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On 2014-10-16 06:00:19 +0000, Howard Lau said:
I'm a rather new glider pilot and I am about to fly on the PW5 as my instructor deems me to be competent after training on the G103, I've seen photos and the glider seems small and the wingspan is only 10 meters or so, so I was wondering how she flies. Any PW-5 experiences? A lot of people criticise the PW5, and the design contest which resulted in it, but I think it does what it set out to do. Flying-wise, anyway. It failed to sell thousands and expand gliding as a whole, which was one of the hopes. It's a very nice, responsive, docile glider to fly. Like all single-seaters, it is lighter and more responsive than the Grob. You'll feel the air much more (Grobs are known as steamrollers around here). The glide angle is slightly worse than the Grob. Not enough to notice or affect your planning at 50 - 55 knots, but it gets rapidly worse above 65 or 70 knots. Don't fly above 65 knots unless you're in heavy sink (or want to lose height). On the plus side, the PW5 will circle much tighter and climb much better than the Grob. I've done contest flights up to 250 km in the PW5, in thermals. 500 km would be a big flight in it and need an early start, but 300 is not a problem. If the flight doesn't go according to plan, it's very easy to land in a field. The brakes work well for a steep approach, and the touchdown speed is low. I've done a number of outlandings in the PW5 and paced out each one. Normally I touch down about 30m from the fence (typical NZ sheep/cattle farm fence about 4 ft high), and stop in another 30m. |
#2
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I own a PW-5 and have about 75 hours in it. It is a great glider as stated by Quietpilot and Bruce.
One attraction is it has "no nasty habits". Stalling is a non event. The nose mushes down a slight bit and the glider starts flying again. Ditto in thermals. Because it is lighter and smaller than the Grob, you do get bounced around more in a rough thermal. It is a great "first single seat" glider to fly. A prediction - Once you jump into the PeeWee, you will never want to fly the Grob solo again. Lou |
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