Hang glider circa 1998.
Wing area: 14.6 sq.m
Certification: DHV 1-2
Pilot weight: 65-95 kg
Wing span: 10.4 m
Nose Angle: 128 deg
Aspect ratio: 7.3
Price (1998) 6800 DM
Hang-glider
UP Speed

Hang glider circa 1998.
Wing area: 13.5 sq.m
Certification: DHV 2-3
Pilot weight: 65-95 kg
Wing span: 10.5 m
Nose Angle: 133 deg
Aspect ratio: 8.2
Price (1998) 8400 DM
Speed TL
A topless hang glider circa 1998.
Wing area: 13.5 sq.m
Certification: DHV 2-3
Pilot weight: 65-95 kg
Wing span: 10.5 m
Nose Angle: 133 deg
Aspect ratio: 8.2
Price (1998) 10400 DM
UP Joker
Hang glider circa 1998.
Wing area: 16.3 sq.m
Certification: DHV I
Pilot weight: 65-95 kg
Wing span: 9.6 m
Nose Angle: 122 deg
Aspect ratio: 5.6
Price (1998) 4200 DM
UP Ultralight Products / UP Europe / UP Delta
UP Ultralight Products
4054 W – 2825 N
Mountain Green UT, 84050
USA
Pasadena California, 1970. Pete Brock finishes his studies at the Art Center, a world-renowned school of industrial design, as its youngest graduate ever. Brock soon discovers a new passion: hang gliding- probably the most radical sport imaginable in the early 70s. While there are several glider models on the market there is only one common theme – they are all extremely dangerous. This also holds true for Pete’s first design, the Brock Redtail.
However, when Pete Brock gets together with the young designer Roy Haggard, a new concept is born. The Dragonfly is the first tenable post-Rogallo glider and becomes the flagship of their newly founded company, Ultralight Products. A series of successful designs follow, including the Condor with its world record duration flight of 16 hours, 4 minutes in 1979.
Helping the company gain success quickly is Pete Brock’s logo design. The UP arrow achieves cult status from the beginning and for many pilots characterises the spirit of hang gliding and later paragliding. The logo and the brand’s positive image attract the interest of various investors over the company’s three-decade history. The first is in 1980, when Yuseke Yamazaki, a Japanese investor, lays the foundation for UP’s success in Asia.
The year 1980 also marks the introduction of Roy Haggard’s pioneering development, the UP Comet. The Comet’s outrigger-free construction concept was revolutionary. Jim Lee sets the world distance record at 268 km with a Comet in 1981, and eventually the UP Comet becomes one of the biggest-selling hang gliders of all time. Success breeds followers, and the Comet is a natural target for copying. In 1982 Airwave, UP’s representative in Europe, produces the Magic, which is nothing more than a modified Comet.
In the mid-80s Pete Brock and Roy Haggard retire from the everyday business. Ownership and location of the firm change in the following years. Through the continued influence of Yuseke Yamazaki, UP becomes UP International, a wholly owned subsidiary of a Japanese parent company, Isomura, Inc. Encouraged by the success of the hang gliding business, Isomura diversifies the UP brand into windsurfing, UL-flying and fashion. In Japan one can find the UP arrow on the UP-Sports clothing line, and on T-shirts, jackets and socks. Even today at Venice Beach in Los Angeles one can find rollerbladers leaning against the UP arrow logo as they take breaks on park benches donated by the local UP surf shop in the mid-80s.
The TRX, the first production series hang glider with carbon tube elements, is developed at the UP Soaring Center in Salt Lake City under the guidance of UP’s new designer, Terry Reynolds. Despite various technical innovations, the TRX remains the last successful UP hang glider for some time.
Though UP is a latecomer to paragliding, the company hits the mark in 1990 with the relatively unknown Korean designer Gin Seok Song. The Flash, developed by Gin in the U.S. together with test pilot Greg Smith, is revolutionary. The Flash is the first paraglider with a perfectly smooth leading edge and has more performance than anything else on the market. The glider dominates in competition and becomes a bestseller. Yet the Flash remains Gin’s only design for UP since he is coaxed to another paragliding newcomer, Edel, with a lucrative offer.
At this time, Claus Bichlmeier is UP’s importer for the German-speaking markets.
Global Expansion from Germany
UP Europe
Ultralight Products Europe
1998: Altjoch 19 A, D-8243 kochel am See, GERMANY
By 1998 UP Delta had bought out aircraft manufacturer Thalhofer.
In 1992 Ernst Schneider establishes UP Europe in Sindelsdorf near Garmisch and all development and testing is carried out in Europe. Designer Rasso von Schlichtegroll, later co-founder of freeX, develops best-selling gliders like the Katana, the Vision and the tandem Pickup. Chief Test Pilot Ernst Strobl crowns his competition career in 1992 by winning the European Championship.
That same year Uli Wiesmeier wins the first Paragliding World Cup series on a Katana. In addition to his involvement in competition, Uli is responsible for UP’s public image. Uli’s advertising work, his eye for style in developing the Skywear line of clothing and his award-winning creativity in filmmaking all contribute greatly to ensuring that the UP thrives in paragliding. French UP pilot Richard Gallon wins the 1994 PWC. In 1995 the new World Champion Stephan Stiegler and top pilots like Peter Hensold, the Italian cross-country ace Eduard Taschler and Sebastian “Rambo” Bourquin become members of the UP team.
