Rolladen-Schneider LS8

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Rolladen-Schneider LS8
A Swiss-registered LS8 on the landing approach.
Type designation LS8
Competition class Standard and 18 metre
Number built 6 (LS8)
438 (LS8-a/LS8-18)
36 (LS8-b/LS8-t)
11 (LS8-s/LS8-st)
Crew 1
Length 6.72 m
Height 1.33
Cockpit width 0.61 m
Cockpit height 0.80 m
Wingspan 15 / 18 m
Wing area 10.50 / 11.40 m²
Aspect ratio 21.4 / 28.4
Wing profile FX 81-K-130/148
Empty mass ca. 245 kg (LS8-a)
ca. 250 kg (LS8-18)
ca. 285 kg (LS8-st)
Water ballast 188 kg
Maximum mass 525 kg (LS8-a/LS8-18)
575 kg (LS8-s/LS8-st only @ 18m)
Maximum wing loading 50 kg/m² (15 m)
46 kg/m² (18 m)
50 kg/m² (18m for LS8-s/LS8-st)
Maximum speed 280 km/h
Speed in strong turbulence 190 km/h
195 km/h (LS8-s/LS8-st)
Maneuver speed 190 km/h
195 km/h (LS8-s/LS8-st)
Minimum sink ratio ca. 0.59 m/s (15 m)
ca. 0.51 m/s (18 m)
Best glide ratio ca. 43 (15 m)
ca. 48 (18 m)
Roll rate
(-45º to 45º)
3.4 s at 96 km/h (15 m)
4.7 s at 92 km/h (18 m)
Climb rate in powered flight 1 - 1.5 m/s
(LS8-t/LS8-st @ 18 m)
Range in 'saw-tooth' operation ca. 300 km
(LS8-t/LS8-st @ 18 m)

The Rolladen-Schneider LS8 is a Standard and 18 metre class single-seat glider developed by Rolladen-Schneider and in series production since 1995. Currently it is manufactured by DG Flugzeugbau.


Contents

[edit] History

By the mid-to–late eighties the LS4 had lost its leading position in the Standard Class to new arrivals, in particular the excellent Discus from Schempp-Hirth. The LS7 failed to recapture the lead and, with flagging sales, Rolladen-Schneider went back to the drawing board.

Designer Wolf Lemke was skeptical of the usefulness of developing a new airfoil. There was no guarantee that the large effort and investment required would bring any palpable gains, as the LS7, ASW 24 and DG-600 had clearly shown. The tools available at the time were simply not up to the task of reliably predicting the performance in everyday conditions of the newer laminar profiles then emerging from the research labs.

The 15 meter Class LS6 was however achieving surprisingly good results flying with locked flaps in the non-FAI sanctioned Sports Class in the United States. Following this lead, Rolladen-Schneider modified an LS6-c by removing the flap handle, resetting the wing at a slightly higher angle of incidence and adding winglets. This experimental prototype outperformed state-of-the-art standard class sailplanes both in side-by-side flight tests and in contests including the German Championships at Neustadt-Glewe.

The LS8 that finally emerged in 1994 had a few improvements over the prototype, the most significant being the redesigned ailerons and the lighter and aerodynamically cleaner wing made possible by deleting the flap system.

LS8's scored second, fourth and fifth in the 1995 World Gliding Championships at Omarama, New Zealand, first, second and third in the 1997 World Gliding Championships at St Auban, France, six out of the first ten positions in the 1999 World Gliding Championships in Bayreuth, Germany, the first three places in the 2001 Women's World Gliding Championships in Lithuania and, more recently, first (and nine out of the first ten places) in the 2005 Women's World Gliding Championships in Klix, Germany. Many still regard it as the best all-round standard class glider.

Commercially the LS8 was very successful, due to its competition potential and to the gentle and easy flight characteristics that make it suitable for club and leisure flying. Primarily to cater to the latter market, versions with longer wings and a ‘turbo’ or sustainer version were developed. A total of 491 examples of all subtypes had been manufactured by December 2005.

