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#11
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On Mon, 06 Sep 2010 21:09:55 -0700, GARY BOGGS wrote:
How could you fly a glider without a rudder and not be able to tell something is very wrong???? I'd rephrase that as "How could you fly a Puchacz without a rudder and not notice?" because its rudder is enormous and has considerably higher pedal pressures than any other glider I've flown. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#12
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On Sep 7, 6:37*pm, danlj wrote:
On Sep 7, 7:46*am, JC wrote: On Sep 7, 1:09*am, GARY BOGGS wrote: How could you fly a glider without a rudder and not be able to tell something is very wrong????...clip... Boggs I agree with Gary.. How could the pilot not notice the rudder is gone? Our club DG200 had the rudder pop out on a winch launch and it fell back and hung from the rudder cables. The pilot felt both pedals go forward and get stuck. He completed the launch and from the ground he was told that his rudder came off so he made gentle turns and landed without trouble....clip... We don't recognize when something has gone wrong with the rudder because *a - we normally don't practice not having a rudder *b - really don't understand, in the seat of our pants, what it feels like not to have one So -- all we know at first is that *something is wrong*. (Note that Juan Carlos points out that the pilot was TOLD his rudder was off.) What that *something* is, ain't all that obvious. This is true for MOST airplane malfunctions, not just rudder malfunctions. And the emotional upset ("alarm") that we feel during the event hinders rational analysis. I speak as an expert, having once many years ago flown a Blanik L-13 with the rudder cables reversed. All I could tell was the rudder *wasn't working*. So I put my feet on the floor. Which worked fine until they quietly snuck back onto the pedals during the turn from base to final. My personal mantra, "Speed is my friend" saved the day. (Then, after the repair, one of us five guys who'd all missed the rudder reversal, found the safety missing from the castellated nut underneath the elevator bell crank and saved someone's life. An airplane flies awkwardly but safely without a good rudder, but the pilot dies without an elevator.) DJ After finding the rudder missing are new seat cushions also on order? |
#13
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On Sep 6, 6:50*pm, CindyB wrote:
Folks: You will not yet find this on any accident/incident reports. There were no fatalities. *A pilot called me to relay this story. The SZD-50-3 Puchacsz was bought used from Europe and imported to the US with ~1900 hours. The glider was given a US airworthiness inspection, and licensed by an FAA inspector last week Thursday or so. *It went into legal service before the weekend. On Saturday, following only a few flights, the pilot felt some restriction in rudder movement, and asked the front seat passenger to adjust the length of rudder stirrups for more freedom of movement. The passenger complied, and free movement was "restored." The flight continued in nice lift, and some mild maneuvers for perhaps twenty five more minutes prior to landing. As the glider came to a halt, the ground personnel roared up to the cockpit and informed the pilot that there was no rudder on the machine. All parties were amazed. A search by air for the missing rudder were fruitless. I have not seen the Puchacsz. I do not have pictures or links to any photos. I cannot comment on the mode of departure. I do not know if the cables or swedges and thimbles are on the machine, nor if the vertical hinges are in place on the rear face of the vertical fin. I do know there was a mandatory service item to replace the rudder stop elastic nut on the bottom bolt with a castelated nut and safety key. *I cannot say if this was done, found, gone or otherwise on the machine in question. I do know that you should look at the attachments of controls and moving parts fully and carefully on each pre-flight inspection. *Things change and move over time. The pilot in this case asked me to put the information out to the soaring community, PRIOR to any formal incident investigation, to prevent any possible similar occurrence. Cindy Brickner Southern Californiawww.caracole-soaring.com Just for your information, before you so blatantly post such rude and one sided statements, you should know that this pilot in particular (whose identity is no secret to me) has a track record of severe damage and abuse to not only this new ship that came from Europe, but also to many other ships owned by the club as well. He is subject to suspension from the club. As a primary witness of that day, I saw that he repeatedly and severely over-rotated the glider during take-off, and was sure to smash the tail to the asphalt concrete after every landing. He was instructed numerous times to fix this behavior. And before hand there was even a 2 HOUR training session, which should have clearly let any pilot there know how you should and should not handle this new glider. He is known in our club for his poor glider handling skills, prior damage to our Grob-103 (twice), severe tail damage to our Junior, and at this point his carelessness that has led to his denial of being such an inadequate pilot in the first place. He is aspiring to become a glider instructor and to this I must say, GOOD LUCK! All the Puchacz AD's were completed by authorized shops in Europe. There is an FAA investigation in process. We are following all and any rules, so any statement made to the contrary, is extremely incorrect. But what I have to say in accordance to this post, is that it was immature and premature to have posted this at all. Ed S. is no saint in the soaring community and if that is your perception on the man after his phone call to "alert" the community and "save the Puchacz's and their users", I can honestly say that you are all VERY mistaken. Best Regards, Blue Skies and Happy Soaring to all ![]() |
#14
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FWIW, I don't see anything rude or one-sided in the text you quoted.
