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#61
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#62
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On 24 Jun, 16:39, Tony Verhulst wrote:
Pretty much all students in my clubhttp://soargbsc.comget spin training. And not the kind where you yank the nose up 30 degrees and then stomp on the rudder at the top. One CFI (that's "Chief" over here, USAnians) I knew was very fond of spinning - in a Bocian - from perfectly coordinated thermalling turns. More than one experienced pilot on a site check came down having learned something very useful. Ian |
#63
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On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 07:55:39 -0700, Ian
wrote: Do you mean how many do, or how many can? How many *do*. Pretty easy to stall any glider during a winch launch if you intentionally pull back fully. 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. .... and if it happens...? A benign glider significantly increases the chance of survival, doesn't it? Bye Andreas |
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On 25 Jun, 12:51, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 07:55:39 -0700, Ian wrote: 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. ... and if it happens...? A benign glider significantly increases the chance of survival, doesn't it? On the same principal training gliders could be fitted with elevator backstops so that pupils could pull back as hard as they liked on the winch with no danger of stalling. Ian |
#65
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![]() "Ian" wrote in message oups.com... On 25 Jun, 12:51, Andreas Maurer wrote: On Sun, 24 Jun 2007 07:55:39 -0700, Ian wrote: 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. ... and if it happens...? A benign glider significantly increases the chance of survival, doesn't it? On the same principal training gliders could be fitted with elevator backstops so that pupils could pull back as hard as they liked on the winch with no danger of stalling. Ian How about watching the airspeed? If you maintain a margin over the loaded stall speed, there no chance of stalling. As for the ASK-21, you don't gain anything from pulling back anyway. The highest winch launches are when the glider is flown at the best L/D angle of attack - that's about neutral elevator.. Bill Daniels |
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On Jun 25, 7:21 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote:
How about watching the airspeed? If you maintain a margin over the loaded stall speed, there no chance of stalling. As for the ASK-21, you don't gain anything from pulling back anyway. The highest winch launches are when the glider is flown at the best L/D angle of attack - that's about neutral elevator.. Bill - Ian was being sarcastic... Dan |
#67
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On 25 Jun, 19:21, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote:
"Ian" wrote in message On the same principal training gliders could be fitted with elevator backstops so that pupils could pull back as hard as they liked on the winch with no danger of stalling. How about watching the airspeed? If you maintain a margin over the loaded stall speed, there no chance of stalling. That wasn't quite my point ... However, drawing from what you say, we all agree, don't we, that training and early solo gliders have to be suitable for pilots who can't fly very well? The argument is therefore whether a good glider at this stage is one which is easy or difficult to fly. My personal belief is that it shouldn't be too easy. It's all very well having a trainer which won't spin - and it would be easy enough to make one which was almost impossible to stall - but these early stages are surely the time when the foundations should be laid for later. That's why the BGA has every ab initio in the UK religiously checking the flaps on a K13 every time they launch. I don't think a trainer has to be, or should be, vicious. It doesn't have to flick into a spin, or invert on recovery, but I do think it should spin easily and require a full recovery procedure. As a parallel, I do a fair bit of sailing. When people ask me how to learn, I always tell them to start, even if just for a few times, in a dinghy rather than a yacht. Dinghy sailing teaches fast responses and attentiveness: it's easy to slow down things for a keel boat but much harder to go the other way. I still make a point of hiring a Wayfarer at a local sailing centre a couple of times a year, preferably on a good blowy day, to remind myself what it's like and sharpen my responses. Ian |
#68
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![]() "Dan G" wrote in message oups.com... On Jun 25, 7:21 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: How about watching the airspeed? If you maintain a margin over the loaded stall speed, there no chance of stalling. As for the ASK-21, you don't gain anything from pulling back anyway. The highest winch launches are when the glider is flown at the best L/D angle of attack - that's about neutral elevator.. Bill - Ian was being sarcastic... Dan OK, I accept the sarcasm and appologise for being sharp. However, in the US there are many glider pilots who have never flown a winch launch and instinctively fear nose high attitudes. Even joking about full up elevator and stalls on the wire is terrifying to them. I felt I had to make it clear that you should not be anywhere near the stalling AOA. Adding to my concern is that the ubiquitous US Schweizer 2-33 does use full up elevator on a winch launch due to the unfortunate position of the release hook. A pilot transitioning to even a docile a trainer like a ASK-21 could be in trouble if he misunderstands the difference. It also concerns me that pilots with much experience on aero tow transitioning to winch launch may have never considered the need to monitor airspeed on a launch since the tug pilot has always done that for them. Bill Daniels |
#69
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Bill Daniels wrote:
Adding to my concern is that the ubiquitous US Schweizer 2-33 does use full up elevator on a winch launch due to the unfortunate position of the release hook. A pilot transitioning to even a docile a trainer like a ASK-21 could be in trouble if he misunderstands the difference. True CG hooks were an option for 2-33s, and could probably still be retrofitted if desired. A second Schweizer hook is mounted ahead of the main wheel, to the left of the skid. From recent experience, the handling during launch is similar to a K-13... Marc |
#70
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Bill Daniels schrieb:
Adding to my concern is that the ubiquitous US Schweizer 2-33 does use full Ubiquitous? I've never seen one in my life. Ok, I'm living in Europe. up elevator on a winch launch due to the unfortunate position of the release hook. A pilot transitioning to even a docile a trainer like a ASK-21 could be in trouble if he misunderstands the difference. That's what instructors are for. It also concerns me that pilots with much experience on aero tow transitioning to winch launch may have never considered the need to monitor airspeed on a launch since the tug pilot has always done that for them. That's what instructors are for. |
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