Motivated by UP’s success in paragliding, Ernst Schneider establishes a hang gliding department under the auspices of UP Europe. The original Salt Lake development team at the Soaring Center starts a separate company that eventually leads to the formation of Altair under the leadership of Dick Chainey and John Heiney. Bernd Weber, the manager of Thalhofer and co-founder of the rigid wing manufacturer A.I.R. takes charge of UP’s new hang gliding line. The Speed, UP’s first hang glider in nearly five years, is introduced in 1995, and the topless version, the Speed TL follows in 1997.
UP Europe Delta
1998: Salzstrasse 6, D-72589 Römerstein, GERMANY
In 1998 UP Europe was manufacturing the wings for the rigid wing Pegasus of Jurgen Lutz, having bought out aircraft manufacturer Thalhofer.
Ernst Schneider sells UP Europe, and the buyer is once again from Japan. The profitable entertainment group Daiichi Kosho is seeking to diversify from the Karaoke industry and is looking to the flying industry for an additional profit center. With the continually developed paragliders from Europe and their own paragliding schools domestically, “DK” quickly enjoys market leadership in Japan.
The Japanese invest substantially in UP Europe, where the workforce and the competition team are expanded. In 1997 half of the German League is flying UP’s new performance glider, the Escape. During this time, UP Europe relocates to offices north of Garmisch in Kochel am See, where up to 20 employees are working.
By this time, the paragliding boom is subsiding and high quality designs like those of the Escape, the Soul, and the Blues do not attain the market successes of their predecessors.
Daiichi Kosho and UP part ways in 1999. At the same time, Bernd Weber gives up the hang gliding part of the business. Of the several parties interested in the remaining paragliding business with the exceptional UP brand, the successful bidder is the Swede Christian Rönning. Flying since 1988, Christian is one of the pioneering paraglider pilots in Sweden. He also brings with him a wealth of experience gained as a management consultant to multinational firms in Asia.
At the end of 1999 Christian Rönning began UP anew with a substantially reduced, yet highly experienced staff at his side. Torsten Siegel, Georg Maier and former World Champion Stephan Stiegler were responsible for product development, and it was upon their know-how that the first UP Europe product line was based. A new era for UP was firmly established when in just one year UP progressed from the old designs to a whole new glider range including the Pulse, the Makalu, the Summit, the Gambit, the Sherpa, and the Gambit C. UP’s R&D department has since adopted a roughly three-year cycle for the renewal of gliders, which led to a number of even more succesful designs being launched, not least the World Champion 2003 winner called the Targa, the Serial Class reference wing for almost 4 years called the Trango, and later the successor to these, the Targa 2 which won the World Cup in 2004. Torsten Siegel eventually decided to pursue his career goals with Swing, and some time later Stephan Stieglair departed to form his own new brand called Air Design.
Since 2010 the new design team, which picks up the baton from the Stieglair/Siegel years, is headed by Czech industry old-timer Frantisek “Franta” Pavlousek and supported by both new faces and experienced people. In the former category not least German aerospace engineer Matthias Hartmann, who is a passionate hobby paraglider pilot, and Czech young test pilots Michal “Snajby” Sneiberg and Jirik “Jirka” Dlask, and in the latter category German lightweight guru Stefan “Boxi” Bocks.
University of Louvain la Neuve Two Seat hang glider
The club of the University of Louvain la Neuve (Belgium), wanted to make a two-seater hang-glider in 1979. They became interested in the Flexiform Skyline which had a non-profiled sail, which greatly facilitated the sewing work.
Based on photos, they extrapolated their two-seater to scale to be 23sq.m, with a wingspan of 13m. It was desided to truncate the tips of wings at 11m.
To avoid the pilot weight + passenger weight risk of distorting the leading edges, they put triple deflectors.
With triple deflectors and no need to use big tubes, 44×1,25mm resulted in 28kgs weight.
A keel pocket in two parts was sewn in, including 30cms in front of the mast.
For maneuverability it has a trapezoid with a control bar of 1.80 m.
To build a wing that will allow to do all the centering tests without redoing them cables the idea was to use a trapezoidal top in the form of a rail to change the centering between two tests over a length of 30cms, and attach the cables with cable ties, which will only be crimped ‘Once the flight tests are completed!
It flew several hundred hours with several pilots without problems or accidents. It was even ranked 1st in a two-seater competition at the Icare Cup.
University Of Pretoria Exulans

