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#11
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I have always heard it as Grob rhyming with rob.
The Twins are always in their element when it is really stoking. Reminds me of the time Ron Newell and I where watching some finishes at an inter-services once and I asked him about the Astir CS compared to the STD Cirrus, that he had a share in with my Dad, anyone remember "Cirrus 10"? Anyway he told me to listen to an Astir and how loud it was crossing the line, he then said, "it takes a lot of wasted energy to make that much noise". I flew Bicester's Astir CS, remember "316", I could get it to climb pretty well, did out climb my Dad who was it an ASW-20, remember "27", then he ran off and left me in a glide over to Little Rissy. Those were the days!! wrote in message oups.com... I hear most people pronounce Grob with a B on the end. But I dont think it is actually a B but rather an esset which is a letter in german that looks like a B but is pronounced as a hard S. So Grob should really be pronouced Gross. |
#12
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In message , Bruce
writes I've heard it pronounced 'led swan' ;-) Generally pronounced to rhyme with "rob" around here. Yup, that's right. I used to know a guy who worked at Mattsis and that was how he pronounced it. Maybe the earlier models are slow in roll and the tail is "heavy". But I really like the G103 Twin Astir, feels a little like a Mercedes Benz. All that momentum makes it a lot more comfortable than something like a K13 in strong conditions. In weak conditions it does emulate a well thrown brick... Maybe I just don't know better, but I like 'em. Everybody I know who has flown one for a while says exactly the same, a brick but I really enjoyed flying it :-) Robin -- Robin Birch |
#13
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![]() That was it! Concrete or lead, I've had many great flights in the 102 and 103. A nearby club (in the US, 190km is nearby :-) ) calls their 103 the Plastic Pig. The only glider I've flown where on a calm day i stomped on the rudder while on tow and wished I had more. Kinda reminds me of the Shorts driver who hit a microburst on final and pushed the engines to 110% rated power, mandating an expensive overhaul of the hot sections. When asked why he applied so much power, he replied "because the throttles wouldn't move any further" :-). Tony V. |
#14
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So would you rather have a Grob or a 2-33? Might as well stir up that
hornet nest since none of the PW 5 insults generated a response. Chip F |
#15
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chipsoars wrote:
So would you rather have a Grob or a 2-33? Might as well stir up that hornet nest since none of the PW 5 insults generated a response. LOL. Grob, please! Tony |
#16
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In article . com,
"chipsoars" wrote: So would you rather have a Grob or a 2-33? Might as well stir up that hornet nest since none of the PW 5 insults generated a response. Gosh that's easy. A Grob. The Twin Astir and descendents are great for learning to fly in, right up to handicapped contest flying (especially in wave or on the ridge). The PW5 is better on the weak thermal days we always seem to get in contests areound here though. -- Bruce | 41.1670S | \ spoken | -+- Hoult | 174.8263E | /\ here. | ----------O---------- |
#17
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Hi,
Is it "Grow"b? Is it "graw"b? The former. Ciao, MM -- Marian Aldenhövel, Rosenhain 23, 53123 Bonn http://www.marian-aldenhoevel.de "I ran some quick calculations on it. He's about 80% on the right track. That leaves him only 20% dead when he crashes." Bob C |
#18
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Interesting. In the US, pretty much everybody I know pronounces it
Grow"b (long O). I guess that's the non-metric pronounciation! More useless trivia: My glider is an LS6-b according to the flight manual. Yet everytime I see an LS in print in the US it's called an LS-6B, LS-4A, etc. Maybe because that's how we name our military planes (EA-6B, for example)? And if a Grob 103 is a Concrete Swan - then a Schweizer 2-32 is an Aluminum Overcast! Love that beast too... This is bad - I need a thermal fix soon! Cheers, Kirk 66 |
#19
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I have asked a German!
Interesting. In the US, pretty much everybody I know pronounces it Grow'b (long O). is the correct way to say Grob!!! At 12:36 09 February 2006, wrote: Interesting. In the US, pretty much everybody I know pronounces it Grow'b (long O). I guess that's the non-metric pronounciation! More useless trivia: My glider is an LS6-b according to the flight manual. Yet everytime I see an LS in print in the US it's called an LS-6B, LS-4A, etc. Maybe because that's how we name our military planes (EA-6B, for example)? And if a Grob 103 is a Concrete Swan - then a Schweizer 2-32 is an Aluminum Overcast! Love that beast too... This is bad - I need a thermal fix soon! Cheers, Kirk 66 |
#20
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Once, and forever. The letter 'o' in Grob is pronounced
like Boat and not like Bob. The vowel sound in Bob cannot be made in German using the letter 'o.' It does not exist. To make that sound they would have to write Bab or Bahb. Grob means big, thick, coarse, uncouth, peasant-like, etc. At 13:00 09 February 2006, Damien Dyer wrote: I have asked a German! Interesting. In the US, pretty much everybody I know pronounces it Grow'b (long O). is the correct way to say Grob!!! At 12:36 09 February 2006, wrote: Interesting. In the US, pretty much everybody I know pronounces it Grow'b (long O). I guess that's the non-metric pronounciation! More useless trivia: My glider is an LS6-b according to the flight manual. Yet everytime I see an LS in print in the US it's called an LS-6B, LS-4A, etc. Maybe because that's how we name our military planes (EA-6B, for example)? And if a Grob 103 is a Concrete Swan - then a Schweizer 2-32 is an Aluminum Overcast! Love that beast too... This is bad - I need a thermal fix soon! Cheers, Kirk 66 |
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