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dede2008

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Everything posted by dede2008

  1. and? care to write impressions? How does it compare to the rest of the range? Speed only with trims and with trims and speed , handling, takoff etc?
  2. It will all get better, you will learn to master takeoff so you only walk a few steps and then let the motor push you till off the ground, and you will enjoy flying not only WHEN PG friends are on the ground but also WHERE they cannot go. Have fun!
  3. Yes morgy, no one aiming for a Roadster 2 should get a viper 3, sorry again if it sounded like that was the case Actually, in my opinion there could be a third type of pilot who can enjoy the viper 3: an intermediate pilot with a few years of PPG who likes to go XC in the quieter times of the day, which is what 99% of pilots do here anyway, meaning early in the morning or late in the afternoon, without turbulence or strong winds and no thermic conditions. In that case one can enjoy all the advantages of the wing without being too worried of the high aspect ratio or behavior in turbulent conditions. I know for example that most of my flights will be like that, with the occasional thermic flight when I am late or early. I should be fine with a few years of PG background. In my test I was really impressed by the numbers besides agility: I normally get level flight at 6900 rpm with my miniplane and a 26 free flight wing. With the viper 20 I had level flight at 5900 rpm, 6900 trims out (55 kph) and 7500 rpm at full trim + full speed (68 kph). That means I still have 2000 rpm to use at max speed. On a miniplane and a 20sqm size! Amazing. I was waiting to see if a Speedster 2 was coming out, but I had a chat with Emilia Plak and for what I undrstood there were no plans anytime soon for that because the Roadster 2 is as fast as the speedster is but with a much better glide.
  4. I never said you should compare the two, they are like apple and oranges. I just wanted to share what happened to me with a smile. Sorry for the confusion. Went in to test the two wings as I am constantly demo fly new stuff, I knew I was not going to buy the Roadster 2 anyway. It just happened that I liked the viper 3 a lot and bought it. Is it for advanced pilots? Yes. Is it for competitions only? Not at all. If you are an advanced pilot who likes to go XC it will be a dream wing to fly
  5. Just a word of caution: don't try Roadster 2 and Viper 3 at the same time. I made a mistake trying first a Roadster 26 and then a Viper 3 20. Got 1000 RPM less with the viper and took off in nil wind in 5 meters with a miniplane top 80. I ended up buying the viper on the spot
  6. That's my video. Nice wing, easy inflation, great agility and a really good glide (notice how good it glides before the final flare in the video). This is another video of my friend trying the wing: The title says it all: "How forgiving is the Roadster 2 at takeoff?" Interesting launch style he's clearly running 45-90 degrees to the wind, how on earth did he ever expect to get off the ground lol!! But as you say, forgiving it certainly is! Perhaps an understatement in this case Yeah, he did everything he could to mess up the takeoff Low airtime pilot but in his defence it must be said he has a terribly unbalanced paramotor frame. Hopefully that will be changed soon.
  7. That's my video. Nice wing, easy inflation, great agility and a really good glide (notice how good it glides before the final flare in the video). This is another video of my friend trying the wing: The title says it all: "How forgiving is the Roadster 2 at takeoff?"
  8. Hi Simon, care to share some references to this concept or its your theory/assumption? As far as I know I never heard of read anything relating to rotors higher than 2x the obstacle's height, and thats on some serious wind speed with a particular terrain layout that is facilitating the rotor upward extension (i.e. some other obstacles that is funneling the rotor up). The general thought in aviation is that as long as you fly twice the height of the obstacle you are fine (twice the height to be on the safe side, while in most situations flying over the horizontal line of the obstacle is safe). You might be referring to the area of sinking which is always experienced in the air mass over and downwind of the rotor. That is also something to have in mind, but not quite like a rotor itself.
  9. Only if you flying below some obstacle's line which is not wise. As long as you stay low but on top of the highest obstacle you will not have any problems with rotors.
  10. Been there a few times too. Nice good advises so far, let's recap: - Dont panic. - Learn your weather. Shit can happen, but bad weather/strong winds are normally predictable. - Head upwind. Again good advise here. Wind picking up and changing direction is rare. - Low level flying. There is a chance you can make it back to takeoff if you stay as low as you can (out of obstacles and always with a landing option of course). - Learn how to control the wing on the ground. I'll add two more: 1) Attach and use the speedbar. The guy in the video didn't even have a speedbar attached to the wing. Bad choice. 2) Choose a high speed range wing if you are flying in windy places. I'd recommend this to anyone, but more so in this case. If you have a wing that allows you to go as low as 20kph or as fast as 65kph, you have a better chance to make it out of troubles.
  11. Good SIV and nice active control, the guy is being taught well That also shows how spicy the Speedster really is, with the typical fast reaction of a C glider.
  12. I'm impressed. Mitsubishi shogun, Vitara... I assume when you talk about fitting perfectly you mean you have to put the paramotor in horizontally and maybe at an angle too. In my view if a paramotor will not fit vertically or just slightly bent it is not a perfect fit (emptying/sealing for gas leakage everytime is a pain), but everyone is different I prefer the bicycle carrier on the back door as an alternative to a van, 3 mins and you are ready to go.
  13. Just out of curiosity, you two guys have the same wing, maybe a different size/trim setting/load in the occasion? I felt bholleran was catching up quite fast on you Morgy...
  14. Nice one Clive, video is accelerated maybe 2x in some parts so you get the impression he's doing 100kph
  15. Nice, next time try to do the same deep stall with GTR too instead of just trying to pull A's in vain . That exit would have been interesting to see.
  16. I get a 2.7-3.0 m/s rate max (don't know how that translates to fpm, not my unit sorry on a miniplane top 80 with a 26 Epsilon 6 wing. My weight is 70kg.
  17. I'd love to know more about this Morgy. Do you just use wing tip steering for everything up until touch down? Aren't the brakes harder to flare with? I've never landed above neutral trim in zero wind and found that more than adequate and never even thought about going beyond that - but then again I rarely fly with others so sometimes miss picking up better techniques. When you are trying to flare a 100% reflex wing trimmed out I don't think the flare will be as effective. Maybe Morgy is using this technique with his new Speedster, with which you can use the breaks throughout the complete range of trims.
  18. oh well, Can I say I miss Alan's comments? Come on Simon, be a gentleman and let him come back to share this kind of humor with us again please?
  19. You had a camera with you? I think it would be useful to us all to see the footage and try to understand what happened. Do you mind sharing it?
  20. Hi there, glad to hear the first hand version of the story and that you are more or less ok. I'm still wondering about the collapse though, was your sharp turn to the left or right? Were you applying power? I can only think that the wing went into a unintentional negative spin for a combination of lots of break + turning against motor torque + applying power or something like that. Fast recovery!
  21. Looking forward to see the results! Let us know when is aired. Actually maybe a raw unedited copy straight out of copter would be ideal, before the Nat Geo savvy editors played with it in post Can you post a sample to show?
  22. Yes that meant to be what I was referring at as technique n. 2, but ended up being more tech. n. 1, i.e. a normal powered launch. He indeed waited a bit too long before stepping forward for the wing to be helped in lifting. Here is a better example of the technique with detailed explanation: [vimeo] [/vimeo]
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