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Published byJulie Burns Modified over 9 years ago
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What is Soaring/Gliding? The First Controlled flight (Wright Brothers, 1902) Gliders (Sailplanes) are airplanes without engines They stay aloft by exploiting weather systems
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Wilbur Wright at the Controls of the 1902 Glider
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Moving Right Along – A 1940’s Glider (Hungarian)
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Typical Modern Glider (SH-Cirrus)
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Virginia Pilots Clearly a Minority Group in Aviation – But the Most Fun!
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Examples of Extreme Soaring Flight World Record Altitude over 50,000’ World Record distances over 1,000 miles Duration Records no longer kept! (Stopped at nearly 50 hours... ) World, National, and Regional Contests involve speed around a closed course
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A Modern Two-Place Training Sailplane (ASK-21)
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Examples of Ordinary Flight Training flights last about 20 minutes each Typical ‘fun-flight’ lasts 2-5 hours, distances of up to ca. 100 miles
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Waves Over Omarama
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Forcing the Glider to Come Down!!
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The Pilot’s View While Being Towed Aloft to Start Flight
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Civil Air Patrol Cadets Get Flight Instruction
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The Start Grid of a Regional Contest
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Thank You! Jim Kellett Director, Region IV Soaring Society of America CAP Glider Flight Instructor and Check Pilot Skyline Soaring Club Flight Instructor
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A 22 Metre Wingspan Two Place Glider in New Zealand
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