Development
The development of the Silent goes back to the early 1990s and its roots can be found in Walter Mauri's light sailplane called the "Dream". On 8 December 1994 the definitive prototype of Silent light sailplane made its maiden flight from the small grass strip of Gagliano in the northeastern Italian province of Friuli. The glider, flown by test pilot Walter Mauri and towed by a 50 hp trike, was airborne in 200m and, after climbing to 600m, successfully flew for 16 minutes. Series production of the "Silent 2" with the 13m wings will begin in the second half of 2003. On 1 September 2003, USAF Captain Brock Vaughn flew his kit-built self-launch Silent Club sailplane for the first time. On 22 November 2003 the first test flights of a jet-powered Silent Club sailplane were conducted. Powered by twin AMT USA engines, the 12m Silent easily self-launched with acceptable take-off distance and good climb rate. Several successful flights were conducted to analyze performance, handling, temperature issues, and engine systems.Design
The fuselage is carbon and glass fiber composite with epoxy resin. The wings have an elliptical planform, vertical or elliptical design winglets. The wing structure includes extensive use of carbon fiber, both in the sandwich skins and in the tapered I-beam wing spar which uses pultruded carbon rods for the spar caps. The wing geometry is notable in that it varies non-linearly from the root to the tip, both in overall planform shape and in wing section profile. The flaperons stretch for 11.0 meters of the full wingspan and their range of motion varies from positive landing L +8°, to +4° for thermalling, to 0°, -4°, and S -8° reflex positions for cruising. Schempp-Hirth-type spoilers extend on the upper wing surface only. Opening the single-element spoilers with stick held results in a noticeable nose-down pitch movement. This, however, can easily be avoided by maintaining the nose attitude relative to the horizon; doing this will cause little airspeed change. Closing the spoilers has a similar pitch-up effect, again easily controlled with stick movement. On approach, the spoilers are moderately effective. Descent rate can be quickly increased by slipping. At approach speed with spoilers out, there is a clear view ahead over the nose. The sailplane is trimmed in pitch via an innovative variable-position horizontal stabilizer. The stabilizer position is governed by the flaperon setting. The five settings of the flaperons control produce corresponding changes to the stabilizer incidence, thus defining the trim airspeed in relation to the flaperons requirements. The conventional elevator remains in trail, minimizing trim drag. There is a fixed or retractable main wheel behind the pilot, with shock absorber and drum brake activated via spoiler control lever aft travel. The Silent airframe has undergone thorough analysis (Variants
There are three versions of the Silent Gliders. * The Silent Club version has 12 meter wingspan. *The Silent 2 version has 13 meter wingspan. *The Silent 2 Targa version has 13.3 meter wingspan and a special elevator.Specifications
*Cockpit width 0.63 m (2.1 ft) * Cockpit height 0.91 m (3 ft) *Wing profile IMD 050 (16%) *Wing loading 34 kg/m2 (6.96 lb/sq ft) *Stall speed 64 km/h (35 knots) *Roll rate 2.5 s at 80 km/h (43 knots)References
* Silent 2 Targa Flight Manual * https://web.archive.org/web/20070308124458/http://www.alisport.com/eu/eng/alianti.htm * https://www.faa.gov/regulations_policies/handbooks_manuals/aircraft/glider_handbook/ * ''Sailplane Builder'', March–April 2002 * ''Soaring'', May 2003 * ''Soaring'', March 2005 * https://web.archive.org/web/20070418051732/http://www.glidingmagazine.com/FeatureArticle.asp?id=368 * https://web.archive.org/web/20070202111444/http://www.alisport.com/eu/images/img_news/Volaresett04/VOLARE_SETT04.htm * https://minijets.org/en/0-100/amt-titan/silent-2-targa-jet {{Alisport aircraft Glider aircraft 2000s Italian sailplanes Alisport aircraft