Icaro Cyber

The Icaro Cyber is an Italian single-place, paraglider that was designed and produced by Icaro 2000 of Sangiano. It is now out of production.[1]

Cyber
Role Paraglider
National origin Italy
Manufacturer Icaro 2000
Designer Michael Nessler and Christian Amon
Introduction 2001
Status Production completed
Unit cost
2,216 (2004)

The Cyber 2 was designed by Michael Nessler and Christian Amon.[1]

Design and development

The Cyber was designed as a beginner glider.[1]

The design progressed through two generations of models, the Cyber and Cyber 2. The models are each named for their relative size.[1]

Variants

Cyber S
Small-sized model for lighter pilots, introduced in 2001. The glider model is DHV 1 certified.[1]
Cyber M
Mid-sized model for medium-weight pilots, introduced in 2001. The glider model is DHV 1 certified.[1]
Cyber L
Large-sized model for heavier pilots, introduced in 2001. The glider model is DHV 1 certified.[1]
Cyber 2 S
Small-sized model for lighter pilots. Its 11.6 m (38.1 ft) span wing has a wing area of 25.5 m2 (274 sq ft), 40 cells and the aspect ratio is 5.3:1. The pilot weight range is 65 to 85 kg (143 to 187 lb). The glider model is DHV 1 certified.[1]
Cyber 2 M
Mid-sized model for medium-weight pilots. Its 12.2 m (40.0 ft) span wing has a wing area of 28.3 m2 (305 sq ft), 40 cells and the aspect ratio is 5.3:1. The pilot weight range is 80 to 105 kg (176 to 231 lb). The glider model is DHV 1 certified.[1]
Cyber 2 L
Large-sized model for heavier pilots. Its 12.8 m (42.0 ft) span wing has a wing area of 31.2 m2 (336 sq ft), 40 cells and the aspect ratio is 5.3:1. The pilot weight range is 100 to 125 kg (220 to 276 lb). The glider model is DHV 1 certified.[1]

Specifications (Cyber 2 M)

Data from Bertrand[1]

General characteristics

  • Crew: one
  • Wingspan: 12.2 m (40 ft 0 in)
  • Wing area: 28.3 m2 (305 sq ft)
  • Aspect ratio: 5.3:1
gollark: (because people never strip the debug symbols)
gollark: (although that decompiles pretty easily)
gollark: I had to deal with BYTECODE before, you know.
gollark: Technically they're combination arrays/maps so they can start at other stuff, but table literal syntax and the builtins assume 1.
gollark: No, Lua tables do start at 1.

References

  1. Bertrand, Noel; Rene Coulon; et al: World Directory of Leisure Aviation 2003-04, page 19. Pagefast Ltd, Lancaster OK, 2003. ISSN 1368-485X
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.