Schempp-Hirth Nimbus
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Type designation | Nimbus 1 |
Competition class | Open |
Number built | 1 |
Crew | 1 |
Length | 7.30 m |
Height | 1.53 m |
Cockpit width | 0.62 m |
Cockpit height | 0.80 m |
Wingspan | 22.00 m |
Wing area | 15.80 m² |
Aspect ratio | 30.6 |
Wing profile | FX 67-K-170 / FX 67-K-150 |
Empty mass | 370 kg |
Water ballast | 90 kg (to be confirmed) |
Maximum mass | 500 kg |
Wing loading | 28.6 - 32 kg/m² |
Maximum speed | |
Rough air speed | |
Minimum sink rate | ca. 0.43 m/s |
Best glide ratio | ca. 51 |
The Schempp-Hirth Nimbus was a prototype glider built by Klaus Holighaus.
The HS-3 Nimbus was a high performance single-seater. Holighaus designed and built this prototype glider in his spare time with assistance from Schempp-Hirth. Strictly speaking, it is not a Schempp-Hirth glider but rather a glider built at Schempp-Hirth.
It employed the same fuselage as the Open Class Cirrus and a similar tail, but had an entirely new wing, high-set and in three segments adding up to a 22 metre span. The prototype first flew in January 1969.
The type was seriously under-ruddered. After the pilot applied full stick and rudder, the glider continued to fly straight ahead for several seconds before suddenly dropping a wing, requiring full opposite controls. No air brakes were fitted and it was an exceptionally difficult glider to land. It was damaged several times in overshoots. However, it had an exceptionally high performance for the time, with a best glide ratio of 51:1 at 90 km/h and a minimum sink rate of only 0.43 m/s.
George Moffat of the USA flew the Nimbus in the 1970 World Gliding Championships at Marfa, Texas. He had to modify the aircraft's cockpit to fit in, and became the first person to sample its spin characteristics when, in mid-competition, the glider departed from a steep turn with asymmetric ballast into autorotation. While considering baling out, he remembered that the spin of the similar Akaflieg Darmstadt D36 could be tamed by rocking the stick back and forth violently. Flexing the wings caused the angle of attack to change and recovery eventually ensued. In spite of these difficulties, Moffat and the Nimbus won the World Championship.
[edit] Sources
- Moffat G, Winning on the Wind, Soaring Press, 1974
- Thomas F, Fundamentals of Sailplane Design, College Park Press, 1999
- Simons M, Segelflugzeuge 1965-2000, Eqip, 2004
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