Unlike commercial air transport and military aircraft,
the high performance glider was developed as an end
in itself so that individual pilots could achieve
extended flights using only energy present in the
air. From modest beginnings in the first two decades
of this century the best gliders available today are
able to fly 60 miles from a height of about 6000 ft
in no wind and without upcurrents. Using thermals
and other available lift in the air these gliders
are capable of flying a distance of 1000 miles in a
day. The realisation of such performance efficient
gliders was possible because the design problems
attracted top quality aerodynamicists. Germany led,
and still leads, because German universities saw, in
glider development, a fine training ground for young
aeronautical engineers — initially encouraged, of
course, by the Versailles Treaty which forbade the
manufacture of powered aircraft at the end of WW1.
Now superb gliders exist but because of their cost,
complexity and size they can be afforded and/or
flown by only a relatively small number of pilots.
This paper follows the historical development of
gliders, the arrival of hang gliders and paragliders
and considers the way forward for motorless
flight.