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#1
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![]() I was referring to the usual carry of a PG from the car or cable car to the take off point, not hauling the thing on your back up 3000 vertical feet. Yes, that is very hard. I have done that 100s of times. I have a light PG with super light harness. I like the workout of climbing up for 3 hours in the early morning and a quiet, quick glide back home for lunch. But you are right, for effortless flying at speed nothing beats the coffin with a view. gotovkotzepkoi "the coffin with a view"? Really? At 17,000' it's kinda essential to have - there is no way you are going to survive hanging out in the open in the 13 knot thermal to cloudbase I found last weekend on my way to the Grand Canyon. But you are right, for effortless flying at slow speed going nowhere, nothing probably beats the swing seat with a view... It's all fun! Kirk 66 (and yeah, I know para's go XC...chill. |
#2
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As a hang glider pilot that transitioned to glass a few years ago I do tend to be very surprised at the general lack of awareness of what hang gliders and even paragliders are capable of. Experienced sailplane pilots marveling at the fact that hang gliders can climb in thermals and go XC. Really, really long XC.
Hang glider and paraglider pilots that have thermal and XC experience make fantastic sailplane pilots. Here on the central coast of California, the PG pilots tend to be primarily coastal ridge lift flyers. Very little interest in XC and thermals. A few exceptions of course, but mostly they love the convenience of a quick drive to a coastal ridge and are up in flying in minutes. I routinely post about my XC flights and experiences in sailplanes, but haven't sucked anyone in from the PG/HG club here. I've given demo flights in my Duo and blown their minds with the performance, but cost/convenience seem to be the primary motivators. It's still a fantastic group to try to tap into, but the conversion rate is still pretty low. The main difference is how quickly an experience HG/PG pilot will pick up and transition into sailplanes and want to start going XC. Nowhere near the fear and trepidation around landing out when all you've ever done is "land out" in a hang glider. Yeah, I worry more about field selection and the obvious things to keep from damaging the plane or myself, but generally speaking the process is very well known to me. Another great source of potential pilots are the RC glider clubs. More than anything, I think the power pilot population represents the group most likely to take up and continue soaring. They are already used to the cost and preparation around flying an airplane. You just have to wean them off the throttle and onto the mental game that soaring is. Morgan On Sunday, April 29, 2012 12:44:33 PM UTC-7, kirk.stant wrote: I was referring to the usual carry of a PG from the car or cable car to the take off point, not hauling the thing on your back up 3000 vertical feet. Yes, that is very hard. I have done that 100s of times. I have a light PG with super light harness. I like the workout of climbing up for 3 hours in the early morning and a quiet, quick glide back home for lunch. But you are right, for effortless flying at speed nothing beats the coffin with a view. gotovkotzepkoi "the coffin with a view"? Really? At 17,000' it's kinda essential to have - there is no way you are going to survive hanging out in the open in the 13 knot thermal to cloudbase I found last weekend on my way to the Grand Canyon. But you are right, for effortless flying at slow speed going nowhere, nothing probably beats the swing seat with a view... It's all fun! Kirk 66 (and yeah, I know para's go XC...chill. |
#3
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I came to sailplanes from paragliding, and love and enjoy both, for
their unique qualities, as well as their commonalities. I have always felt that many paraglider pilots would go for sailplanes, if given a good introduction -- one which overcame the many stereotypes attributed to each form. I remember waiting on the paragliding launch at Ellenville, NY, on a day with winds too high to fly, watching a sailplane ridge-soaring overhead, and hearing another PG pilot state: "Sailplanes are a rich man's game." The reality is that the cost per hour may actually be lower in sailplanes, when you factor in the enormous number of hours spent driving to the paragliding site, waiting for the small window of acceptable weather conditions to open, and driving home. Living in the Northeast, it was the fact that my driving-to-flying ratio was vastly better in sailplanes than paragliders that got me. A $15,000 SGS 1-35, which retained all it's resale value, also looked pretty good relative to $3500 worth of PG gear that depreciated rapidly as available gear improved from year to year. I could go on for days on this topic. But in a nutshell, when we bemoan the "graying" of the SSA membership and wring our hands about the difficulty of recruiting younger members, I think we are missing a real opportunity by not reaching out to thousands of soaring pilots who are mastering soaring in "low performance" (8:1 L/D) gliders. I've always thought that the SSA and USHPA should offer each other a page in the respective magazines which guest authors could use to share their experience and perspective on the sports, so that each pilot population could start to learn more about the other, and to encourage "bi-wingualism." |
#4
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Le samedi 28 avril 2012 07:54:01 UTC+2, gotovkotzepkoi a écrit*:
you'd rather run off mountains with the wind in your face than sit in a bubble.... -- gotovkotzepkoi Well if you can translate this from french you get another opinion... ( extract from http://www.augredelair.fr/joomla/rec...igneBleyne.pdf ) "En passant non loin de l’atterro de st André, je m’aperçois qu’il n’y a qu’une voiture sur le parking et le plan récupe me parait totalement compromis. Arrivé sur la crête des serres je n’avance pas beaucoup, contré par le Sud , je traverse des thermiques en pleine forme et observe des planeurs méga satellisés sur le pic de Chamatte, rentrant à 120km/h vers Faïence. Je plafonne à 27 km/h sur la crête des Serres observe mon ombre sur le relief qui avance à la vitesse d’un bon coureur à pied, et découvre sur le pic de Chamatte un delta sans mât qui zone à peine 100m au-dessus du pic. Les cums du pic sont dissouts… Le deltiste enroule avec un rendement bien maigre… Soudain juste avant le pic, je rentre dans le plus virulent et magnifique thermique de la journée, alors que le delta enroule lui aussi à 300m dans un truc atomique identique. Nous montons comme des balles en nous observant à distance. Le truc est tellement puissant, qu’il monte droit sans dérive. D’habitude j’évite ce thermique fort et inutile pour un retour vers St André, mais là le soleil est encore bien haut et je n’ai jamais tenté le retour vers Bleyne… Je compte bien essayer aujourd’hui fort de mes 2800m de plaf. Le delta part comme une fusée vers la crête du Crémon/ Vauplane. Je mesure avec horreur la différence de perf face au vent. Il enroule déjà au vent du Crémon alors que je ne suis qu’à 1/3 de la transition." |
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