Scheibe SF-30 Club-Spatz

{{Short description|German single-seat glider, 1974}}

{{Infobox Aircraft Begin

| name=SF-30 Club-Spatz

| image=

| caption=

}}{{Infobox Aircraft Type

| type=Single seat Club class sailplane

| national origin=Germany

| manufacturer=Scheibe Flugzeugbau

| designer=

| first flight=20 May 1974

| introduced=

| retired=

| status=

| primary user=

| more users=

| produced=

| number built=8 by early 1977

| program cost=

| unit cost=

| developed from= Scheibe SF-27A Zugvogel

| variants with their own articles=

}}

The Scheibe SF-30 Club-Spatz ({{langx|en| Club-Sparrow}}) is a 15 m class single seat sailplane built in Germany in the 1970s and intended for club use.

Design and development

Design work on the Club-Spatz began in 1973. With a {{convert|15|m|ftin|abbr=on|0}} span, it was intended to suit gliding clubs and inexperienced pilots, strong and easy to fly and maintain. It is of mixed construction, using a combination of steel tubes with fabric glassfibre covering in the fuselage and with a wooden structured, plywood and glassfibre skinned wing. Despite its name, the Club-Spatz was unrelated to the earlier L-Spatz but developed from the Scheibe SF-27A Zugvogel-V.

It is a shoulder wing cantilever monoplane, its wing built around a single wooden spar. Its Wortmann airfoil tapers in thickness/chord ratio from 18% at the root to 12% at the tip. The wing is also tapered in plan, with square tips; its leading edge is glassfibre/foam composite covered, with plywood over the remainder of the wing surface. There are all wood, spring trimmed ailerons and upper surface Schempp-Hirth airbrakes.

The fuselage of the Club-Spatz used Scheibe's traditional steel tube construction, glassfibre skinned over the nose and tail and fabric covered between. The cockpit, ahead of the wing, is covered by a long, one piece, side hinged Plexiglas canopy which smoothly blends the nose contours into those of the fuselage behind and terminates at the wing leading edge. Its fuselage tapers to a conventional tail; the rear surfaces are wooden structured and ply skinned. A straight edged tailplane is mounted on top of the fuselage, carrying damped elevators fitted with adjustable spring trimming like the ailerons. Fin and rudder together are straight tapered and square topped, with the latter reaching down to the keel. The Club-Spatz lands on a fixed, unsprung monowheel, fitted with a brake and assisted by a tailwheel.

The Club-Spatz flew for the first time on 20 May 1974. At least eight were built, two of which remained on the German civil aircraft register in 2010.

Specifications

{{Aircraft specs

|ref=Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1976/77 pp.565-6

|prime units?=met

|genhide=

|crew=One

|length m=6.10

|length note=

|span m=15.00

|span note=

|height m=

|height ft=

|height in=

|height note=

|wing area sqm=9.30

|wing area note=

|aspect ratio=24

|airfoil=

|empty weight kg=185

|empty weight note=

|gross weight kg=

|gross weight lb=

|gross weight note=

|max takeoff weight kg=295

|max takeoff weight note=

|more general=

|perfhide=

|max speed kmh=210

|max speed note=smooth air

|cruise speed kmh=

|cruise speed mph=

|cruise speed kts=

|cruise speed note=

|stall speed kmh=65

|stall speed note=

|never exceed speed kmh=

|never exceed speed mph=

|never exceed speed kts=

|never exceed speed note=

|minimum control speed kmh=

|minimum control speed mph=

|minimum control speed kts=

|minimum control speed note=

|ceiling m=

|ceiling ft=

|ceiling note=

|g limits=+8.0/-4.0

|roll rate=

|glide ratio=best 36:1 at {{convert|90|km/h|mph kn|abbr=on|0}}

|sink rate ms=0.59

|sink rate note=minimum, at {{convert|75|km/h|mph kn|abbr=on|0}}

|lift to drag=

|wing loading kg/m2=30

|wing loading note=

|more performance=

}}

{{aircontent

|see also=

|related=

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}}

References

{{reflist|refs=

{{cite book |title= Jane's All the World's Aircraft 1976-77|last= Taylor |first= John W R |year=1976|publisher=Jane's Yearbooks |location= London|isbn=0-354-00538-3|pages=565–6}}

{{cite book |title=Gliders & Sailplanes of the World|last= Hardy |first= Michael |year=1982|publisher=Ian Allan Ltd|location= London|isbn=0-7110-1152-4|page=82 }}

{{cite book |title=European registers handbook 2010 |last= Partington |first=Dave |year=2010|publisher= Air Britain (Historians) Ltd|isbn=978-0-85130-425-0}}

}}

{{Scheibe aircraft}}

Category:1970s German sailplanes

SF-30

Category:Glider aircraft

Category:Aircraft first flown in 1974