· ICAO24 403c4f· last seen Apr 2026

G-SKYT is a Schempp-Hirth Arcus, a single-engine piston aircraft. SkyMeter has tracked 44 flights totalling 24 hours of airtime via ADS-B. The most frequent segment is GB-0024 to EGBJ. Service window in our records spans 301 days. Of those flights, 6 (13.6%) carry at least one detected incident — go-around, unstable approach, stall warning, or runway excursion. The Schempp-Hirth Arcus has a maximum takeoff weight of 1,653 lb, light wake category.

About the Schempp-Hirth Arcus

The Schempp-Hirth Arcus is a German-built high-performance two-seat sailplane that bridges pure gliding and self-launch capability through an optional retractable sustainer engine. Introduced in 2001 by the venerable Schempp-Hirth firm — makers of competition gliders since 1935 — the Arcus was designed for cross-country soaring, advanced training, and the unique European tradition of touring sailplanes where pilots fly hundreds of kilometers ridge-running and thermaling with a companion. Its 20-meter wingspan and sleek composite fuselage deliver a glide ratio exceeding 45:1, among the best in the two-seat class, while the fold-away Solo 2625 engine (when fitted) provides self-launch to 10,000 feet and climb-out from marginal fields without ground crew or towplane.

What sets the Arcus apart is its dual mission: it competes as a pure glider in the Racing Class yet offers the safety and flexibility of power when weather turns or thermals die. The cockpit seats instructor and student (or two touring pilots) in tandem under a long bubble canopy with exceptional visibility. Wing-mounted water ballast tanks allow pilots to optimize wing loading for conditions — dumping water for light-lift days or filling to 1,653 pounds MTOW for fast cruise in strong thermals. The type has become popular in North American soaring clubs and among private owners who value the ability to operate from remote grass strips without external support.

The Arcus remains in production at Schempp-Hirth's Kirchheim facility, with increments like the Arcus M (shorter 18-meter span for tighter thermals) and the Arcus T (turbocharged sustainer) expanding the family. Its operating envelope — never-exceed speed of 168 knots, stall around 43 knots with flaps — reflects the sailplane's lightweight structure and long wings, demanding smooth handling and respect for turbulence limits. SkyMeter has tracked flights across airframes and operators, with the largest observed operator.

FLIGHTS
44
all time
FLOWN HOURS
24
tracked time
📍
AIRPORTS VISITED
11
unique
📡
CALLSIGNS
1
13 routes
📅
SERVICE PERIOD
06/10/2025 → 04/08/2026
first → last
INCIDENT RATE
13.6%
6 flagged

Top routes

By flight count

7
1

Flight numbers

Most-flown by this airframe

1

Aircraft specifications

Schempp-Hirth Arcus

Engines
Single Piston
Vref (approach)
54 kt
MTOW
1,653 lb
Wake category
L

Recent flights

Newest 22 operations of G-SKYT

22
04/08/2026
35m
No alerts
04/08/2026
28m
△ Unstable approach
04/01/2026
39m
No alerts
04/01/2026
38m
No alerts
03/21/2026
28m
No alerts
03/21/2026
35m
No alerts
03/19/2026
53m
No alerts
03/19/2026
1h 15m
No alerts
01/04/2026
14m
No alerts
01/04/2026
11m
No alerts
01/04/2026
20m
No alerts
12/16/2025
39m
No alerts
11/21/2025
27m
△ Unstable approach
10/09/2025
13m
No alerts
09/05/2025
33m
No alerts
09/05/2025
37m
No alerts
09/05/2025
7m
No alerts
08/24/2025
50m
△ Unstable approach
08/24/2025
52m
No alerts
06/25/2025
26m
No alerts
06/17/2025
18m
No alerts
06/10/2025
18m
No alerts
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