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Paraglider Review: 1998 Reflex

Aug 26, 2009 | Ratings: 1 is bad, 10 is good | Para2000 Specs

This is the original Reflex wing. I remember going down to Florida to try a Sky Cruiser top 80 and one of these wings. At the time I had only been flying for a year or so but was intrigued by the claims of collapse resistance and heard lots about the wing. Kudos to Michael Campbell Jones for introducing the concept for the first time.

My first flight was in gusty conditions on a then-new Sky Cruiser and, admittedly, it wasn't a long flight. Besides barely being able to gain altitude, the brake pressures were so high I was worried that I would struggle with landing. Mind you this was in my first year of flying. I've flown the wing many times since then, trying to like it, but just wasn't able to pull that off.

Handling (1): This set a new low for handling, rivaling the most beginner of beginner gliders for a lack of brake responsiveness. And it got worse when the trimmers were let out. Not surprisingly, you were supposed to use tip steering when flying fast since the brakes were there mostly to do pullups with. Mind you, like any wing, you could get it to yank and bank it just took enormous effort.

The glider's mission wasn't handling, it was collapse resistance and speed, both of which it excelled at.

Inflation (1): This was right down there with my first wing, the Apco Santana. Yes, I was able to inflate it running in the field, and yes it did tend to come up straight but, oh my god, the effort required! Having berated it for that, know that it tolerates an enormous amount of "A" pull which, if you do every time, and make sure to get moving quickly before letting go of those A's, you'll have great success.

Whenever I struggle with a wing it's nearly always because I don't have the right technique for that wing rather than the wing itself. If pilots are launching it consistently with success than its up to me to figure out how. But then that's part of what I enjoy about trying new stuff.

Efficiency (1): I could barely keep it aloft with the trimmers fast let alone with speedbar, not that I had one on the demo machine I was flying. I remember thinking there's no way the motor would last very long having to work this hard.

Speed (7): It's faster than average. It has trimmers and speedbar and is relatively so

Construction (9): The lines were built to handle flying a tank. It was exceedingly well made to the point of being overbuilt. That was probably part of its inflation struggle—it weighed probably 18 pounds.

Certification & Safety (7): It never got certified because the testing didn't know what to do with it. The wing was so hard to collapse that they couldn't induce some of the required deformations. But that says a lot for its safety.

Overall (-): This clearly wasn't my type of paraglider. It excelled at going quickly but with horrible handling, making it great for pilots wanting to go cross country without needing to do lots of maneuvering. If that's your main activity then it's pretty good but nothing like the current crop of reflex gliders.

 

Alex Varv loved going fast on what he called his "condom" in deference to its high resistance to collapses. This was one of the earliest of the early Reflex models.


Remember, If there's air there, it should be flown in!