So glad to hear it's not just taking up space in your basement!dbodner wrote:I flew Daniel's Mark IV for an extendo.
Expect a lot of bar pressure with that wing. I had Adam fly it and he felt it was trimmed appropriately; bar pressure is just part of the deal. Towing was always a great workout on the Mark IV.dbodner wrote: I seem to fly really fast at trim, and I can push out (with surprisingly high bar pressure) to slow down without any mush.
For my first soaring flights on that glider, I couldn't understand why I was always so much lower than everyone else. Then I realized I just had to push out much more.
I think you hit the nail on the head. The handling is not stiff. Once you get dialed into the timing, you'll feel like it turns very easily.dbodner wrote: Turning is taking a surprising amount of muscle. I know it's not gonna react as quickly as a Falcon. And maybe that slow response is causing me to put more effort into turning than is necessary.
That's good. I had some experiences I could have done without PIOing that wing. I feel like it's prone to it, Christy said the same, others have said that I'm dead wrong.dbodner wrote:On the good side, I'm not PIOing
I think you should probably just buy a newer intermediate glider that you can fall in love with and keep the Mark IV for trips to Kitty Hawk or Smithsburg when it's too muddy.dbodner wrote:So, what do you think? Do I just need to fix the hang-point and start hitting the weights?
Best,
Daniel
P.S. Brian, it's a 17, should fit him fine.