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#51
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On Sat, 23 Jun 2007 15:11:13 -0700, Dan G wrote:
Why do people think instructors are invulnerable? I know instructors who've destroyed gliders. Me too... but even the worst instructor should not be able to spin a *basic trainer* during a winch launch. That was the rationale behind the K21, which was designed to German requirements. Unfortunately all single seat gliders will spin, so training solely on spin-resistant gliders is a receipe for disaster and has no doubt cost lives. Definitely. But I am convinced that the non-spinnable ASK-21 safed more lifes than it cost. Spin-training in a truly spinnable glider is certainly necessary - but a student pilot on his first solo flights needs a glider that is as safe as possible. Bye Andreas |
#52
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![]() "Andreas Maurer" wrote in message ... Spin-training in a truly spinnable glider is certainly necessary - but a student pilot on his first solo flights needs a glider that is as safe as possible. Thank you Andreas! I am a believer in spin training, (and even insisted on it pre-solo) but as a CFIG I always thought it to be of primary importance that all of my students actually survive the training experience. It is possible to design a trainer that will do a very convincing spin without that same trainer being even vaguely spin-prone. Vaughn |
#53
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The ASK-21 has a kit to work the spin training issue.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Image:S..._an_ASK-21.JPG I prefer to train in a Blanik...because it is a more tempermental glider to fly than a K-21 and then I prefer to solo students in the ASK-21 because it is much easier and safer to fly. I have not used the spin kit, however if a club did not have a Blanik type in the fleet (that will drop a wing) then the kit is probably the best all around choice. If an ASK-21 is chosen for a basic all around trainer. It would be intersting to see how the SZD trainer is for wing dropping. |
#54
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On 23 Jun, 23:58, Andreas Maurer wrote:
Spin-training in a truly spinnable glider is certainly necessary - but a student pilot on his first solo flights needs a glider that is as safe as possible. Indeed. But he shouldn't /know/ that. Ian |
#55
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On 23 Jun, 22:34, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On Fri, 22 Jun 2007 13:10:28 -0700, Ian wrote: How many gliders can recover from a spin which starts on the winch launch? I really don't think the Puchacz can be blamed in such cases. Sorry to repeat myself, but how many primary trainers really DO enter an unintentional spin during a winch launch with an instructor on board? Do you mean how many do, or how many can? In my opinion a primary trainer (the one that is used for early solo flights) cannot be spin-resistent enough. I disagree. I think the glider used for training should spin like a top. The learner needs to know that this is something which can happen, can be recovered from, and really shouldn't be allowed to happen near the ground. I like K21's, but their lack of spinnability is a mennace. I jave flown at three different clubs where the message given - effectively - to student pilots is "Today we are going to learn about something called a spin. To do that, we are going to need a different glider from the one you normally fly in, and we are going to have to do very strange things to the controls." Subliminal message: "This won't happen to you unless you want it to." My first spin was in a Bocian - the one I was used to flying in as an ab-initio, at Portmoak. One day my instructor said "You are flying to slowly and over-ruddering your turns at the hill. One day you will scare yourself ****less doing that. Let me demonstrate. I have control..." And he proceeded to scare me ****less. So I learned that spinning was something which could happen to /me/ in gliders /I flew/, doing / perfectly normal things/ - albeit not very competently. I do not this a message of "Let's land and go up in a completely different aircraft" would have made anything like the same impression ... Ian |
#56
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On 23 Jun, 23:11, Dan G wrote:
Tales of "unrecoverable" spins in pooches are probably due to the idea that the low tail can blank the rudder (actually it won't). In reality a pooch will always recover with standard spin recovery technique. If you claim otherwise, please provide a reference to an accident report stating so. I think it's laziness. So few training two-seaters need full spin recovery (especially the bits about "pause" and "until the spinning stops") that people who fly them get used to the "stop pro-spin input and recover" method. Which does not work on a Puchacz or a Bocian - or, as far as I can see, on most things made in Poland. Ian |
#57
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![]() And he proceeded to scare me ****less. So I learned that spinning was something which could happen to /me/ in gliders /I flew/, doing / perfectly normal things/ - albeit not very competently. I do not this a message of "Let's land and go up in a completely different aircraft" would have made anything like the same impression ... "a spin is a normal mode of flight - unsuitable for landing" unknown British aerodynamicist. Pretty much all students in my club http://soargbsc.com get spin training. And not the kind where you yank the nose up 30 degrees and then stomp on the rudder at the top. I slow the glider way down and start a turn (at altitude) and tell the student that we're simulating a runway overshoot while turning from base to final. I add bottom rudder to "help the turn along" and over she goes and the nose never got above the horizon. It's a wake up call for many and the mantra to maintain speed and coordination in the pattern (sorry, circuit :-) ), finally means something. Tony V. |
#58
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On Jun 23, 3:51 am, Paul Hanson
wrote: ... The 50-3 was desinged in 78' I believe, the Perkoz in 91'. ... Come on, it is a completely new aircraft; it just uses some of the same molds and parts as the 50-3. "Completely New Aircraft", but: - designed in 1991 (16 years ago)... - uses some of the same molds... I wish them all the best, but this hardly uses all the knowledge now available to us in 2007... Best Regards, Dave "YO" |
#59
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#60
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