Slingsby Skylark 2b - Thoughts?
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Slingsby Skylark 2b - Thoughts?
Folks,
I am currently looking at purchasing the above glider and wonder if anyone here has any experiences? Things to look for etc when having a look would be appreciated too.
Regards,
Tiger
I am currently looking at purchasing the above glider and wonder if anyone here has any experiences? Things to look for etc when having a look would be appreciated too.
Regards,
Tiger
A few key points.
1 Take an "adult" with you to look at it
2 If it smells "musty" walk away
3 Fabric...press it gently with a finger tip; if it forms a ring, walk away
4 On gliders this age, the trailer is the most important thing.
5 Rigging is easy, but the centre section is a bit heavy . ( not as bad a a kestrel wing root though)
6 Flying.Stable, easy to teach yourself cloud flying, has the usual slingsby nod at the top of a winch launch, just release the back pressure. Dosent soar as well as a K8, but will outglide same.
For your first glider, if the price is right, you will have bags of fun for little money. Will get you your silver C.
Have FUN
1 Take an "adult" with you to look at it
2 If it smells "musty" walk away
3 Fabric...press it gently with a finger tip; if it forms a ring, walk away
4 On gliders this age, the trailer is the most important thing.
5 Rigging is easy, but the centre section is a bit heavy . ( not as bad a a kestrel wing root though)
6 Flying.Stable, easy to teach yourself cloud flying, has the usual slingsby nod at the top of a winch launch, just release the back pressure. Dosent soar as well as a K8, but will outglide same.
For your first glider, if the price is right, you will have bags of fun for little money. Will get you your silver C.
Have FUN
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Preusmably you have discussed this with the CFI where you fly - if not do so before going any further with buying a glider.
Has this glider got a current CoA? Be extra careful if it doesn't.
Have you had a BGA inspector check it? If not, do so, and try to find one with an interest in older wood gliders especially if it doesn't have a CoA. My club has one, but I have no idea if most other clubs do.
Have you tried rigging it? Rigging aids can take the strain out of it, but the Skylark at my club seems to take over an hour to rig and another hour to derig.
Have you sat in it? You need to fit, have a decent view and be comfortable. If not, walk away. Quite a bit can be done with dynafoam and the like, but everything has it's limits. BTW you should be sitting on a layer of dynafoam or similar - if it has a soft squishy seat cushion you need to replace it.
Plus all the other good advice below. Especially about the trailer - if it's not roadworthy don't bother. Check it all - look at the underframe, check the lights, check the tyres etc. Glider trailer tyres tend to crack on the sidewalls and also develop flats. I got a new tyre for £35 last year (ATS, Brackley) but if you need three of them that's over £100 and I'm guessing you are on a pretty tight budget.
Make a list of everything else you will need. If it has a parachute, when was it last packed? Does it have some kind of data logger? You will need something if you want to do Silver badge flights - and if you don't I can't really see the point in having your own glider. You might need rigging aids - whilst ingenuity will go a long way, money comes into it at some point if only to express gratitude for help received. (getting the rivets fixed on my trailer cost a rather good bottle of single malt)
Also look at your annual costs - glider parking, insurance and CoA are the main ones.
Finally, how old are you? Younger folks are starting to get caught with not having the group on their driving licence without doing some extra. (old folks like me have a list of groups as long as our arm!) And do you have a car with a towbar?
(edit)
I forgot to say that it's far too easy with a glider of this age to end up buying a project glider rather than one you can start flying and have fun with. It's also easy to end up with a glider that will never, ever fly again no matter how much time and energy is put into it.
Now if a project glider is also your idea of fun, I'd suggest you need a mentor who is a wood glider enthusiast so you start with something that is salvegeable and end up with something that's airworthy.
Has this glider got a current CoA? Be extra careful if it doesn't.
Have you had a BGA inspector check it? If not, do so, and try to find one with an interest in older wood gliders especially if it doesn't have a CoA. My club has one, but I have no idea if most other clubs do.
Have you tried rigging it? Rigging aids can take the strain out of it, but the Skylark at my club seems to take over an hour to rig and another hour to derig.
Have you sat in it? You need to fit, have a decent view and be comfortable. If not, walk away. Quite a bit can be done with dynafoam and the like, but everything has it's limits. BTW you should be sitting on a layer of dynafoam or similar - if it has a soft squishy seat cushion you need to replace it.
Plus all the other good advice below. Especially about the trailer - if it's not roadworthy don't bother. Check it all - look at the underframe, check the lights, check the tyres etc. Glider trailer tyres tend to crack on the sidewalls and also develop flats. I got a new tyre for £35 last year (ATS, Brackley) but if you need three of them that's over £100 and I'm guessing you are on a pretty tight budget.
Make a list of everything else you will need. If it has a parachute, when was it last packed? Does it have some kind of data logger? You will need something if you want to do Silver badge flights - and if you don't I can't really see the point in having your own glider. You might need rigging aids - whilst ingenuity will go a long way, money comes into it at some point if only to express gratitude for help received. (getting the rivets fixed on my trailer cost a rather good bottle of single malt)
Also look at your annual costs - glider parking, insurance and CoA are the main ones.
