![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 31 Jan 2009 22:15:02 GMT, Jim Beckman
wrote: Only 22 pilots? Now the numbers starts to make sense. What they actually tell us is that your club gliders don't really fly all that much cross-country. Which is fine, of course. Well.. let me put it this way: In 2008 club members made 53.000 kilometers in the OLC (similar to your club), placing us in the top ten percent of Germany's flying clubs, most of them situated in far better thermal conditions than our airfield. 30.000 kilometers of those were flown in club gliders. Nearly all pensioned members don't even try to fly XC on the weekends because they fly during the week were the other pilots need work (but they appear on the airfield to help and to have a good time). You'd need to add these 10 to 15 people to the 22 pilots which are on the XC reservation list. BTW: At the moment the entire German 15m-class national team consists of pilots of my club I'm pretty content with the situation. ![]() Which also makes sense - about a quarter of the fleet flown XC by about a quarter of your pilots. I would guess that our own club in Blairstown does about that well with XC in club gliders, although our fleet looks shabby indeed next to yours. We're having this dicussion since at least a decade: One state-of-the-art glider (e.g. ASW-27) or two older ones which are hardly inferior (e.g. ASW-20)? So far we have more than sufficient gliders for XC pilots, but we just bought an old Mistral-C as a first single seater after the 21 because we got so many new student pilots last year (THIS is what is missing: a basic trainer, compatible to the ASK-21, and affordable). But it's interesting: Most XC pilots of my club are pretty content if they fly two to three hours and return with 200 to 250 kilometers. The number of hardcore XC pilots who try to fly as far as possible whenever the weather allows it is very limited - less than five (I'm one of them - fortunately I have exclusive access to a pretty good private glider). Looks like most members of my club regard gliding as a pretty recreational sport - few of them are ambitious. ![]() Maybe one cause for that is that we have a very good social life (and an own club house) - on weekends there's always an afternoon tea, dinner and lunch, lots of wifes and children around. Many good causes to land and have a coffee and some self-made cake... I guess this is what makes many German clubs different from US clubs: The social life often plays a part that is nearly as impoortant as the flying. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
X-Wings and Canard Rotor Wings. | Charles Gray | Rotorcraft | 1 | March 22nd 05 12:26 AM |