The
honest choice - det ærlige valget
Av Rob Whittall |
Rob
Whittall (UK) gives his personal advice on the factors that should
influence you when choosing a new paraglider.
Confidence
Confidence is often overlooked, yet I feel that it the most important
factor in glider choice. If you feel good on a glider, you will invariably
fly better than on one that makes you anxious. If you lose confidence
and get scared in a bad situation or rough air, you also lose the
ability to make good calculated decisions. This is partly due to adrenaline
and fear that will cloud your judgement just when you need it to be
clear. On the other hand, if you really enjoy your wing and feel comfortable
under it, then your discomfort threshold will be much higher and thus
you have a better chance of making the right decisions all the time.
Fashion victims
First, I would ignore style or fashion, and I wouldn’t be a
slave to figures either: some crazy folk add up the results of the
DHV test report and the glider with the best result is the one to
buy (oh my God). I have also heard that pilots buy wings because their
friend has one (isn’t that sweet?). Or some are completely influenced
by the top speed and manufacturer’s performance figures (a recipe
for disaster). Finally, some buy because it has a nice colour (matches
their nail polish and car!) I would avoid these factors and simply
make an honest assessment of your capabilities and then go for a wing
which will give you that all-important confidence when in the air.
What type of pilot am I?
Now is the time to be completely realistic about your capabilities.
If you are a leisure pilot flying less than fifty hours a year, then
the choice is easy: a DHV 1 or 1/2 wing will have the stability and
handling ease to keep you confident even if you have occasional lay-off
of a month or more so you are not always completely ’current’.
Don’t fall into the trap of dismissing this category as ’beginner
wings’. Nowadays performance is excellent and many long-time
pilots say that they’re getting their best-ever flights on them
after unhappy experiences with hotter wings.
If you are lucky enough to fly most weeks and can keep current, consider
DHV 2. Only if you are already very confident, honestly extremely
experienced, and fly all the time, should you even think of any rating
higher than this.
"So I have decided that I am, in reality, an intermediate pilot
nowadays rather than my previous image of myself being a hot cross-country
and competition pilot. Thank God for that, I have probably just saved
myself hours of sphincter training or even worse, an accident"!
Remember, this is a flying machine you are about to purchase; your
safety could depend on this decision!
Test fly
Once you have narrowed down the field to four or five models, go and
take a test flight on them. This is what will tell you the most; don’t
listen to the sales pitch or think about the great offer the sales
man will give you. Think about how each glider feels: did it take
off well? Did it feel twitchy or was it smooth as an oil tanker? Were
you confident and comfortable every minute you were on it?
The one with the most yeses is probably the one for you. It does not
matter if your friends are buying a different model at a cheaper price
because at the end of the day it is you that has to fly the glider
not them. When you think about it, you are spending a lot of money.
If the glider that really felt the best is a couple of hundred dollars
more, then you would be a fool not to buy it just because of the price.
Now, what size?
Size is always a problem, yet it’s quite simple really. Just
take your naked weight and add 20kg. This will give you your ’in-flight’
weight. Knowing this, you can select the size of glider that puts
you closest to the middle of the specified weight range. If you fall
on the border of two sizes, then just analyse what type of flying
you do and choose accordingly. For example, if you expect to be flying
in fairly strong winds quite often, then a little more wing loading
could be a good thing to give you more speed, so the smaller size
would be better. On the other hand, if you are always flying in weak
conditions, the bigger size might be a better choice as it will give
you a slightly better sink rate, helping you to climb well. However,
if you often fly in strong thermal conditions, you may feel more comfortable
on the smaller wing. Don’t get too wound up about this: you
will be safe on either of the sizes, so simply buy the one that feels
the best to you.
Every pilot desires something a little different but remember that
fashion or fad is not important. Your comfort and confidence in the
air is all that matters.
At the end of the day it does not matter who was highest or who flew
the furthest. What matters is that you go home having had a great
flight, with a big smile on your face and a head full of beautiful
views and a fantastic feeling inside, because that is what our flying
is all about.
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