tomsines27 wrote:Hi Bill, I see you have a sport2. Any chance you can tell me the approximate balance point on it?
Tom

Tom,
I don’t have an easy answer for you. If I assume that you mean when I get under the glider and pick it up from the ground I would have to say for left and right balance right near the keel tube is the balance point.
For nose to tail balance it would depend how much my cross bar was pulled back by my Sport 2’s VG cord, but approximately at the hang strap or somewhere near that general vasectomy.
If I assume you mean in flight I would say that my glider’s balance is exactly at the hang strap as I received it from the WW test pilot.
If I pushed the control bar ahead about two to three inches (moving my body (CG) back behind the CP (the gliders Center of Pressure or the lifting force of the glider) I would be at about minimum sink speed.
If I pushed the control bar almost as far ahead as I could reach (slowly) the glider would start to wallow as the root section of the sail would be stalling first and progressing toward the wingtips.
Having the hang strap in the right place would have me flying at trim speed between minimum sink speed and best glide speed with both hands off of the control bar. I would be closer to minimum sink speed than best glide speed at trim speed.
I would have to pull in on the control bar past trim by about four to five inches to achieve best glide speed.
These are approximate guesses that would change if I pulled out more VG, Variable Geometry Cord which pulls back the cross bars and spreads the wing tubes. Just like opening an umbrella further.
A light weight glider could still employ a VG system but it starts the slippery slope.
This 35 year plus text book stuff is all fuzzy to me now and I may have some or most of it wrong but I can still auger up through the riff-raff and smoke half the gaggle of pilots.
I once plugged on some floats to Gene Stone’s Firefly 2B. The tail tube was quite long and there were two floats on it. Gene was complaining about the glider always stalling in flight. I went up the bank of the railroad grade along the Mississippi River and found a tie plate and vice gripped it to his nose plate to shut him up.
Finally his glider was “Balanced!” (Trimmed.)
