A hang glider is an unpowered
ultralight aircraft that is capable of being
foot launched and is controlled via
pilot weight shift and/or the actuation
of
aerodynamic control surfaces. The definition of 'hang glider' per the
international hang gliding commission, or
Commission Internationale de Vol
Libre (CIVL), which operates under the auspices of the
Federation Aeronautique
Internationale (FAI), is:
A glider capable of being carried, foot launched, and landed solely by
the use of the pilot's legs.
There are four distinct classes of aircraft which are covered by the definition
of 'hang glider':
- Class 1 - Hang gliders having a rigid primary structure and controlled
by weight shift only and which demonstrate consistent ability to safely take-off
and land in nil wind conditions.
- Class 2 - Hang gliders having a rigid primary structure and controlled
by deflection of aerodynamic control surfaces as the primary method of control in
at least one major axis and which demonstrate consistent ability to safely take-off
and land in nil wind conditions.
- Class 3 - Hang gliders having no rigid primary structure and which
demonstrate consistent ability to safely take-off and land in nil wind conditions.
- Class 4 - Hang gliders which are unable demonstrate consistent ability
to safely take-off and land in nil wind conditions but that otherwise are capable
of being launched and landed by the use of the pilot's legs.
Class 1 hang gliders are the
delta shaped, cloth and metal aircraft that most people
associate with the term 'hang glider', and are commonly called '
flex wings'. Class 2
hang gliders, '
rigid wings', may look like Class 1 wings or they may have wings more
similar to standard airplane wings. Class 3 covers
paragliders, which
resemble advanced
ram-air skydiving canopies (
parachutes). The remaining class serves
to cover the gap between Class 2 hang gliders and ultralight gliders, which are defined
elsewhere as gliders with a maximum empty weight of 440 lbs. (220 kg. ) and without
restrictions regarding wind conditions for launch and landing, nor any mention of the
pilot's legs.
The remainder of this discussion will pertain primarily to Class 1 hang gliders.
Class 2 and 4 wings, rigid wings and Paragliders are distinct enough
from the other classes that separate discussions are warranted.
Theory:
Class 1 hang gliders are called 'flex wings' because the design depends on the
aircraft
having a certain flexibility. When the frame is tensioned, the straight leading edge tubes are
forced into curves by the shape of the wing covering, thus holding the wing covering taut. Except
in the very middle, the sail is attached only to the leading edge, which allows the wingtips to
rotate up or down relative to the leading edge. This flexing is in response to loads placed
on the wing by the pilot's weight, shifts of weight, and maneuvering. The wingtip on the inside of
a turn flexes up, for instance, which lowers its
Angle of Attack. This is important for making
tight
radius turns because if the angle of attack were fixed then the tip would
stall, since
it has very low
airspeed; the tip would drop and the glider would
slip sideways, losing
excessive
altitude as it turned.
The flexibility of the wing is what allows full control of the glider without using
aerodynamic
control surfaces such as
ailerons,
rudders, and so on. Rigid wings, by contrast,
require some form or combination of ailerons, rudder, or
spoilers.
NOTE: Hang glider pilots primarily discuss airspeed and ground speed in terms of miles per hour (MPH) or kilometers per hour (km/h), unlike most forms of aviation, where knots is the preferred unit of measure. Climb and descent rate units used are feet per minute (FPM) or meters per second (m/s).
The
wing of a hang glider generates
lift when air flows across it from
fore to
aft, like any
airfoil. The amount of lift produced is not enough to
overcome the force of
gravity (climb),
but is enough to slow the
descent rate in still air to about 200 feet per minute (
FPM). If the glider
flies in air rising at more than the glider's
sink rate then the glider will gain altitude, or
soar.
The
stall speed of a hang glider is 18-22
mph,
best glide is usually just under 30 mph, and
top speeds are around 60 mph, though speeds of 80-100 mph can be achieved during
aerobatic maneuvers.
At best glide speeds hang gliders have
glide angles of between 9:1 and 14:1. Sink rates
vary from about 200 fpm just above stall speed (
minimum sink) to as much as 1500 fpm for
low performance wings at top speed. Sink rate increases more or less
linearly with
airspeed
and is the main topic when hang glider
performance is discussed. Most flying is done
in the narrow range between minimum sink, when climbing in lift, and best glide, when going from
point to point. Airfoil profile,
aspect ratio and percentage of double surface determine to a great extent the performance
of a wing. Thick-cambered low aspect (5. 5) wings with little or no double surface are slow and
docile, usually with
great low-speed characteristics. Wide (>7. 5 AR), skinny 'blade wings' with 80% or more double surface are
made for racing and require finesse to realize their potential.
