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#11
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On Dec 28, 9:37 am, toad wrote:
Sorry that I'm late to the discussion, but I think the issue about winches in the US is primarily about land. I doubt that there are very few public use airports in the US that would allow winch operations. There are only a few that put up with aero tow glider operations. So to start a winch operation in the US you would have to own enough land and be able to get it designated an airport (hard to do politically) to allow winch operation. In the northeastern US, there is only one glider clubs that I know of that has the space to do it, at Philadelphia. The land for such an operation would cost several million dollars at todays prices. Aero tow doesn't sound so expensive compared to paying for that mortgage. Todd Smith 3S Finger Lakes bought the old PGC winch and is using it at Dansville, a mixed use airport, since 2007. The Soaring Sooners are winching, since 2007, from a rather under utilized public airport with a nice new hangar full of gliders mostly. Greater Houston Soaring Association built a gliderport in recent years and winches regularly. They did great PR with the local government and locals before moving ahead to defuse any objections as they also self-launch and have multiple tow planes. You will get much less objection to establishing a new gliderport with a winch than a tow plane. Land can also be mixed use, and leased, rather than purchased. Local regulations can be problematic or not. If you are in a club, you will likely get more objection from your geezer members to setting up a winch only club than you will from neighbors. There are geographic limitations to flat land availability in many areas, so it can be challenging. Suitable ridge and hill top sites generally require less land than flat land sites for winching. Somehow the Europeans have been able do this with generally higher population densities and intense governmental restrictions. I know they don't set up new sites often, but they have done so since I've been soaring. Frank Whiteley |
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