Finally, how old are you? Younger folks are starting to get caught with not having the group on their driving licence without doing some extra. (old folks like me have a list of groups as long as our arm!) And do you have a car with a towbar?
(edit)
I forgot to say that it's far too easy with a glider of this age to end up buying a project glider rather than one you can start flying and have fun with. It's also easy to end up with a glider that will never, ever fly again no matter how much time and energy is put into it.
Now if a project glider is also your idea of fun, I'd suggest you need a mentor who is a wood glider enthusiast so you start with something that is salvegeable and end up with something that's airworthy.
Last edited by cats_five; 22nd Feb 2010 at 10:10.
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Just one thing...
"...easy to teach yourself cloud flying...."
Not sure I'd recommend that without having had the benefit of some instruction/practice with a safety pilot first....
Not sure I'd recommend that without having had the benefit of some instruction/practice with a safety pilot first....
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Blimey - missed that! Guess it was said on the ground the Skylark (probably) has speed-limiting airbrakes. Personally I don't suggest anyone does deliberate cloud flying and agree absolutely with your recomendation.
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As I recall:
Good
- Great fun to fly, very slow in roll, soars really well but does not penetrate that well, awesome brakes
- safe for low time pilot
Bad
- Heavy to rig
- 3 piece wing is always awkward
Ugly
- there was an issue with sternposts on Skylarks 2,3 & 4. There should be inspections holes in the side of the fin (at the base) and inspection records (I seem to remember it was a mandatory and I had to borrow a boroscope to check one)
- Difficult to get any spares for them nowadays
Hope this helps
Arc
Good
- Great fun to fly, very slow in roll, soars really well but does not penetrate that well, awesome brakes
- safe for low time pilot
Bad
- Heavy to rig
- 3 piece wing is always awkward
Ugly
- there was an issue with sternposts on Skylarks 2,3 & 4. There should be inspections holes in the side of the fin (at the base) and inspection records (I seem to remember it was a mandatory and I had to borrow a boroscope to check one)
- Difficult to get any spares for them nowadays
Hope this helps
Arc
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I flew a Skylark 2, but was only a quick bash around the circuit. As has been said, has a tendancy to nod a bit on the winch, but something that will be easy to control.
Meanwhile I`ve just purchased a share in an Oly2b!
Meanwhile I`ve just purchased a share in an Oly2b!
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The early Skylarks should be looked at as a plaything - a good, cheap way of getting into the air and exploring your local area. It's not a serious cross country machine - Ka6's will eat it for breakfast, and rigging it is a team sport - also expect to have no friends when you land out as without good rigging aits it's hard work in a muddy field.
If you just want a toy, then it'll be fine. If you've aspirations of becoming a top cross country pilot, you'll outgrow it in very short order. It'll get around a 50k - on a good day - but you'll work hard for it. Can't remember much about cabin comfort but if other aircraft of that era that i've flown are anything to go by you'll hate it after 5hrs.
If you just want a toy, then it'll be fine. If you've aspirations of becoming a top cross country pilot, you'll outgrow it in very short order. It'll get around a 50k - on a good day - but you'll work hard for it. Can't remember much about cabin comfort but if other aircraft of that era that i've flown are anything to go by you'll hate it after 5hrs.
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g12k......
"Meanwhile I`ve just purchased a share in an Oly2b!"
Good move g12k. Three of us bought one from the Polish Air Force Assoc. at Lasham in 1966. Beautifully maintained by the Poles, we had such fun in the 2B.
Did 6hrs and gain of height one sunny Lasham day. Not the most comfortable seating position but a joy to fly, especially in marginal lift conditions. Would thermal on a cow f*rt.
Great glider and being surrounded by helpful Poles was a bonus. We were made "almost Poles" and got to fly their up to date machines as well. Even in '66/7 the Oly was real vintage stuff.
"Meanwhile I`ve just purchased a share in an Oly2b!"
Good move g12k. Three of us bought one from the Polish Air Force Assoc. at Lasham in 1966. Beautifully maintained by the Poles, we had such fun in the 2B.
Did 6hrs and gain of height one sunny Lasham day. Not the most comfortable seating position but a joy to fly, especially in marginal lift conditions. Would thermal on a cow f*rt.
Great glider and being surrounded by helpful Poles was a bonus. We were made "almost Poles" and got to fly their up to date machines as well. Even in '66/7 the Oly was real vintage stuff.
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Fin spar inspection at base technical notice TN107/T50 was issued 08/87 and followed an abused Skylark shedding its fin.
The BGA website summary says that it is annual and after heavy landings, ground loops etc. The written TN as originally issued states that it was a one off requirement and then mandatory after a heavy landing or ground loop. I've checked this with the VGC technical officer who says that the written TN is applicable and not the BGA summary.
