 L/Ds and easier retrieve characteristics than bigger ships. A set of rules can be built around the existing designs without denying entry to newer and better designs. Contrary to advertised beliefs, 30:1 is plenty for X-C [20:1 is plenty for the 1-26 guys]. But how do we keep the cost under control ? Well, my only semi-facetious suggestion would be to have a rule that the top three in any National-level contest have to offer their ships, fully equipped as flown, for sale at a fixed price immediately afterwards. Take $40,000 as a random number. Will anyone really want to buy a championship with a $60,000 ship if he has to sell it for $40,000 afterwards ? It would be snapped up. But the $20,000 ship that wins would probably not be sellable at $40,000 and the owner could keep it to fly another day. As a reference point, the Sparrowhawk is perhaps the highest performance 13m ship around, and I believe it still sells for below $40,000. And my aging Russia would be competitive; it cost me $19,000 new a few years ago; even with a trailer and flight recorder and oxygen etc and CA sales tax, it still came in at well below $25,000. It could be done. With 60 or so Russias, maybe 50 PW-5s, a growing number of Sparrowhawks and a sprinkling of Apis and Silents we should have a viable nucleus of a fleet. And if it works, more people may be enticed to join in affordable competive soaring. Ian |
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