The key to life is not accumulation. It's contribution. Hands that serve help more than the lips that pray.

Saturday, May 11, 2013

SWING Mistral 7 S (75-95)



SWING Mistral 7 S (75-95)


It has been a long time I have flown a SWING glider. The M7 S is now available and I flew it from 88 to 92 all up.

Today the test flight is being made at 88 all up.


The Mistral 7 has 7 lines /side, a nose shark profile, unsheathed lines at the top, with very minimalistic layout.


Launching: In calm air the M7 S rises smoothly and evenly without any hard points. In windy conditions it rises fast and needs a swift control to keep it overhead.


In the air: Once airborne, the pilot will immediately feel the high trim speed for a B glider even if flown at mid weight. It has a trim speed of 39.5 km/h at 88 all up.

I can describe the maneuverability and the brake authority as short, very responsive, but must adapt a certain technique to keep it agile and on course. Hitting a thermal if the brakes on the outside are pulled a bit, the M7 S strangely will be reluctant to turn nicely inside the core.

The pilot must let the M7 S with its energy, slip though, then control the pitch and let go of the outside break completely or just a ‘though’ of a pressure J and then weight shift and pull the inside brake for ±10 cm, finding himself in a perfect thermal swirl.


I flew this glider from very weak conditions to average thermals and in high wind soaring.

I always felt that the M7 S is on the attack. I cannot say that it’s a floating glider rather than an interesting racing glider.

In ‘windy conditions’ I felt that the M7 S profile cut through the wind with efficiency than any recent B I have tested.

In turbulent conditions the M7 S moves above the pilots head, and it’s a bit alive. It does have some pitch movements and fast reactions in turbulence, putting it in the high-end B category, but the authority on the brakes will keep the M7 always in control without the feeling of an empty paraglider, much better than some high-end B’s.


Climb rate:

In weak conditions at 88 all up, little and light brake controls are required to keep the M7 S from diving into the turn. A pilot could not make the M7 S at a slow stationary turn. It’s a racing B glider that likes to fly fast, so it could suffer a bit in very weak thermals (-0.2 m/s) .

In strong cores the energy inside the M7 S will enable its pilots to have some excellent climbing characteristics! As if it’s a loaded spring. The climbs in steady strong cores could match the class above, because of its constant biting ability.


Performance: Everyone is waiting for that chapter? Ok.

The M7 S is on top of the B category in terms of gliding performance. In a 4 km glide with a recent top C bigger size glider (85-105) loaded at 101, the results are: Same trim speed all the way and just a very few meters of difference for the ‘C’ at the end .(Videos on the way)

Don’t need to make measurements …The M7 S has definitely a superb glide angle but without the ability to float in lift lines like the higher rated ones.

 


The accelerator is relatively light and the increase in speed over trim is immediate and fast with some ± 15 km at my loadings. It is very usable and the leading edge deforms a bit at max speed but pulling a bit the A’s still felt pressurized.


Big ears are stable, very efficient and even better if coupled with the speed system. They reopen by themselves.


The stall point for the M7 S at my loadings is still very forgiving, with a stable parachute descent, before the full stall.


For which pilot is the M7 targeted: The M7 S is a high-end B glider that an educated intermediate pilot will feel at home, without being dull and empty of character. It needs the right amount of control.




Conclusion: SWING has introduced to the market a small flat area glider with plenty of performance. It needs an educated pilot to fly it happily. Pilots flying in those windy places would welcome the M7, or pilots who wants to go fast in a cross country flight .I can describe that glider like a small energetic race car.


https://plus.google.com/photos/110040226962521480605/albums/5876782218793065393?partnerid=gplp0

 

Wednesday, May 1, 2013

UP Kantega XC 2 S 70-90


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UP Kantega XC2 S (70-90)



My favorite glider in 2012 was the Trango XC2 .I really liked that glider ability to fly efficiently. I was waiting for Franta’s new creation the Kantega XC2. And since I can be min at 90 all up I preferred to get the S size for a test flight.



Launching is easy …even if there’s a little wind it can inflate without touching the brakes…



In the air at max load on the S size, I could sense a low trim speed that was confirmed afterward by flying next to gliders in the same cat.

That slow trim will enable the glider to lock on thermals at low speeds and climb vertically. In head wind thermals and climbs, it needs more time to enter that air mass. The day before I was test flying a Peak 3 in turbulent air, and I was active all the time under it. The next day when test flying the Kantega XC2 , I was feeling a completely relaxed and forgetting totally about the glider, especially that my friend reported same turbulences and discomfort on his Delta 2 as yesterday. On board the Kantega XC2, it was like sitting in a hammock on the beach in the Bahamas islands. All I was missing is the music…



The brake authority is very nice under the Xc2 allowing me to core every thermal even if it’s rough or disorganized. The turns are well coordinated and the wing can turn really narrow.



The overall glide in different conditions showed a competitive glide in the mid B category. I would have preferred a faster trim speed with more biting ability into the thermals like its bigger sister the Trango XC2.

But may be the extra comfort under the Kantega was the main focus of the designer.



The accelerator is smooth and usable all the way with 15 km gain over trim speed.



Big ears are stable if they aren’t pulled too much, but the sink rate is around 3 m/s with bar.



The stall point of the S size at my loading is a little below the hips and must be carefully reached when top landing.



