I bought into a LAK17BFES in the spring. Once the batteries were back from
LZ I have had a great time flying it in a mixture of XC and ridge flying.
The engine start is as easy as advertised and has taken some of the stress
away from some low level ridge running this autumn certainly! With a young
family the thought of a muddy field and the retrieve I probably wouldn't
have flown!
Anyway, I'm 6ft 2 and fit in the LAK fine. It seems to run pretty well
with V2s etc but when the lift gets weak it seemed to lose out a bit to the
JS1 I have been flying with (although Matt is a better pilot than I am -
but don't tell him I said that).
I can't talk about the "over the other side of the pond" issues relating to
transport but it is a thumbs up for the LAK/FES system so far in the 6
months I have owned one.
At 14:34 30 November 2018,
geb...@hotmail.com wrote:
>Good morning to all from a very grey and mushy Montreal,
>
>I want to thank everyone for posting and sharing their experiences with
>tho=
>se of us who are looking at buying some type of FES equipped sailplane
>down=
> the road. Please keep this thread going with your own impressions on
this
>=
>most fascinating technological development. I especially want to thank
>Luka=
> for jumping in and sharing the latest in 'forensic' battery research. If
>e=
>ver there was an authority on this advancement in green and very compact
>pr=
>opulsion, it surely is him and his company. And while I am sensitive to
>the=
> many challenges of developing this technology and bringing it to soaring
>c=
>ommunity, my concerns are mainly to do with support of these high
capacity
>=
>storage devices once they reach foreign shores, far from the factories of
>b=
>oth the glider, power plant AND battery manufacturers, in a galaxy far,
>far=
> away.......
>
>From the sidelines of my club this past soaring season, I watched two
>fell=
>ow members and LAK 17b FES owner enjoy their 21m toy....WITHOUT the
>benefit=
> of that rather expensive FES option. Now, these two fellows hardly need
>th=
>is technology, as their long distance flights attest to, and they do not
>se=
>em hampered by the LAK (lack, get it?) of FES in the slightest, even
under
>=
>weak soaring conditions. However, even after you factor in the time to
>comp=
>lete the investigation into the cause of the fires, issuance of the
>emergen=
>cy Airworthiness Directive on the storage device, design and
>implementation=
> of the manufacturer's supported battery box modification, I still find
it
>=
>very disturbing that these customers, after having spent some
considerable
>=
>coinage on this technology, were left high and dry without a suitable
>batte=
>ry replacement, not to be found anywhere across North America. Now, it is
>a=
>ll very nice for you folks living in Europe to simply send the defective
>or=
> recalled units back from whence they came, but when a lithium device
here
>=
>is declared 'defective', it is essentially treated for what is, to wit,
>'Da=
>ngerous Goods' under the act of the same name as set forth by various
>membe=
>rs if IATA, including Canada.=20
>
>So then, as this technology matures and improves every year, sometimes at
>a=
> snail's pace, at others, leaps and bounds, my question is really a
simple
>=
>one, and back to the essence of the original post, which FES/Self-Launch
>sa=
>ilplane is worthy of my consideration? The next time a problem with the
>sto=
>rage unit is encountered, and let us be frank, problems WILL be
>encountered=
>, even if it isn't traceable to a design or manufacturing flaw, who will
>co=
>me to my rescue with a replacement battery, if only a temporary or loaner
>u=
>nit, to at least see me through the very short gliding season in my
>region?=
> Batteries in service, even with the best of care, have a hard life. They
>g=
>et dropped. The get left outdoors by the trailer or vehicle, in the sun
>and=
> the rain. They get left on cold concrete floors or in trailers. They are
>l=
>eft unattended on chargers for extended periods of time.......I digress,
>th=
>is has all been covered before, and there are very clear directives
issued
>=
>by Luka and others on what NOT to do with these batteries whilst in
>service=
>, but mistakes still happen. What I don't understand, or much less
accept,
>=
>is how come there are no provisions here, ANYWHERE in North America, to
>sen=
>d 'muy-rapido-express-now-or-better-yet-yesterday' replacement units when
>M=
>urphy pays a visit? Surely, if the combined efforts of LAK, GP,
>Schempp-Hi=
>rth, Silent, and yes, LZ Design, can't provide for support of a these
>stora=
>ge units, either by way of replacement units, or handling of defective
>unit=
>s, or preferably both, the effort of marketing this development in North
>Am=
>erica will, I dare say, be 'rather difficult'.=20
>
>Thank you all again, and I look forward to more informative rebuttal.=20
>
>John Hebert
>