[edit] General description

The LS8 is a flexible and relatively conservative design with high development potential. Although primarily designed to Standard Class specifications, it has lent itself easily to span extensions, motorisation, etc.

  • Aerodynamic configurations: winglets are default for all spans; wing tips extending the span to 18 metres are an option available to some versions.
  • Structure: wings, winglets, ailerons and horizontal stabilizer are carbon/foam sandwiches; the elevator has a mixed carbon/aramid construction. The longer span versions have a stronger main spar. The cockpit is a double fibreglass shell for increased crashworthiness.
  • Control system: conventional, split elevator/horizontal stabiliser for longitudinal control and top surface Schempp-Hirth air brakes for glidepath control, ailerons with marked differential occupying the outer 50% of the wing’s trailing edge. Controls via pushrods with automatic coupling during rigging.
  • Mass balancing: the aileron control system is mass balanced, with integral counterweights inside the wings. The ailerons themselves are also mass balanced in the longer-span versions, with up to 1.5 kg of lead added to the leading edges of each control surface. The elevator and rudder are 100% mass balanced.
  • Sealing: all control gaps as well as the control runs inside the wings are fully sealed. The ailerons are sealed by internal Teflon boots. The resultant very low friction ensures exceptionally light stick forces. The horizontal stabiliser and rudder retain Teflon and Mylar strip seals.
  • Ballast system: 'integral' ballast tanks with two tanks per wing in the LS8-a and subsequent versions. A smaller tank in the tail fin, with a capacity between 3.5 and 12 litres according to version and options, allows centre of gravity corrections.
  • Wheel brake: operated by pressing on the rudder pedals (in DG-built versions also coupled to the air brake lever).
  • Turbo: the -t variant brings an innovative solution to the sustainer problem. The reliable Solo 2325 engine is mated to a small diameter 'paddle' propeller that sacrifices a small amount of propulsive efficiency in exchange for much smaller drag if the engine fails to start. The hydraulic extender allows instantaneous extension. Both innovations make the 8-t one of the safest turbos available (DG-built sustainers have conventional electricity-driven spindle extension).

[edit] Variants

[edit] Rolladen-Schneider

  • LS8: original version with LS6-c style ballast bags, removable fin tank and span limited to 15 metres.
  • LS8-a: version with stronger spars and integral water tanks allowing conversion into an LS8-18.
  • LS8-18: as LS8-a plus mass balanced ailerons and an integral tail tank. Can be operated in 15m and 18m mode.
  • LS8-b: as LS8-18. Structurally prepared (wings and fuselage) for retrofit of a self-sustainer engine.
  • LS8-t: -b with self-sustainer ('turbo').

[edit] DG Flugzeugbau

Following the transfer of ownership, subtype designations and specifications changed slightly.

  • LS8-a: as the previous –a model except the spar is not reinforced for span extension.
  • LS8-s: corresponds to the previous LS8-18 model, with a larger main undercarriage, the wing further reinforced for an increased maximum weight of 575kg in the 18m mode and other minor changes.
  • LS8-st: self-sustainer version, differs from the previous LS8-t in the same ways as the LS8-s; additionally, an electrically driven spindle and a DEI-NT engine control unit supersede Rolladen-Schneider’s hydraulic engine extraction system and the original Walter Binder controller.


Version-specific characteristics
LS8 LS8-a LS8-18 LS8-b LS8-t LS8-s LS8-st
Wingspan, m 15 15/18
Tail water ballast, l 3.8 / 5.5 12 7.5
Empty weight, kg 240 245 250 285
Typical empty weight in service, kg 252 267 275 315
Maximum takeoff weight, kg 525 525 / 575
Maximum wing loading, kg/m² 50 50 / 46 50 / 50.4
Engine type - Solo 2325 - Solo 2325
Engine power, hp - ca. 23 - ca. 23
Fuel Tank volume, l - 17.3 - 17.3

[edit] Sources

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