GLIDING INTERNATIONAL
ISSUE NOVEMBER 2016



The November 2016 issue will go in the mail next week and should be with
subscribers by November 1.


We must be doing something right as we are experiencing a big lift
in circulation, materially aided by our Digital version. The hundreds
that have subscribed to the Digital issue will get their November copy
in their email box on November 1.  The November issue is another great
64 page all colour issue.


€  It is time gliding had a good hard look at the Olympics and
reintroduce our case for participation.  This issue traces the history
of gliding¹s involvement in the Olympics as far back as 1936. It
provides readers with a chance to become informed on gliding¹s Olympic
history. As an aside to this, comes the news from Germany that one of
the country¹s biggest clubs has lost 20% of their members over the last
six months, a state of affairs not restricted to the Germans.
 Membership decline must be addressed by the IGC and with more than just
 the cursory lip service they have given the problem in the past.
Olympic participation must be a move in the right direction.


€  Aldo Cernezzi, our European correspondent flew the Spanish
Nationals in the Pyrenees. Thermalling close to Vultures is really
Œsomething¹, especially  soaring in this under-rated historical soaring
site in Europe. A great place for a gliding holiday.


€  There has been eight fatal gliding accidents in past six weeks.
 We spend considerable time documenting accidents in most countries with
 a view to educating the sport on some of its hazards. And we came
across the hangar fire that demolished six (6) sailplanes in one go.
 Read the details!


€  Why  is the DG1001  two seat trainer the choice of  a number of
Airforce training organisations. We have a good look at what DG offers
and tell our readers that they are "A good buy".  (USA 19, Indonesia 6,
Brazil 10, Australia 11).

These upgradable trainers must be a first on any club¹s shopping list.


€  Little known is the story about the gliders built in Poland with the
aid of concrete in the 1960s. A fascinating story.


€  Sadly, we report the death of Fred Weinholtz in Germany.  Known
to thousands world wide, this gliding administrator was the first to
publish a book on modern soaring.  His inexpensive book, ³The Theory of
Modern Cross Country Gliding², was translated for and published in
English by our editor.  Some 30,000 copies (German and English editions)
 were sold.  There are plans afoot to have Fred¹s text updated and the
seventh edition of the book out next year.  Fred and John were lifetime
friends.  -  A Gliding International project!


€  Aldo Cernezzi has flown the first two seat sustainer in series
production, the ASG 32Mi from Schleicher.  He reports very favourably.
 (Readers will love our new art work).


€  Electric Self Launchers are getting closer and closer.  We keep
an eye out on all the new battery technology, the secret to this
possibility.


€  We discovered in the last two months that the New York Herald
actually sent a reporter to Germany in 1894 to interview Otto
Lilienthal.  We have published the interview in full (unedited) complete
 with the Herald¹s sketches of what the reporter saw happening in
Germany.


€  NASA is putting its money where its mouth is.  They are
undertaking millions of dollars of research into advanced aviation.  We
report on six of their projects.


€ All this plus 30 other stories that will educate and inform.


As we have said before  - our best issue yet!

 

We hope you will join us.

JOHN ROAKE

EDITOR.

 

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