A given wing
planform's useful load capacity is a function of its
area. Glider models
come in several sizes to cover the range of pilot sizes, and gliders are referred to by model and size,
either in square feet or square meters. The smallest racing gliders, for 100 lb. pilots, are about
120 square feet, while 225 - 250 square foot gliders have been made for
tandem (two-person) operation.
A 190 lb. pilot might fly a 195 square foot beginner glider or a 150 square foot high performance model.
Wing loading determines sink rate and control authority. The example pilot just mentioned
would have a wing loading of about 1. 3, including
harness,
helmet, parachute,
instruments,
and glider weight. At higher wing loadings
a glider will fly, but will have an increased sink rate, and will also be more
responsive to control inputs.
Conversely, a lightly loaded glider will have a better sink rate but will take longer to respond to control
inputs. Thus, a pilot can choose a model and size of glider suited to the type of flying desired.
The pilot hangs from a point near the center of the glider such that the glider
trims, i. e. flies 'hands off',
at a speed between minimum sink and best glide. The wing of the glider has '
twist' - the
Angle of Attack is
higher at the middle than at the wingtips, which are aft of the pilot due to the
sweep angle of the wings. When the
pilot pulls the
control bar (
basetube), which is attached near the hang point, towards his or her body (actually pulling his
or her body weight forward) the nose of the glider drops a few degrees and the glider speeds up. Due to the twist
in the wing, the wingtips produce much less lift than before, while the center continues producing lift. The
center of pressure of the lift produced by the wing as a whole moves forward and the glider tries to return to trim speed. When the pilot
'pushes out' (body weight aft) the center of the wing starts to stall and the tips produce more lift, so a nose-down
pitch moment is produced. In this way the glider is self-correcting in pitch, or
convergent. Wings that are
divergent
are dangerous and unpleasant to fly, and so are not made.
The sweep of the wings also makes hang gliders stable in
the
yaw axis. If the nose of the glider begins pointing away from the
direction of travel, the wings meet
the air at different angles, and the
differential drag slows the forward wing while the aft wing speeds up,
and the glider points back into the direction of travel. A pilot can purposely maintain a
crab angle via a small roll input to
soar along
a ridge or to compensate for a
crosswind.
Hang gliders are stable in the remaining
axis,
roll, in a somewhat different way. Most
airplanes have
dihedral, that is, their wingtips are higher than the root, which results in roll stability and a resistance
to other than level flight. When the plane rolls a little, the wing rolled toward becomes more
horizontal, producing
more force against gravity, since the lift
vector is generally perpendicular to the
span of the wing, while the other produces less, so the plane wants to roll back to level flight.
Hang gliders are made with
anhedral - their wingtips are below the middle of the wing. A hang
glider will maintain level flight unless the pilot pulls his or her weight
to the side (weight left=turn left) or is rolled by
turbulence. With the pilot's weight to one side, the
glider banks in that direction, the frame flexes a bit, and the sail shifts the load a bit so that the angle of attack of
the low wing increases slightly, and that of the high wing decreases. The low wing slows down in response
while the high wing speeds up, and a turn results. The sweep of the wing plays a role in this action
as well. Most gliders have a predictable bank angle to
which they will settle at a given airspeed. Once in a turn a hang glider will generally keep turning
until given a turn input in the opposite direction. This is an important quality since much time is spent
circling in lift. Docile gliders can be made which prefer level flight, will return to level flight with little input, and will
resist high bank angles, while high performance gliders roll in and out with very light input, will remain without input at at a range
of moderate bank angles, and will happily bank steeper and steeper ('wrap in') without pilot correction.
Hang gliders are roll-yaw
coupled, i. e. a roll motion always results in a corresponding yaw change. This
is how a hang glider can be controlled with only input on two
axes (pitch and roll) instead of the
three axes of control required by airplanes and sailplanes, and how hang gliders can thus be controlled without
aerodynamic control surfaces.
Construction:
Hang gliders typically consist of a frame of
aluminum tubing braced with
stainless steel
cables and covered with a dacron sail which forms the actual airfoil. Curved
battens,
also usually aluminum, are inserted into the sail to help define and maintain the airfoil
shape. Hang gliders generally weigh 45-70 lbs. (20-35 kg. ) and have a wingspan in the
neighborhood of 30 feet (9. 2 m). The wing may have a single surface curved like the top
of an airplane wing or it may have an additional bottom surface, usually flat, extending
rearward from the leading edge of the wing to some point on the underside of the upper
surface; there may be a few battens inserted in this bottom surface.
Airframe:
The tubing used for the frame is almost exclusively 7075-T6 aluminum alloy or 6061-T6, or a combination
of those two. The 7075 is lighter and stiffer than 6061, but considerably more expensive. An all
6061 glider would weigh on the order of 10 pounds (~15%) more than an all 7075 wing. Aircraft grade
aluminum is also used for the plates and brackets used in the frame. Stranded stainless steel
cable, primarily 7 x 7 3/32", with stainless steel
tangs for attachment, makes up the rest of the
frame, along with AN grade
bolts and
clevis pins. Various small pieces of
Delrin and
UHMW plastics
are used in the fittings as well.
