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My club in the UK has 9 of the things that have all made many tens of
thousands of launches, mostly by winch. They are tough, easy to repair and relatively cheap to buy compared with modern glass. They are a good, safe, all round trainer, but are rather slow and have low performance by modern standards. Unlike its successor the K21, it can be persuaded to spin and doesn't quickly loose vast amounts of height doing so, unlike some other modern glass trainers. We are starting to replace them with K21s and DG1000s. Derek Copeland At 04:54 29 October 2008, noel.wade wrote: Frank - Good point! Whether your group rigs and de-rigs the two-seaters often is another important consideration. This, of course, depends not only on your hangar/trailer/tie-down situation and your local weather patterns, but ALSO in how you run your operations and what kind of flying you intend to do with your 2- seat ships (for example, XC training entails a slightly higher risk of a 2-seater landout and the resulting de-rig to trailer it home). Take care, --Noel |
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