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Recognizing and reacting to tow plane engine failure
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October 24th 14, 03:24 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Bob Whelan[_3_]
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Recognizing and reacting to tow plane engine failure
On 10/23/2014 9:18 AM,
wrote:
On Thursday, October 23, 2014 8:41:57 AM UTC-6, son_of_flubber wrote:
It would be useful to hear your stories of how incidents of tow plane
engine failure turned out for you. It seems that there is very little
time to recognize, react, and recover. What are classic mistakes to make
in this scenario?
Would it be useful to practice 'release and land to side of the tow plane
path (and have the tow plane fly a normal departure of course)? Any
other recommended training exercises?
A simple answer. Save yourself first. I have been on both ends, but not at
once. If YOU have a problem don't expect the other guy to fix it. Don't
kill the other guy. If he has a problem, you have no way to fix it. So,
take the best way out for you. Typically this put into go left or go right,
but I would suggest that this makes little sense. It depends entirely on
where you are and what's in the way. Rope failure - not the towplane's
problem. Keep flying the towplane. Towplane failure - not glider's problem
- let towplane fix it by staying out of his way.
I'll second this succinct feedback. Flying's real safe so long as you don't
hit nuthin'...'cept the earth in a controlled manner!
Bob W.
Bob Whelan[_3_]
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