Commodious Sailplane?
BT wrote:
Frank.. I agree.. my books say 242# per seat.. period.. impact integraty for
the required g-impact rating for certification.. put a 300# person in the
seat.. you may be within W&B.. but not impact rating..
so long insurance
BT
"Frank Whiteley" wrote in message
ups.com...
It may be the seatbelt or anchor point structural limit and may not be
the W/B limit. It's derived from the JAR22 miniumum maximum
specification. Some airworthiness authorities do not recognize JAR22,
however they often do specify operating within the stated operating
manual/POH and placarded limits. Likewise, your insurance underwriter
might have some specific compliance limitations.
YMMV,
Frank Whiteley
Bruce Greef wrote:
BT wrote:
something I've not seen in all of the previous responses..
most of the foriegn built imported into the US gliders that I am
familiar
with have a 110kg per seat loading.. that is 242 lbs US.
check the papers , w&b and max seat loading on anything you plan to buy
BT
"Jim" wrote in message
news:ca0Wg.1916$La2.1639@fed1read08...
I've been searching for a used sailplane for a month; most are
proportioned
for pilots not-so-large as me. Any recommendations for ships with
commodious
cockpit dimensions?
Jim Hultman
6'3" 240 lb.
Just call me 'Falstaffian".
Note that the 242lb is a seatbelt ultimate strength limit, not a weight
and
balance issue. A little lead in the tail can sort that out easily.
Personally I doubt I would be interested in the difference between my
seatbelt
failing at 15G or 14G, but if you want to fly a certified ship...
Hmmm, you're within w&b, run into a downdraft, big sink, or rainshower
perhaps just as you're getting back to the gliderport, come up short of
the runway and break your bird. Being over 242 lbs. and therefore
exceeding the rating for the seat/seatbelts contributes to the accident
how???? I rather doubt that the insurance company would spend that much
time looking for reasons not to pay. For what it's worth, I've pranged
a glider and didn't get a single question from the insurance company
beyond "give us a description of what happened". If they were that
motivated to find discrepancies, I bet very few people would get payouts.
Now, if it was a passenger that was hurt in the accident and he/she was
over the seat rating, that would be a differnt case, particularly if
there was a seat/seatbelt related failure during the prang.
I don't see it happening in a single seater though.
|