Helmut Reichmann
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Professor Dr. Helmut Reichmann (* 1941; † March 10, 1992) was a German glider pilot, thrice Gliding World Champion and co-founder, with millionaire Barron Hilton, of the Barron Hilton Cup. He was an arts teacher and a professor of industrial design in his native Saarbrücken in Germany.
Reichmann earned his glider pilot license in 1958 and soon achieved prominence as one of the most successful and influential people in the history of gliding:
- 1965 German Junior Champion
- 1968, 1971 and 1973 German National Champion
- 1970 and 1974 World Champion in the Standard Class
- 1978 World Champion in the 15-Meter Class
- 1978 FAI Lilienthal Gliding Medal, the highest honor in soaring
- 1973 to 1992, German National Team Coach.
Dr. Reichmann retired from contest flying after his third world championship, wishing to dedicate more time to flight instruction in cross-country and competition soaring. He taught gliding at the Sports Studies Institute at the University of Saarbrücken, but eventually moved to its Faculty of Fine Arts where he taught experimental sculpture and design.
He was killed in 1992 when his Discus collided in the French Alps with an LS4 flown by Lars Gölz. He had been leading four members of a German squad at the time.
He was the author of two books. Streckensegelflug published by Motorbuch Vlg., Stuttgart, in 1975, is available in an English translation as Cross-Country Soaring published in 1978 by the Soaring Society of America, ISBN 1883813018. It is still a primary reference on soaring. For the same publisher, he also wrote the more basic Segelfliegen - Die praktische Ausbildung. It was translated as Flying sailplanes - A Practical Training Manual and was published by Thompson Publications in 1980, ASIN B0006E1VSK.