NOVA Ion 3 S (80-100)
Having flown the Ion 1 and Ion 2 here is the Ion 3 test flight.
Nova has already proven with the Ion 2 its ability to make some long XC
flying with a large passive safety. They claim that the Ion 3 is
targeted to the same group of pilots wanting more performance without
the stress of a high aspect ratio glider.
The glider just arrived and I am already on the take off.
Construction:
On the Ion 3 unsheathed lines are found at the top and normal on the
bottom main lines. I could see a clean 3 line construction without any
splits on the C .
Digging my ‘hard nose’ inside the NOVA ‘Air scoop’ cells of the Ion 3 to check the construction,
I can see that you could expect a quality beyond questioning on the
ION 3. The workmanship on this glider and on recent NOVA gliders is
really remarkable.
Launching the Ion3 is straightforward and at 95 all up I was immediately airborne even with a light breeze.
In the air:
First thermal and first contact in the air on board the ION 3 S size loaded at 95,showed a very quick brake response.
After the first 10 cm slack from the pulleys, the glider can be turned on the second 10 cm travel and it doesn’t need more !
It is weird for me to experience that on a low B glider.
I have tried to dig the brake 40 cm lower just to make sure it doesn’t spin…. But it does seem to be a forgiving B glider.
The pressure on the 10 cm travel needed to steer the glider is average,
just like on the Ion 2, but pulling +10 cm more showed a hard brake
pressure.
In thermals the glider is easy to place inside the core with just those 10-12 cm .
Roll response is present on the Ion 3 slightly more than on the Ion 2.
But the pilot feels its passive safety, as it doesn’t have some high
angle surges. Just moving above the pilot’s head…
In entering the thermals, the Ion 1 would pitch back a little, the Ion 2
would have a slightly more neutral pitch, but the Ion 3 has a slight
forward pitch, as it seems to reach for the thermals. A nice feature for
discovering the higher rated gliders.
The Ion 3 seems to have its entire load on the A’s and B’s. At trim
speed, the C lines are nearly loose. It is another concept from the Ion
2.
The speed travel is long for the category and I was able to get +12 km/h over trim speed.
The pressure is similar to the Ion 2, which has a relatively average pressure.
Big ears are stable and reopen on their own.
The performance seems nice for this low-end B.
I have to make more flights along new low-end B’s to be more sure.
But it seems that at second bar the glide doesn’t deteriorate like on
the Ion 2 ! It feels more faster with a more interesting horizontal
glide !
More feedback,
Today i was hoping to get a long glide with the Buzz Z4 with same
loadings, but the conditions weren’t so ideal for comparing. But after
some hours in the air, here is what i found more :
Climbing :
Flying the Ion 3 S today with ballast at 96 all up.
First it was a bit windy and in those conditions when on a thermal and
facing the wind, the Ion 3 as a low B glider behaves like the class
above in surfing upward the air with each turn.It means that the leading
edge would convert the lift to a nice climb.This characteristic was not
really found before on the low B gliders i have tested.
Going in some turbulent conditions the Ion 3 moves above the pilots head
but won’t go far, and after a while the pilot will get a solid
confidence !
At the end of the day, i dropped the 3 kg ballast to get to 93 all
up.The brake pressure felt a little less tiring and the glider was
surely a better floater, that could easily be compared to the class
above ! in terms of climbing efficiency.
The Ion 3 doesn’t require a heavy approach. If the pilot will let it
fly, without too much brake input, it will ‘surf’ the air in a very
efficient glide for its low B category ! I think it is designed for XC
flights in mind.
The glide test is coming soon, but it seems that the Ion 3 has some
impressive glide angle for its category, especially into wind
transitions and at bar !
Just to tease you a bit
Soon…
AND more interesting feedback !!!
I was very excited to do the Mentor 3 Ion 3 glide for the past month !
As i knew there was something special here …But couldn’t write anything
before, being sure.
Now after many glides at trim and accelerated in headwind and difficult
conditions, I can confirm that the glide at trim and at 45 km/h are
identical !!
-In climbing ability the Mentor 3 still has a light edge.
-The overall handling and maneuverability is also on the M3 side..
-The total comfort and smoothness in flight is on the Ion 3 side.
IMHO, ‘Any’ low en-B pilot looking for some top performance in the
(High and low B) category would miss NOT to try that Ion 3 just to feel
what i talking about !
And i wonder how it could be done …. and why there are still some
‘very’ high aspect ratio gliders other than for top high speed gliding …
5 Comments
Hi Ziad,
I know you are busy with the Rush 4 now and had bad weather, just curious will there be any more comparison with the Ion 3?
I'm interested how it compares to last year mid B's like Hook3, Epsilon 7.
Zsolt
Seems a bit unfair to compare the Z4 with the Ion 3, given the Z4 has one "B" rating and the Ion 3 has 6 "B" ratings… Should the Ion 3 be considered a "mid-high" B glider? But I guess that's just the ratings, not how she flies.
I have tested the ION3 during 10 hours in Switzerland last week.
In comparison to my previous wing (Advance Epsilon 7) the ION3 reacts much quicker and turns even bettter. I dared to turn towards the mountain, something I didn't dare to do with the Epsilon.
The gliding rate is at least one whole point better, especially when using the speed system at half speed.
During the 10 hours in sometimes very rough thermals I had no problems. The occasional foldings for max 30% gave no problems and overall the ION3 gave a safe feeling.
I was so enthusiast that I have bought the ION3.
I was so
Hi Ziad!
Thankx a lot for Your testing!
Could You write something comparing the comfort -B-Class Gliders with each other, or eaven with all other B-Gliders?
This might stop some more pilots from flying too hot gliders.
Especially I am interested in a comparison between Tequila 4 and Ion 3.
In my case I tend more to the Ion 3 S, because I have a Takeoff weight of 100kg flying in the alps, prefering to fly at the upper end of the weight range.
Thankx!
Nicolas
Hi Ziad,
I've read with a lot of interest your B range comparison!
We can see that Rush 4 and Swift 4 have some slight difference on the rating due to the glider weight.
For the Ion 3, it exist a light weight version…
Do you have any idea, feed back of the light version? Shall we expect the same behavior changes?
Thanks in advance for your highlights!
Guillaume