A glider is generally designed to carry a maximum of two people. However, large gliders with more wing surface area can support more weight.
A typical glider can carry one or two people, depending on its design and size. Larger gliders may have the capacity for a pilot and one passenger, while smaller ones are often operated solo by just the pilot.
The number of people a ferry can carry depends on its size and capacity, but typically ferries can carry anywhere from 100 to over 2,000 passengers.
The longest limousine can typically carry around 30 passengers, depending on the model and configuration.
The Gautrain can carry up to 1,200 passengers per train set during peak hours.
A full Eurostar train can carry around 900 passengers.
A Boeing 777 can typically carry between 300 to 550 passengers, depending on the seating configuration chosen by the airline.
There are no practical limits, but engineering a hang glider for more than a few people could be difficult. It is easy to show this is true. Imagine a hang glider for 2 people. Now imagine a million of them side by side. Imagine they are somehow connected. It would still fly like a 2-person hang glider.
It is perfectly natural for a sugar glider to be afraid of people in the start. All that you can do is go slowly, and give the glider time to adjust. Talk to it, give it licky treats (such as honey or applesauce), carry it in a bonding pouch, and just generally spend time with it.
Otto Lilienthal was the German inventor that designed and built a glider that would carry a human in 1891. He died in 1896 at the age of 48 when the glider he was flying lost power and crashed.
John Zelger
George Cayhey in 1891.
otto linentha
George Cayhay
your mommas bir toe did
John Zelger
Orvile and Wilbert
you can't bring a sugar glider over here. because A they are a naturaul animal here and you could introduce disease and be you do relise keeping a sugar glider is really cruel you horrible monster
If you mean how many people it can carry then it can carry three people.