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At 08:44 11 July 2019, Senna Van den Bosch wrote:
I've been flying my DG-101 for a year now and really love it. However, there are some gaps which haven't been sealed and I'd like to give tuning a shot. Does anyone have experience using aileron fences? Would it be worth using to increase handling? My rudder has no gap sealing to transition from tail to rudder. Is this advised to still have that sealed? Is turbulator tape something interesting? I have seen some articles on this for a Standard Cirrus but can't seem to find a definitive answer. Last but not least, winglets. I know there are no factory upgrade winglets available for a DG-100/101, but could it be possible to add the DG- 300 winglets? Every % of performance is welcome, feel free to add your options ![]() There is one glaring omission in this discussion, and it that is the issue of post-mold cure and spar waves on the wing surfaces. DG was better than most, but most gliders of that generation suffered from the thick resin in the wing spar caps continuing to cure (and thus shrink) over a period of ~2 years after manufacture. This process creates spar waves which will act to trip the laminar boundary layer to turbulent at a point on the wing chord well before the intended design transition point, thus significantly reducing performance. If you have a wave gauge, you can measure the waviness of the wing profile. If you don't have a wave gauge, you can simply take a handkerchief, (or paper towel, or a very thin plastic shopping bag, etc) and use it flat underneath your outstretched flat hand to rub chord-wise across the wing surface. Some designers have also commented that spar waves on the under surface of the wings are at least as important as those on the upper surfaces, if not more so, due to large lower surface laminar separation bubbles on that generation of airfoils. You will feel any significant waves this way. If you want to improve performance and you have spar waves, then you will need to get rid of them. If the waves are not too big, and if the gel-coat was applied thick enough at manufacture, then judicious sanding and polishing might be able to remove most of them. Probably best to check with your CAMO or someone who has done this more than a few times already, because if you are not careful, you can go through the gel-coat. If you are very lucky, the glider won't have much for spar waves, or a previous owner had already fixed the issue at another time before you bought it. While you are at it, make sure the dive brake caps are flush too, and by all means do seal the glider up... Basic glider tuning course "101" :-) Smoothing wings that were previously wavy will lead to a noticeable performance improvement when flying alongside other similar gliders, like if you were to want to race in Club Class, etc. RO |
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