The primary components of the glider's frame are the
leading edge tubes, the
keel, and
the
crossbars. The leading edges and keel are joined with a plate or plates at the nose -
the leading edges on either side of the keel, all in the same plane. The crossbars are
attached somewhere near the middle of the leading edge tubes and are
hinged together at
their other ends. The center hinge of the crossbars is pulled rearward by a cable, which
attaches to a point near the rear of the keel, spreading the leading edges and holding them
apart in flight.
A tube called the
kingpost rises vertically from the keel with cables from the top to points
at the ends of the keel and the outboard ends of the crossbars. The latter cables support
the wings while not flying, i. e. on the ground, and in the (unusual) event that the glider experiences
a negative load during flight. Smaller diameter cables run from the top of the kingpost to the trailing
edge of the sail, two to five per wing, attaching near the batten pockets. These cables,
called '
reflex bridles' or '
luff lines', support the trailing edge if the glider is at
an extremely low nose angle, and thus provide some extra nose-up pitching moment, that is,
dive recovery. Beginning in the mid-1990s high performance hang gliders began being produced
which dispense with the kingpost by utilizing very strong crossbars and
robust center hinge
mechanisms which can withstand the negative loads encountered in ground handling, landing,
and even the rare inverted
attitude in flight. Most of these "topless" designs use
carbon composites for good
strength to weight, but at least one employs
riveted aluminum box construction. In place of
reflex bridles these gliders have various arrangements of internal tubes extending aft from
the leading edges and/or crossbars to support the trailing edges.
The benefit of eliminating the kingpost and upper rigging is greatly reduced
parasitic drag
and correspondingly improved glide ratio, especially at speed. The best kingposted racing hang gliders
had glide ratios of just over 12:1; the kingpostless gliders had glide ratios of more than
14:1. The inevitable
trade-off was increased weight, cost and complexity. A pair of aluminum
tube crossbars weighs 2-3 pounds compared to 10-12 lbs. for carbon composites. Cost was more
than doubled for the carbon bars as well. 'Topless' hang gliders became
de rigeur on the competition
circuit within one season.
Below the keel is a triangle of tubing known as the control bar, consisting of a 4'-5' control bar, or 'basetube',
parallel to the wing plane and two ~5. 5' control legs, or '
downtubes', which join the ends of the
basetube to a point at the middle of the keel. Cables run from the corners of the triangle to
the
noseplate and aft of the keel (usually where the crossbar haulback cables and upper rear
cable attach) to keep the control bar in a given position relative to the keel. Stout
cables run from the corners out to the leading edge / crossbar junctions to keep the wings
in place under flight loads.
The tubing used for the control triangle may be either round or
streamlined, and the basetube
may have some bends so the the center section is offset forward a few inches; the bends allow more comfortable grip
positions and the bar can be pushed back a few inches further, for more speed. Downtubes are
frequently bent or broken in poor landings - the corner of the triangle hits the ground and
stops while the pilot, who is holding the downtubes, continues forward. The
compression loaded
tube takes little force to bend. Downtubes are made with thin-walled tubing, 1. 125" x . 058" is typical
for round tubing, so that the tubing bends instead of the pilot's arm breaking. Carbon composite
downtubes, with very thin airfoil sections, and thus very low drag were introduced in 2000, as were
streamlined composite basetubes. The cost, about 4 times that of aluminum, limits the use of composite
downtubes, though not so much for basetubes as they are less subject to damage.
Sail:
The
fabric part of a hang glider, which makes up the wing surfaces, is known as the
sail. Standard
dacron
polyester sailcloth, used for making
boat sails, is the primary material. The cloth is
coated/
impregnated with
resin (to limit
porosity), weighs about 4 Oz. per square meter (manufacturer's units), and comes in a range of colors.
The fabric is woven in the
ripstop style, where thicker strands are used every 1/4" or so to stop tears from
spreading; the fabric would be much heavier if these strands were used for the whole cloth. Dacron, like
virtually all
plastics degrades under
exposure to
ultraviolet light from the
sun, so hang glider
sails are rated for about 400 hours of UV exposure (4-8 years of average use), though wings typically last for 800 hours or more.
The main effects
of UV exposure are to
weaken the fibers and to break down the resin, colors
fade as well. The sail gets more porous, which reduces
performance slightly, and the fabric begins to tear easily. Since white reflects most frequencies of light,
and thus has the longest UV resistance, that is the color most used for the upper surface of the wing. The bottom
surface of a hang glider wing is not a
structural element, like the rest of the sail, and is somewhat protected from
UV exposure by the upper surface, so colored panels are used, either simple two or three color layouts
made as 'stock' patterns by manufacturers or custom patterns incorporating symbols, lettering, etc.
