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#11
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![]() Paul Hanson wrote: And what of it if today's youth want 'instant gratification'? Should that not then be the goal for soaring operations to provide? If that is our reality, than we either need to adapt to it or fade into irrelevance. -Paul That is a very perceptive comment. If instant gratification is the primary demand from our marketplace, and our primary goal is to expand our customer base, then we should aim for that instant gratification. A single long introductrory flight in the highest-performance self-launcher to be found; with the promise of solo in a couple of days, private license within a week ? But perhaps the soul of our sport is that it does NOT provide that kind of instant gratification, that instead it rewards prolonged effort. Then we restrict our market to that minority of people with similar tastes. We will not grow so big or so fast. And perhaps people like that are happy to start out at the bottom of the ladder, learn all the fundamental skills and work their way to the top. Blaniks or Schweizers as workhorses, with just a tantalizing glimpse of slippery glass to keep the long-term goal in mind, might then be appropriate. The glider does not matter so much compared to the inherent motivation of the pilot and the skill and dedication of the instructor. What we often do lose sight of is the need to offer a ladder with all the rungs in place. There must be an affordable - that means cheap - entry rung, intermediate rungs to gradually increase capabilities, and top rungs for the most skilled and competitive. That suggests a mixed fleet. Perhaps a 2-33 or Blanik, a 1-26 or similar to enjoy solo flight, an ASK-21 to transition to glass, a Cirrus or Libelle to taste peformance and a Duo or DG-1000 [possibly self-launching] before the new pilot needs to buy his personal sailplane of choice. Just a thought. Ian |
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