Remember the Cumulus Motorglider? It’s Flying!

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The author's early motorglider design, the Cumulus, was taken over by Dave Ekstrom, who developed it into an affordable kit.
  • Ultralight Soaring Aviation LLC offers the Cumulus motorglider as a homebuilding kit, significantly reducing costs compared to high-end factory-built aircraft.
  • The kit-built Cumulus provides excellent soaring performance (20:1 glide, <200 fpm sink rate) while retaining an engine for safety and convenience.
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In the 1990s I tried my hand at developing an airplane. While that business venture didn’t make me a millionaire, it provided a valuable lesson about what it takes to stay in the light-sport airplane business. Later, I realized the project needed someone who understood building techniques better than I did. That man was Dave Ekstrom and he ultimately took over my design, the Cumulus, a motorglider. He calls his business Ultralight Soaring Aviation LLC .

In the world of soaring, a motorglider is an expensive flying machine, making it not so different than high-end LSA that cost $130,000 or more. But Ekstrom comes from the world of homebuilts and he knew he could produce a kit for a lot less if buyers were willing to pull a few rivets (about 300 total hours are needed).

One of the 21 Cumulus builders is Andre Girard of Ottawa, Canada, who kindly provided Dave with the photos you see (five Cumulus kits are now airborne). On such a lovely day for flying Cumulus has calculated performance of 20:1 glide and a sink rate less than 200 fpm. From personal experience, I can vouch for those numbers as easily facilitating soaring flight. Yet you always have an engine to get you back home.

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