Some shared rough notes in the play cloud of my part in the broader movement:
1. Wing5 has been a mantra. But in current notes: "Wing4" is showing up. The "4" regards affinity to pack max length of parts: 4 feet, not 5 ft. The "4" aims to more convenience and safety within a city bus. The "4" seems to allow a looking at more standard off-the-shelf items to use in prototypes.
2. Though continued interest holds inflatable parts, the having to carry an air pump is a downer for me, though workaround space may have fertile members.
3. Exploring fiberglass window screen material ...
4. Early expenditures hold errors, but lessons are hard to evaluate. "Don't do that again ..." etc.
5. Tug-of-war over single straight spar in cantilever or near cantilever verses left and right wing in rigged formats ...
6. Against Frank's insistence on "shape" first, I practice over structure for busability over shape; I let shape be looked at after seeing some kind of structure that aims to fit the busability ease.
7. There are so many technologies that seem to scratch at the project ... Some worker in each technology might be fun.
8. Nothing of my side of the project will arrive for show at the 2022 Otto Dockweiler Day.
9. Weight of parts is ever a pressing spur.
10. Glide ratio is staying as a secondary concern. If a structure gets me to the bottom of the slope reliably safely and is a happy tote on the bus and back up slope, then a win will be felt. Then go from such. Assembly and packing time are secondary to busability and tote satisfaction. Once confidence on busability and safety is met, then fine tuning the system will occur and material cost will be secondary. Yet low-cost-off-the-shelf materials are a pleasant thought === thus the "3." above note. Indeed, a bottom-only-getter may be a key to break Bob Kuczewski's "flights-in-a-day" (201 or 202} record.
11. Two bladders of TPU finally arrived for experiments. The bladders may support spar case diameters from 16" or less. Each bladder weighs nearly exactly 2 lb. The 4-mil TPU is beefier than would be needed for a lower-weight HG; but the present bladders will be entering many different spar cases for experiments; the bladders will taking a beating. I will be using one bladder until it cannot serve; then the other will begin service. But down the time line, I might explore using both bladders in one ship (communicating the air pressure via an umbilical hose from one left wing to right wing).
12. A too-heavy spar case of inflatable-jumper-house material is 11 lb and that is far heavier than spar cases of aim.
13. Sticks? I am staying with wood, aluminum, plastic, steel, fiberglass, or bamboo before spending on carbon fiber. Sticks serve up ribs, control frames, inflated-beam compression members, struts, sprogs, kingposts.
14. Double surface is most present in my exploration. And "sock" or two "socks" seem to be grabbing frequent attention in the play. Socks with holes in them! Holes for protruding knots when rigging is intended. Still soft-rigging when rigging... Methods for adjusting for line creep are in the play.
15. A general result to date: I am more confident than ever that a branch of modern hang gliding will be "easy-going low-stress bus-toted safe Dockweiler-only hang gliders" in the coming era. And that there will be a variety of wing formats to serve the same genre.