The fabric comes in widths of four to five feet, so multiple panels are sewn together to make up the wing surfaces,
and are needed to get the wing's shape anyway. The trailing edge of the wing is under a great deal of tension,
so it is usually a slightly heavier material or is reinforced with extra layers, or both. Tears in the trailing
edge must be repaired before flying the glider again or total failure in flight could result. The leading edge of the
wing is under moderate
tension and also takes the
brunt of the oncoming airflow, which tends to make it
deform
at speed and perform poorly. For this reason mid- to high-performance wings use a
mylar coated dacron fabric
on the leading edge, forming a
pocket into which
pliable sheets of mylar are inserted, from root to tip, to
stiffen
the leading edge so that it retains the smooth airfoil shape at higher speeds. Very stiff carbon composite sheets are added
by some competition pilots to help at very high speeds. The mylar coated fabric ('
scrim') is sometimes used for the entire
top surface of racing gliders, because it seems to perform better, but the cost is extra weight and stiffer
handling. The mylar coated fabrics begin to
delaminate after about 300-400 hours of UV exposure, especially
in rocky, dusty areas, so full mylar sails don't last very long. It is common to replace the mylar leading
edge panels of a good glider once before the entire sail breaks down. Generally, by the time a sail ages to the point that it needs replacement the design of the glider is so obsolete
that it doesn't make sense to have a replacement sail made - newer used gliders are cheaper. The fabrication of the
sail is where the bulk of the labor in making a hang glider is invested.
Sail panels are either cut by hand or are cut by machine. Beginning in the 1990s at least one manufacturer used a 40 foot long, six foot wide
sail cutting machine to cut sail panels. The surface of the table has small holes via which a
vacuum is applied
to hold the cloth in place while a computer-controlled apparatus moves along the length of the table, with a pen that
draws lines and a
blade wheel that cuts the cloth. The patterns are made using various
CAD programs, and the
precision panel cutting helps greatly in making wings consistently. The old (by hand) method was to follow mylar patterns
laid on top of the material; the mylar changes size and shape as
humidity varies, so each glider was different from
the next. The computer-controlled sail cutter also makes rather complex patterns and inlaid designs practical.
The hang glider sail has
heavy-duty zippers in a few places in the bottom surface, such as at the root and
crossbar/leading edge junctions, to allow access for inspection and maintenance. A glider may have a piece of fabric-covered
mylar covering the nose plates ('
nosecone') to reduce drag, attached with
velcro. Double surface wings often incorporate
tip
fairings, which are plastic covers that attach to the open wingtips with velcro to clean up the airflow there.
As a performance option, some gliders can accommodate
winglets, small (8"-15") vertically oriented fins at or
near the wingtips; they may replace tip fairings or be velcroed to the top surface. The purpose of winglets is to
reduce parasitic drag by reducing the wingtip
vortex which is a by-product of producing lift shared by all wings. The winglet
effectively adds span, about 60% of the winglet's height, and that combined with the added weight reduces roll rate, but
the reduction is minor. Properly oriented winglets reduce stall speed by about 1 mph, allowing better climb while
circling, and winglets help reduce minor yaw variations at speed, giving an 'on rails' feeling. Due to the sail's flexibility winglet orientation is inexact and hard to control, so the value of winglets
is a point of contention. An alternative to winglets is the
vertical stabilizer, a fin which attaches to the rear of
the keel, like a traditional airplane tail (NOT a
rudder). The Vertical stabilizer provides the yaw stability of
winglets (more actually) without the drag reduction but also without as much effect on turn rate and response.
Remarks:
Hang gliders are mechanically quite simple, but the flexible wings, with their continuous reduction of camber from root
to tip and the ever changing wing shape in flight, are astoundingly complex. Designing hang gliders is as much art as
science, where small changes can have profound effects and seemingly major changes can be hard to notice. The hang gliding
population numbers about 10,000 in the USA ca. 2001 (at best) and there are perhaps 10000-20000 more active pilots
worldwide. The number of new gliders manufactured in a given year is 3000-5000, and typical models
retail for
$3,000 to $7,000 in the USA. There are three or four major manufacturers in the world, with one based in the USA.
The market is small, and this small scale means that
research and development funds are limited, so advances happen
very slowly.
Hang gliding, unpowered, foot-launched flight, is a unique, demanding pastime which
is nevertheless well within the abilities of many more people than currently participate. If that were to change,
then the sport could make some profound advances, given the technology and materials available at the dawn of the 21st century.