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Early Composite homebuilts - was Need help please



 
 
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  #11  
Old January 22nd 05, 05:50 PM
Ben
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I own and still fly the prototype Concept 70, first fully composite
sailplane built in the United States. First flight was in January 1971,
built by Art Zimmerman who started Berkshire Aircraft Company in New Jersey
to compete with the European sailplane manufacturers. He died after building
15 or so and the company folded.

Ben Jeffrey
N914RJ


"Bob Korves" bkorves@winfirstDECIMALcom wrote in message
...

"......... :-))" wrote in message
u...
First composite sailplanes were Libelle (1964), Phoebus (1964)
First composite homebuilt Vari-Eze (1975 from memory) (ignoring Jupiter

and
KR-1 which we really wooden)
First Certificated composite aircraft Windecker Eagle (Circa 1967).


Well, not quite. There was the Glasflugel BS-1, the first production
composite sailplane, first built in 1962

http://www.sailplanedirectory.com/glasflugel.htm

which was preceded by the Akaflieg (technical high school) Stuttgart FS-24
Phoenix, built in 1958 and already having a l/d (glide ratio) of 38:1.
This
was truly a composite homebuilt, but not powered as was requested by this
thread. For an overview of composite sailplane design history see

http://www.raeng.org.uk/news/publica...Darlington.pdf

These were beautiful aircraft, not crude in any way, that led the way to
the
fantastic sailplanes we have today. In many ways it has been sad to see
the
homebuilding movement in this country continue again and again to reinvent
the wheel WRT composite structure when the German sailplane manufacturers
had it pretty well figured out by the mid '60s. Most of those early
Libelles and other composite sailplanes are still flying.
-Bob Korves




  #12  
Old January 22nd 05, 10:26 PM
......... :-\)\)
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The BS-1 first flew in 1962 as a one off concept. The production version of
the BS-1, the Glasflugel, BS-1B did not fly until 1966, two years after the
first production composite gliders which are the two I mentioned. You are
right though ... the BS-1 and the FS-24 were the first composite gliders.


"Bob Korves" bkorves@winfirstDECIMALcom wrote in message
...

"......... :-))" wrote in message
u...
First composite sailplanes were Libelle (1964), Phoebus (1964)
First composite homebuilt Vari-Eze (1975 from memory) (ignoring Jupiter

and
KR-1 which we really wooden)
First Certificated composite aircraft Windecker Eagle (Circa 1967).


Well, not quite. There was the Glasflugel BS-1, the first production
composite sailplane, first built in 1962

http://www.sailplanedirectory.com/glasflugel.htm

which was preceded by the Akaflieg (technical high school) Stuttgart FS-24
Phoenix, built in 1958 and already having a l/d (glide ratio) of 38:1.

This
was truly a composite homebuilt, but not powered as was requested by this
thread. For an overview of composite sailplane design history see


http://www.raeng.org.uk/news/publica...nia%2015%20Dar
lington.pdf

These were beautiful aircraft, not crude in any way, that led the way to

the
fantastic sailplanes we have today. In many ways it has been sad to see

the
homebuilding movement in this country continue again and again to reinvent
the wheel WRT composite structure when the German sailplane manufacturers
had it pretty well figured out by the mid '60s. Most of those early
Libelles and other composite sailplanes are still flying.
-Bob Korves




  #13  
Old January 25th 05, 05:24 AM
Capt.Doug
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"Dave Hyde" wrote in message
It wasn't ex-am, but when was the Windecker Eagle
certified? ISTR it was pre-EZ, but I'm not sure.


Mid 1960s, IIRC.

D.


 




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