AlephZero said:
You are right the lift/drag ratio is independent of weight. It only depends on the shape of the plane. ... L/D ratio is the same as the glide ratio. That is why gliding competitions specify the maximum weight of the plane, not the minimum, and the competitors usually load the plane up to the maximum permitted weight with sandbags, so they can glide as fast as possible.
Full scale gliders use water ballast for weight. For example a competition Nimbus 4T with 26.4 meter == 86.6 foot wing span, with an empty weight of 520 kg?, has a max seat load rating of 110 kg, and max overall rating of 800 kg to 850 kg (TM - not sure what TM means). The wing tanks can hold 300 liters (80 gallons), which would be 303 kg, so there seems to be a conflict in the empty / maximum weight spec versus the maximum ballast weight. The water ballast can be released and drained from the tanks during flight. The Nimbus 4T has a glide ratio of 60:1 at around 60 knots.
nimbus_4t_htm
Unlimited thermal duration type competition model gliders have glide ratios of about 15:1 to 20:1, wing spans in the 3 to 4 meter range, and weigh around 2.5 kg, and ballast is used for windy days so the models can fly faster upwind after following a thermal downwind, but it's usually maxxed out at about .5 kg for a total weight around 3.0 kg. The upwind speed is double or more that of speed for best glide ratio, with a reduced angle of attack (and reduced camber accomplished by raising flaps and ailerons a bit), so not a lot of ballast is needed for fast flight with around 7:1 to 10:1 glide ratio. For these models, there's no maximum limit on the weight, since the goal is time duration, not distance covered.
The highest wing loaded model gliders are the ones used for dynamic soaring. Here the goal is maximum speed obtained from a high energy source, a fast wind over somewhat non-moving (but turbulent) wind with a relatively thin shear boudary on the downwind side of a ridge line on a very windy day. These models have about 2.5 meter wingspans and weigh about 4 kg or so. The most recent record I recall was 498 mph == 801 kph was accomplished March 2012.
I've seen part of the video. The "modern" version's wing is shaped similar to a flying wing, usually made out of EPP or Z-foam and used for combat since these foam based models will bounce off each other if there's a collision and without any denting (the foam compresses and springs back). These relatively short wing span gliders don't have a great glide ratio even when made from foam. As mentioned already, a brick's glide ratio would be close to zero. Video of combat wings:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=grFuX1SwGu8&hd=1
update - I finally got to see the test runs. The issue with the lighter glider is that it wasn't trimmed properly. It pitched downwards and slammed into the floor; basically it had "down" elevator input. It needed more "up" elevator, and with sufficient up elevator, it probably would have done somewhat better than the other glider.