Niviuk Peak 3
Being in Saint Hilaire festival in 2012 I passed by the NIVIUK stand. There was
a Peak 3 picture on the wall and after asking when it will be released there
was no answer …
Mysterious hidden design for the moment.
I moved on, thinking it must worth the wait, as NIVIUK seems developing a nice
D glider.
And months pass…In June 2013, I received two Peak 3 23 and from that day I flew
both of them (to be sure of my writings) in multiple conditions, from weak to
rough and nasty conditions enabling me to be as precise and detailed as
possible. I took my time, as I was a bit far from the spreading hype, and just
to be sure of what I am going to publish.
Here is what I found flying the size 23 at different loadings from 90 to 95 all
up:
Launching:
In nil wind the Peak 3 needs a steady pull. It is a bit slow to reach overhead
.In strong wind it launches perfectly without any tendency to shoot forward.
Handling and maneuverability:
Once in the air I was very pleased by the brake authority of the Peak 3. I
think it is one of its strong points. I could quickly place the glider anywhere
in the thermal. If the conditions get rough, turbulent, below an inversion, the
Peak 3 at my loads won’t really react as promptly as it reacts in homogenous
conditions.
It just needs to settle for a sec.
In strong cores and homogenous conditions and when the glider is already inside
the core the Peak 3 has a very nice handling among the best in that category.
In those well-built conditions, the turning ability inside the thermal
for a D is superb!
Flying in turbulence:
The Peak 3 as a 2.5 liner with D certification is somehow comfortable in the
air, but when heavy turbulence is encountered the glider shakes as a whole, but
I felt it has a very solid structure.
I never lost control of the glider in any of the conditions I flew in, just
some hovering moments.
This structure seems successful.
The Peak 3 moves generally in ‘strong air’ more than a Peak 2, and only a ‘little’
less than the IP6 and its authority on the brake will enable the pilot to keep
it better overhead.
In entering some thermals the Peak 3 has a slight pitch back before entering,
loosing a bit of it’s positive biting energy and making it a bit more
demanding…
Roll movements are generally smooth for that kind of D glider.
Piloting with the B’s:
In long glides with some moderate turbulence the B handles helps a lot as they
guide the pilot to keep efficiently the Peak 3 overhead.
In heavy turbulence, they need a higher level of piloting that needs
acclimatization coupled with foot control on the bar. (If applied)
Climb rate:
Flying in very weak thermals (± 0.3 m/s) on my lowest loadings, I found the
Peak 3 to hover a bit .It just waits for that little stronger thermal (+1.5m/s)
to climb faster.
The Peak 3 is not a floater like the Peak 1.
It resembles the Peak 2 in weak climbs.
Flying the Peak 3 in stronger thermals showed that it has spring reactions to
stronger cores where it does in fact climb quickly better than its predecessor
if equally loaded.
Glide performance:
I did several long glides (15 km) tip to tip with the Peak 3 against some top
2013 ‘C’ gliders.
(Only available for now…)
Some in back wind and calm conditions and some in head wind and turbulent
conditions. I only found that the Peak 3 has the edge in head wind conditions
were it surfs the air slightly better.
The glide at first bar is acceptable for the category but at second bar
unfortunately I didn’t feel it was…
The speed:
At trim speed the Peak 3 loaded at 93 has a trim speed of +39 km/h, which was
similar to a Delta 2 ML at 102 all up.
I flew the Peak 3 23 with an X-rated 6 harness.
At 93 all up, I pushed the bar pulley to pulley many times, I could only see an
increase of 17 km/h max over trim speed…I have tried and tried again but that’s
the only result that I have found.
The bar pressure is medium to soft and the glider leading edge show some
wrinkles at full bar but the Peak 3 23 is still solid!
Using the bar in turbulence:
After some flights, I acclimatized myself to the Peak 3,and tried for several
occasions to apply bar in some very turbulent and unstable air.
On the last day of testing I was on the lee side with some very turbulent air.
And I shouldn’t be there… It was just some spicy idea to explore the Peak 3
possibilities.
First I sat well on the harness as it was shaking and snaking all the way, but
applying first bar does in fact make the glider slightly more stable but the
energy is even more present and feel able…
I mean the tips will warn you at first, informing you before any possibility of
bigger collapses that may occur, with a fast dynamic flip-flop!
Overall it is a bit demanding in those conditions, but I was sure that if I was
flying a lower rated glider I would also experience some heavy shakes…
Ears:
Actually pulling the B external lines .It stalls the outside B lines. To do
that, I accelerate a bit first, hold the external B lines high and pull them
down.
The glider slows down ‘noticeably’ at first with the glider going slightly back
a little, and then dives forward to show a sink rate of 4 m/s for 2 seconds,
finally it stabilizes at -2m/s.
Pushing the bar will only add -1m/s. They are a bit hard to hold for a
time and the opening is very energetic and quick, shaking the whole structure
so I found it is better to release them slowly with the bar out.
360’s are a fast descent method. The Peak 3 will keep a stable spiral at least
for my settings.
Wing over’s are a delight and very dynamic, much like the feeling of an acro
glider. I never had a D glider that can build massive wing over’s very quickly
and very high with the pressure still very strong inside the canopy.
Feeling under a 2.5 liner:
Many will ask, why do 2 or 2.5 liners need another understanding approach?
IMHO, 2 or 2.5 liners react differently in the air than 3 liners at least for
the current ones.
They have less attachment points and I presume that they must retain a high
pressure inside to keep the structure solid. That’s why they must be flown like
a Jockey does on a racehorse. Just giving him the exact pressure on the reins
in order to be fast and still controllable without pulling too much and slowing
down.
IP6 overview and differences:
The IP6 had also lots of energy, allowing it to dig in thermal very quickly.
Applying brakes in strong surges didn’t really affect its pitch behavior much,
as it is already inside the core and climbing, or even with the weak ones…with
endless float ability…
Gliding between thermals, IP6 pro pilots trusted the solid glider and use B
handles to be most efficient in lift lines…
Conclusion:
With the Peak 3 targeted for a larger number of D pilots, the pitch movements
has been slightly ‘restrained’ and it does in fact pitch back a
little…especially in sudden surges before entering the thermals.
But NIVIUK has released for the pilots a 2.5 liner in the ‘D’ category with nice
handling characteristics coupled with lots of energy, solid structure, and good
brake authority.
Its also a very beautiful looking taught glider in the air.
I would have preferred a more floating ability as its bigger brother the IP6
and a little neutral or slight positive pitch behavior that maybe could have
led to some close performance in real air…
I found that the Peak 3 is very different in flying
feeling and less in efficiency, but many pilots will like to fly a lower aspect
ratio with more fun handling with the Peak 3.
I loved the Hook 2,3 for their comfortable performances, the Artik 2, 3 for
their handling /perf ratio, the Peak 1 for its excellent climb, the peak 2 for
its comfortable speed…The IP 6 for that outstanding package!
As for the Peak 3,and after taking my time with it, i cannot say that i
was totally impressed…may be i was expecting a lot more but this is a with
total honesty my humble ‘personal’ opinion, and I think the best way is to
forget the hype if good or bad and get one for a test flight hopefully in
multiple conditions.
You will love it or you don’t. You, the pilot, only can decide!
Please remember that my tests are ‘personal’ comments and they are just an
idea.
2 Comments
This comment has been removed by the author.
I love it ! It made me able to do great flights and to fight against the head wind…
Cheers !
BRUNO