View Single Post
  #12  
Old June 24th 18, 10:19 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Andreas Maurer
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 345
Default When gliders fail in flight, but pilots manage to land

On Sat, 23 Jun 2018 14:56:05 -0700 (PDT), son_of_flubber
wrote:

Bruno Vassel recalls how the control stick broke off in a glider pilot's hand and how that pilot landed the aircraft safely (using rudder to turn and trim to control speed).
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kF0tTzvU8IM&t=411s

Another favorite scenario is 'one spoiler stuck open'... the pilot opened the other spoiler to match and landed promptly.

Spoilers frozen shut... slip to land.

What else breaks and what if anything could be done about it?



1. L'Hotellier links.

Had one serious incident yesterday:
ASW-20, l'Hotellier of the (inner) wing flap unlocked, causing the
wing flap to go slightly negative after two minutes of aerotow.
According to the pilot he had done a full control check after
assembling the 20.
He needed nearly full aileron to keep the glider level and land it
successfully.


The (inexperienced) pilot made the follwing mistakes:

- Didn't lock the l'Hotellier connection properly (obviously)

- Made the approach and landing with flaps 4 (positive). With the
negative inner flap one one wing this resultetd in a serious
asymmetric lift configuration.

- Pilot approached faster than usual (115 kp/h, 60 kts) with flaps 4.
Aerodynamical forces at this speed pushed the unconnected flap even
further into "negative", increasing the asymmetric lift.


The pilot obvously didn't know how his wing flaps worked - setting
them to 2 or 1 (negative) would have solved the asymmetry and only
needed an additional 7 kts higher approach speed.


2. ASW-24
Elevator trim bowden broke while thermalling and trim was set
significantly tail-heavy. Experienced pilot landed safely, but had to
push the stick forward all the time.


Cheers
Andreas