by Dayhead » Tue May 31, 2016 10:51 pm
Thanks for the info Rick.
For all any of you know, I just might be totally full of s***. But then again, I may be only partially full of it.
For the time being, I'm asking for a chance to get my point across. I'm not very articulate so I may need several posts to clarify just what it is I'm trying to say.
I came to HG from the airplane world. I was only a couple/few hours away from taking my private pilot checkride when I bought a used Pliable Moose standard and commenced teaching myself how to fly it.
Right off the bat I recognized that HG's weren't anything like an airplane, which was both good and bad.
The good we all know about. The bad qualities had among them the one I'm pissing about on this forum, poor roll control. I need to get something out of the way right now: There are many, and quite possibly a majority, of pilots that don't agree with me. So if you feel that the present state of the art is adequate, then you may wish to put me on your Ignore List. If I should be posting this stuff on a different forum, or start a new topic, please feel free to advise me of this.
I took a break from California and went back to live with family in the Missouri Ozarks in 1986, and didn't return to California 'til 1997. While in Missouri I made friends with some really cool airplane folks, and I got to spend a lot of time flying to airshows for free, although that meant spending a lot of time polishing the bare aluminum airframe of a T-6 and a PT-22, and of course upon arrival at the show I got to clean the oil off the belly of the planes.
On one such occasion, I made friends with the builder/owner of a 200+ mph fiberglass airplane, and he took me up with him.
It was amazing. Not only fast, but the thing was controlled with a little side stick, and with quite literally fingertip pressure the plane could be looped and rolled all day with practically no fatigue.
I knew right then that if this thing could be built by a layman in his garage, there was simply no reason why someone such as myself or you couldn't build a foot-launchable or wheeled-launched part 103 glider with truly outstanding handling qualities.
If you guys vote that I'm barking up the wrong tree here, I'll make like an Arab and quietly fold my tent and silently walk away. But if you think we can have a conversation, I'll stay.
Rick says that the pilot population voted with their wallets for the technology in use today. He's right, but I'd like to add my opinion:
Had a better system been offered, the pilots would have voted for it.
But Hg is a small market. No current manufacturer has the resources to pursue research and devilment into alternative ways of getting things done. So where will new design ideas come from? From the grassroots, from the backyard inventor.
I think that in the days or years to come we will see a breakthrough in HG design. It won't be all that great of a leap, but it will bring to our community a safer, more relaxing, and possibly more exciting flying apparatus, one without all the baggage that current Hg designs have.
It may be a tired cliche, but the willingness to do out of the box thinking is required. It will be important to not throw the baby out with the bathwater, to respect all that we've done so far, and yet still be willing to recognize the stuff that does need to be replaced.
Forget me for a moment, I'm sure many already have. Just take a look at the accidents, both here and in the Pg world. Look at the high cost of equipment, and the frightening depreciation rate it has. Almost no one of us is willing to look at our cost per flying hour, it's just too damn depressing. ( I'm one of the exceptions here, all my gear is antique).
I'll close with my opinion of Where We Went Wrong:
I've already mentioned pure weight shift for roll control. When this first became an issue, somebody invented the Tall Keel Pocket. Then when that could no longer cut the mustard, someone invented the Floating Cross-Bar.
Those inventions were relatively cheap to produce, and helped quite a bit. To keep weight-shift-for-roll viable, a new invention on par with those is needed. And no, the VG ain't it. I feel that we should be embarrassed by the use of a VG. We gotta make a choice between reasonable handling and performance, and we do it with what is essentially a sailboat boom vang or a main sheet system. In 2016? Gimmee a break.
Another fork in the road that we took, again by Popular Demand, is the type of competition we pursue.
Cross-country racing is fine, but the goals of it have driven the glider design. That's Ok for the gifted athletes I suppose, but humans have egos, and so we weekend warriors just gotta have a topless bladewing too.
Like Republicans, we vote against our own best interests.
In the early days, when even the hottest gliders could only muster performance figures that are less than today's trainers, competition was for Duration and Spot Landing. Hmmm, I wonder what kind of qualities today's gliders would have, if spot landings were still an event.
And what if our national org had promoted safety by giving awards to those mfgs that had the best safety record?
Today we have a situation where the forward keel length and harness suspension length conspire together to produce brain damage when the nose plate hits our head in a whacked landing.
And speaking of whacks:
How could glider design have been influenced to produce easy landing qualities? What could we as an org have done to promote some other qualities besides a high speed flat glide angle? It's Ok if the outstanding athletes among us dismiss my ideas and criticisms, after all they look good in the present system of doing things. But if you're not in that niche...
Pg's routinely out distance Hg's with twice the glide angle. Hmmm...maybe if competitions had been designed to stress ease of landing in tiny LZ's we wouldn't be in this mess. I wonder where we'd be today if comps had been structured to reward the lowest stalling speed and the lowest sink rate and turn diameter?
Ok, before I call it a night I'd like to remind everyone that my ranting and raving is purely just stream-of-consciousness writing, with little or no pre-thought involved. All I know is that we can do better, and we're not, and if we don't then it's bye-bye hang gliding.
Of course, I may be full of s***, in which case just put me on the ignore list. Your Friend in Flight, Steve