Winch Signals
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
		
On Apr 9, 8:15*am, Nyal Williams  wrote: 
 Our club has yet to try winching, though a half-dozen members have 
 experienced it elsewhere sometime across the last fifty years. 
 
 Reading Piggot, I discover the command "All Out" for the beginning of 
 the launch. *Is this the customary command in other places besides 
 England? *Why this? *What does it reall mean? *At first I took it to mean 
 "Everyone stand clear" or some such, but apparently it means "Give 'er 
 the gun" in US slang. Does this Britishism have some colloquial meaning 
 for them that doesn't exist elsewhere? 
 
 Seems to me, such a command would be the same one a glider pilot who has 
 no wing runner (aero retrieve from a landout) uses on the radio to tell a 
 tow pilot to begin the launch after the rope is taut. *I've heard, "Go, 
 go, go." which I don't really like but can't say why. 
 
 What have you heard? *Anyone have any comments to offer? 
 
As an expatriot Brit, "all out" to me means full speed - whether it's 
the winch or tow plane. 
 
Webster's New World Dictionary defines all out as "completely, 
wholeheartedly" 
 
Mike 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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