tow rope brake practice crash, what can we learn...
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
		
On Jul 14, 6:45*pm, Darryl Ramm  wrote: 
 On Jul 13, 10:07*pm, Bruce Hoult  wrote: 
 
 
 
 
 
  On Jul 14, 2:52*pm, Kevin Christner  wrote: 
 
   Can anyone tell me if they've had an actual rope break below ~200 or 
   even ~400ft. *I have never, ever heard of one. 
 
  I had a rope break 12 days ago. The glider moved about 50 ft before 
  coming to rest. 
 
  I've seen several similar breaks over the years. 
 
  As far as I know, our club has had precisely one rope break in the air 
  in the 25 years I've been a member. It happened at around 1500 or 2000 
  ft and the glider end or the rope and the rings dropped into an 
  electrical substation, which caused them to become a little unhappy. 
 
  I don't know why people are talking about landing downwind from 200ft. 
  When I've done practice rope breaks it's been about a 90 degree turn 
  onto a short downwind for the crosswind runway, but almost invariably 
  when you get onto base for that you figure you've got plenty of height 
  to turn that into a close in downwind for the active runway. 
  Certainly, if there's a reasonable wind (20 - 25 knots, say) then it's 
  easy (and better) to go right around and land upwind even if you land 
  a fair way up the active runway and/or still at a 20 or 30 degree 
  angle to it. 
 
 Bruce, because many gliderports have shorter single runways. You may 
 be thinking of operating off long runways at larger airports with 
 cross runways. 
 
We operate off approximately 450m of grass which forms the long edge 
of a right angle triangle. We do have a lot of width or varying 
directions available, at the cost of a shorter available distance, but 
it's hardly huge. 
 
(the grass is surrounded by tarsealed taxiways (decommissioned 
runways) which are theoretically available for undershoot/overrun, at 
the cost of a "shout", but past that there is a fence and then km of 
very unlandable retail complexes and houses) 
 
		
	
		
		
		
		
		
	
		 
			
 
			
			
			
				 
            
			
			
            
            
                
			
			
		 
		
	
	
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