Gliders |
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![]() Winch launch at KAMS field |
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R/C sailplanes provide a good introduction to radio control model flying for the novice as they are quite stable so the pilot can soon gain confidence. It is also an economical way to get into aeromodelling as the initial costs can be fairly moderate. With growing experience and confidence the pilot will soon discover the never-ending new challenges in flying on silent wings. |
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![]() Ready for launch |
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THERMAL SOARING The model is launched to an altitude of several hundred feet. The pilot then start a search for a thermal, rising air, which takes the model higher and extends the duration of the flight. Thermals are the result of different temperatures of the air mass. The warmer air is less dense which causes it to rise. The updraft creates lift for the model, and on a day with strong thermals models can quickly go out of sight. |
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SLOPE SOARING is a technique to maintain altitude with a radio-controlled glider by flying it in the updraft produced by wind blowing up the face of a steep slope. Birds, such as many seabirds and raptors, also use slopes in this way. Slope soaring requires a hill, ridge or escarpment, and a wind that is blowing against the slope, causing orographic lift. The wind creates a region of rising air directly above the slope which may extend some distance upwards and outwards from its face as the airflow follows the contour of the hill. However at near vertical cliffs, there is usually an area of turbulence with descending air near the base of the cliff. Downwind of the hill, lee waves can form that are also used by glider pilots to gain height but this should not be confused with slope lift (notes on slope soaring shamelessly pinched from Wikipedia). |
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