The TN demanded the removal of a sizeable chunk of ply at the base of the fin to allow inspection and it would have been a major annual effort. The fact that the original ispection has been carried out (in 1987/88) should be recorded in the glider logbook.
Having said that, given the present day availability of fibre optic borescopes a peer into the area under the fin via a small hole is however a very good idea as part of the CofA.
P.S. I can rig a Skylark 4 in 15 minutes and derig and have it in the trailer in less than 10 - with 1 other person who is not an Olypic weightlifter. The stories about needing an hour to rig one imply major finger problems.
The BGA website summary says that it is annual and after heavy landings, ground loops etc. The written TN as originally issued states that it was a one off requirement and then mandatory after a heavy landing or ground loop. I've checked this with the VGC technical officer who says that the written TN is applicable and not the BGA summary.
The TN demanded the removal of a sizeable chunk of ply at the base of the fin to allow inspection and it would have been a major annual effort. The fact that the original ispection has been carried out (in 1987/88) should be recorded in the glider logbook.
Having said that, given the present day availability of fibre optic borescopes a peer into the area under the fin via a small hole is however a very good idea as part of the CofA.
P.S. I can rig a Skylark 4 in 15 minutes and derig and have it in the trailer in less than 10 - with 1 other person who is not an Olypic weightlifter. The stories about needing an hour to rig one imply major finger problems.
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Thanks for that Aviate! When offered a share + year costs for £220 you have to take it!
Looking forward to flying it on the Ridge at Parham, so hoping to finish my silver in it. If it`s not in wood it shouldn`t count Did my silver height in Ka6CR at Pock so i`ve made the right start!
Looking forward to flying it on the Ridge at Parham, so hoping to finish my silver in it. If it`s not in wood it shouldn`t count Did my silver height in Ka6CR at Pock so i`ve made the right start!
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Am bemused that it shouldn't count unless it's in wood. All that happens is people flying wood usually have to wait longer for a good enough day, and they probably visit more fields.
Pah wimps. In my day it didn't count unless it was wood and had struts.
And a 500k had to be an FAI triangle - none of the 80km yo-yo things.
Not to mention living in a hole in the road - did I mention I went to school in Leeds?
Actually, although my logbook last records a Skylark 2 in 1972 I recall it as pleasant enough to fly, adequate soaring glider on a half reasonable day and less of a strain to rig than the larger 3 or 4. I echo the advocates of taking a wood experienced inspector to look at one.
And a 500k had to be an FAI triangle - none of the 80km yo-yo things.
Not to mention living in a hole in the road - did I mention I went to school in Leeds?
Actually, although my logbook last records a Skylark 2 in 1972 I recall it as pleasant enough to fly, adequate soaring glider on a half reasonable day and less of a strain to rig than the larger 3 or 4. I echo the advocates of taking a wood experienced inspector to look at one.
Negative, but to do one in a Grunau Baby 2 was de rigeur in RAF Germany in the early 1960s. The same applied in France, apparently, to judge by George Moffat's memoirs. To my shame I did my 5 hours in the Meise Olympia, appreciating the relative comfort.
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This year a German guy did 110 km in a Hols der Teufel - a bit more than a Grashopper but not a lot! And a Dutch guy did a 40 minute soaring flight on a Grasshopper - with no instruments!
Now those were flights!
I did once meet a lad who on an excellent soaring day had just failed to do his 50k .......in a Discus. Doh!
I always reckon that if people in their £80 K glass gliders have 40 times as much fun as I do in my £2K Skylark 4 then they must be seriously happy pilots!
So have fun out there, and keep the Oly's etc flying.
Now those were flights!
I did once meet a lad who on an excellent soaring day had just failed to do his 50k .......in a Discus. Doh!
I always reckon that if people in their £80 K glass gliders have 40 times as much fun as I do in my £2K Skylark 4 then they must be seriously happy pilots!
So have fun out there, and keep the Oly's etc flying.
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There's a lot in favour of glass gliders. The 15m unflapped ones are generally simple to rig, a lot of them are self-connecting, they are nearly all very easy to fly, with suitable covers they can live out in the summer (so less chance of damaging you or the glider rigging) and you can fly XC on days when a lot of wood simply falls out of the sky. They are often more comfortable than wood as well. I'd say the advantages of wood are that landing speeds are usually slower, so you can fit in a smaller field, and you can manage height gains when glass is struggling for lift. And most of them are pretty cheap gliders.
Of course some people will fail to do their 50k in a glass glider, but many of them will manage it (and quite possibly manage flying back as well now that landing out at the end isn't de rigeur) on a day when wood wouldn't want to be out of glide range of base.
And there are lots and lots of really good glass gliders for well under £80k!
Of course some people will fail to do their 50k in a glass glider, but many of them will manage it (and quite possibly manage flying back as well now that landing out at the end isn't de rigeur) on a day when wood wouldn't want to be out of glide range of base.
And there are lots and lots of really good glass gliders for well under £80k!