Designed by three engineers from the University of Pretoria, Exulan I is inspired by the shape of albatrosses and pteranodons.
The 1989 Exulans (named after the scientific name for albatros) used some wingtip pivot shift for pitch control, in combination with elevons to overcome the inherent inefficiency of elevons for pitch alone. It was tested successfuly but no commercial version was released.
Designer Joachim Huyssens and his team were working on a second prototype since 2004.
Wing area: 12 m²
Wing span: 12 m
Length: 3 m
Minimum pilot weight: 65 kg
Maximum pilot weight: 150 kg
Minimum speed: 150 km/h
Maximum speed: 40 km/h
ULTEAM Topulteam

The Topulteam is basically like a Top Secret with the wing tips chopped off. Only one was built.
Wing area: 11.8 m²
Wing span: 10.8 m
Aspect ratio: 9.8
Minimum pilot weight: 50 kg
Maximum pilot weight: 80 kg
Nose angle: 127°
ULTEAM Styl / Styl+ / Icaro 2000 Orbiter

The Styl is a 2005 hang glider for advanced pilots. Xavier Verges designed the 2005 Laminar Orbiter (Intermediate wing) in collaboration with ULteam, as a derivative of the StyL. It is marketed by Icaro 2000 as the Orbiter, and by ULteam as the StyL+.

The Styl+ is also a 2005 hang glider for advanced pilots. The ULteam Styl+ has options and tuning which provide the Styl+ with a slight edge in performance over the Orbiter.
The Icaro 2000 Orbiter 2 for Intermediate pilots appeared in 2016.


Styl+ 13
Wing area: 13.7 m²
Wing span: 9.7 m
Aspect ratio: 6.9
Hang glider weight: 27 kg
Minimum pilot weight: 60 kg
Maximum pilot weight: 85 kg
Packed length: 5 m
Packed length short: 4 m
Number of battens: 20
Nose angle: 128°
Styl+ 14
Wing area: 14.6 m²
Wing span: 10.2 m
Aspect ratio: 7.1
Hang glider weight: 30 kg
Minimum pilot weight: 80 kg
Maximum pilot weight: 95 kg
Packed length: 5.2 m
Packed length short: 4 m
Number of battens: 22
Nose angle: 128°
Styl+ 15
Wing area: 15.2 m²
Wing span: 10.4 m
Aspect ratio: 7.1
Hang glider weight: 31 kg
Minimum pilot weight: 85 kg
Maximum pilot weight: 110 kg
Packed length: 5.4 m
Packed length short: 4 m
Number of battens: 22
Nose angle: 126°
Styl+ 16
Laminar Orbiter 14
Wing area: 14.45 m²
Wing span: 10.35 m
Aspect ratio: 7.4
Hang glider weight: 30 kg
Minimum pilot weight: 70 kg
Maximum pilot weight: 100 kg
Minimum speed: 31 km/h
Maximum speed: 90 km/h
Packed length: 5.2 m
Packed length short: 4 m
Number of battens: 22
Nose angle: 128°
ULTEAM
69, rue des Ebavous
38660 La Terrasse
France
Hang glider manufacturer circa 2005
UFM Easy Riser

The Easy Riser biplane was designed by Larry Mauro and which under the name Icarus II was one of the earliest hang gliders to be motorised, back in 1975 by John Moody. A rigid wing tailless biplane flown by supplemental weight-shift. A variety of engines could be fitted, including the 125cc McCulloch 101 go cart engine, UFM selling the machine as a hang-glider. Control method: Standard tip rudder and weight-shift pitch axis, optional 2 or 3 axis control. First year built 1976. Units delivered by June 1981 2,500. Many options in power and landing gear were available. It is strut and cable braced.

The Easy Riser is a progression from the Icarus II but the wing is a modified monowing with a double surfaced rigid airfoil. Wingtip rudders are mounted on ball bearings and drag brakes are fitted. Wing tips are fully contoured. Wing covering is 1.3oz dacron sealed with aircraft dope.
The spars are made from 6061-T6 aluminium tubing with foam core spruce ribs. Wing bracing is both aluminium struts and cable. All rigging is aircraft grade. All hardware is aircraft grade, fastened with pop rivets and bolts.
The pilot has a tube cockpit support with an optional swing seat.
The Easy Riser won the 1976 World Open Hang Gliding Championships.
The Easy Riser is offered as a hang glider, and engine and landing gear packages to use with this aircraft are offered separately by other companies. Power and landing gear optional. Standard tip rudder and weight-shift pitch axis, optional 2 or 3 axis control.

Easy Riser 1
Wingspan 30’
Wing area 170 sq.ft
Aspect ratio 8.8
Empty weight 55 lbs. (without engine or landing gear)
Gross wt: 350 lbs
Empty wt: 110-150 lbs
Max pilot wt: 200 lbs
Easy Riser
Chord length: 3.41 ft
Wing span: 30 ft
Wing area: 170 sq,ft
Aspect ratio: 8.8
Wing sweep: 15˚
Weight: 50 lb
Pilot weight: 200 lb
Takeoff speed: 17 mph
Stall speed: 16 mph
Max speed: 45 mph
Best glide ratio (L/D): 10-1
Best L/D speed: 18 mph
Min sink: 180 fpm