Conclusion: I was a bit surprised about the 38 km/h trim speed on the loaded S size. But the overall nice package that the Kantega Xc2 offers that will give immense flying pleasure for many pilots.









https://plus.google.com/u/0/photos/110040226962521480605/albums/5872966667003282641




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Tuesday, April 23, 2013

GIN Atlas S


GIN Atlas S



On the 23rd I was on our flying site ‘Mezyara’ flying a Mentor 3 with superb XC conditions…

Our driver and friend came directly from the airport to the take off and I knew that I have to turn back to the take off after some nice XC flying because the Atlas S is waiting!

I landed switched glider and harness to be at 91 all up at the Atlas S and here I am airborne.



Launching is a piece of cake, and immediately generous conditions and first thermal made my smile wide enough to reach my ears ! 



I have test flew 2 years ago the Sprint Evo,and the Atlas was something very different in a much more positive way…



I am a ‘handling’ freak! and turning this jewel is an experience of a life time!

It has been ages since I found that crispy, direct ,linear handling on a B glider!



I think the two recent tested gliders were a blessing, a EN-C just before and now the Atlas S for its ‘unlimited pleasure feel’ overwhelmed me.

I was flying next to my friend on the Chili 3 S at 98 all up, and we did some long XC flights next to each other, and that was a much more realistic test.



I have to write more about handling…The Atlas can make turns inside any new B glider I have already tested! It can turn on itself J Really impressive!



In the air the feeling under the Atlas is joyful. It does give its pilot the exact amount of feedback without too many parasitic movements. It has some pitch and roll movements but still in a very small angles letting the pilot feels that he is on a very precise glider without being pushed around. A inspire confidence feeling .I can describe it as very well balanced, and surely it rests in the middle of the B category.



The Atlas has the tendency to slide into the thermals without being pushed away. It feels like pulling you ‘gently’ inside those cores with a positive vario.

The climb rate versus the best in the B category puts the Atlas really close in efficiency and I could confirm its excellent climb!



Gliding next to a ‘Top’ B glider in Xc conditions, with head wind, and down wind, the Atlas is never left behind as if they are stuck! At first bar the Atlas glide is also in par with the best. My friend and I were inseparable the whole flight.



The accelerator is soft and smooth, and can be pushed all along. The rear risers offer an efficient control in turbulent conditions and by pulling them gently the pilot can keep the Atlas on track.



Big ears are stable and effective. With the bar, a

-      4m/s can be achieved.



Conclusion:

After the appearance of the impressive Boomerang 9, I was curious to see if that will affect the lower rated gliders.

There is surely a leap in technology somewhere and the Atlas has surely inherited it!

The pleasure and performance ratio is very high!

With its high-end performance, its sublime climb rate, its dream handling and its easiness of flight, the Atlas S sits on the middle of the B category, a complete B glider that will mark its path and will be often talked about!















Friday, April 12, 2013

SKYWALK Chili 3 S





SKYWALK Chili 3 S

I never flew a Chili before. My last testing on a SKYWALK was with a Cayenne 4,and now the Chili 3 S arrived . I added some ballast to reach 99 all up on the S (80-100) .



Launching:

I didn’t find any particular behavior rather than easy to launch it in nil wind or in high wind .I have tried to kite it in high winds on a soaring slope by pulling the rear C risers. It works fine knowing that the C attachment point is far away from the brakes attachments. They do break a bit the profile but still manageable.



In The air:

Like the C4 was having long brake travel, the Chili3 has even a longer one!

In homogenous conditions with calm thermals the Chili 3 can be steered with the first 30 cm of length and the wing can be called as agile!

In turbulent conditions and when entering turbulent strong cores, the Chili 3 have a pronounced roll movement and the first 30 cm of travel won’t do any help for controlling the glider. In those turbulent conditions I found that to stop the surges or to replace the Chili 3 above my head, 60 cm of brake travel are needed sometimes! That’s fine as long as the pilot is acquainted with long brake travel.

I think the profile has lots of energy and the placement of the C attachment is far from the leading edge, putting the brakes at a ‘long,forgiving,linear but huge brake travel, that I am not used to yet!



Climb rate:

At 99 all up on a Chili 3 I was finding myself in a  ‘SKYGOD shape’ as I was able to out climb any mosquito! Yes I can confirm largely that the Chili 3 has an outstanding climb rate putting it on the very top of the B category!

Giving the Chili 3 to a gifted friend @ 100 all up that has only 3 years of experience, was a big mistake as he out climbed me on a M3@ 98 all up!... And that was a hard fact!!

So the Sky god thing didn’t happen to me only….



Glide:

The glide at trim speed in calm air showed a same glide angle as the M3 with a slightly less speed at trim. The glide in head wind glides and difficult conditions could favor slightly the M3 if the headwind surpasses 20km/h and in some surges. Less than that, they are almost identical! (Did several 6 km glides in moving conditions and the glider tips were sealed sometimes ;-)   )



The speed system is relatively light and it can be easily used in most conditions.

Big ears are efficient and can have nice descent rates (-4 m/s) when coupled also with the accelerator. They didn’t seem to flap and open by themselves or sometimes a little dab on the brakes.



Conclusion:

With the Chili 3 SKYWALK has created a top B glider in the category.

But it’s a relatively talkative EN-B, if I was to compare it with the others, and it shows its strong character only in turbulent strong cores! It needs a good ‘B’ pilots to fly it happily.

I wished the brake travel were 50% shorter! As I believe that such excellent performances coupled with that energy needs some more direct brake travel to place it immediately with a short travel.



No excuses for any B pilot flying the CHILI 3 for bombing out! Unless all the flying creature are asleep ;-)