No opinions or conclusions, just a "heads up". Maybe the pilot is as bad as you say. Maybe not. I see this a stark reminder to complete a good pre-flight just in case damage happened on the previous flight. |
#15
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I have quite a few hours in the back seat of a Puchacz, and like some
other posters suspect that the story as related to Cindy is somewhat suspect. For example: On Saturday, following only a few flights, the pilot felt some restriction in rudder movement, and asked the front seat passenger to adjust the length of rudder stirrups for more freedom of movement. The passenger complied, and free movement was "restored." Altering the front pedals merely lengthens or shortens the cable connecting front and rear pedals - the cable which actuates the rudder runs from the rear pedals to the rudder fittings. The only restriction this change could affect would be that of the front pilot's feet on the pedals. Also the Puchacz is not strongly directionally stable even with the rudder attached. With it missing, I'm sure the glider would have been wallowing around the sky and clearly have felt utterly wrong, even when attempting to fly straight. If: The flight continued in nice lift, and some mild maneuvers for perhaps twenty five more minutes prior to landing. without a rudder, the pilot must have been flying in boxing gloves not to notice something was very wrong. I'm not saying the rudder didn't fall off, but I don't find the "decorative" parts of the story convincing. |
#16
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Just for your information, before you so blatantly post such rude and
one sided statements, you should know that this pilot in particular (whose identity is no secret to me) has a track record of severe damage and abuse to not only this new ship that came from Europe, but also to many other ships owned by the club as well. He is subject to suspension from the club. As a primary witness of that day, I saw that he repeatedly and severely over-rotated the glider during take-off, and was sure to smash the tail to the asphalt concrete after every landing. He was instructed numerous times to fix this behavior. And before hand there was even a 2 HOUR training session, which should have clearly let any pilot there know how you should and should not handle this new glider. He is known in our club for his poor glider handling skills, prior damage to our Grob-103 (twice), severe tail damage to our Junior, and at this point his carelessness that has led to his denial of being such an inadequate pilot in the first place. He is aspiring to become a glider instructor and to this I must say, GOOD LUCK! All the Puchacz AD's were completed by authorized shops in Europe. There is an FAA investigation in process. We are following all and any rules, so any statement made to the contrary, is extremely incorrect. But what I have to say in accordance to this post, is that it was immature and premature to have posted this at all. Ed S. is no saint in the soaring community and if that is your perception on the man after his phone call to "alert" the community and "save the Puchacz's and their users", I can honestly say that you are all VERY mistaken. Best Regards, Blue Skies and Happy Soaring to all ![]() - Show quoted text - I've read many posts from Cindy. Not one of them were ever "blatantly rude or one-sided". Dude, take a deep breath and check your attitude a little. That was way off base. |
#17
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On 9/8/2010 12:19 AM, F-U-Ed. wrote:
On Sep 6, 6:50 pm, wrote: Folks: Snip... You will not yet find this on any accident/incident reports. Cindy Brickner Southern Californiawww.caracole-soaring.com Just for your information, before you so blatantly post such rude and one sided statements, you should know [The alleged pilot] is no saint in the soaring community and if that is your perception on the man after his phone call to "alert" the community and "save the Puchacz's and their users", I can honestly say that you are all VERY mistaken. Best Regards, Blue Skies and Happy Soaring to all ![]() Hmmm...of the two posts, the first one seems distinctly less overwrought than the second one...but there IS a factual error in the first one. You CAN find a listing of the incident in the preliminary FAA daily accident/incident data at... http://www.faa.gov/data_research/acc...a/A_0907_N.txt Within a few weeks it can be expected to show up as an NTSB Preliminary Report, too. I for one would much prefer to be alerted to incidents as these than to remain in wondering ignorance. And while I'd also like to know more about the individual pilots involved (because it may well influence my personal conclusions about any incident...and personal conclusions about others' misfortunes are always my own goal when it comes to my own future flight safety), I recognize that generally only thos who know/knew the pilot(s) involved are privy to such intensely personal information. Such is the way of the world and human nature... Regards, Bob W. P.S. For those paying attention to publicly available information, 2010 has become a genuinely statistically bad year for U.S. soaring, both in quantity and deaths. Please - let's try and avoid all avoidable incidents for at *least* the rest of the calendar year! |
#18
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On Sep 7, 5:21*am, JJ Sinclair wrote:
On Sep 6, 9:09*pm, GARY BOGGS wrote: How could you fly a glider without a rudder and not be able to tell something is very wrong???? Was the yaw string missing too? Boggs Some students wouldn't know if the rudder fell off, because they never use it anyway! It (the rudder) must weigh a good 20 pounds or so and that much weight lost way back there would surely shift the CG out of the forward limit. OK as long as speed is sufficient to keep elevator authority. No Guy, my Puchacz went to Brazil and all the ad's were complied with! Cheers, JJ rudder? what's that? Brad "Cessna driver" |
#19
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rudder? what's that?
Brad "Cessna driver" As someone just pointed out to me, it's the thing that stops spins. |
#20
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On Sep 8, 12:11*pm, Brad wrote:
On Sep 7, 5:21*am, JJ Sinclair wrote: On Sep 6, 9:09*pm, GARY BOGGS wrote: How could you fly a glider without a rudder and not be able to tell something is very wrong???? Was the yaw string missing too? Boggs Some students wouldn't know if the rudder fell off, because they never use it anyway! It (the rudder) must weigh a good 20 pounds or so and that much weight lost way back there would surely shift the CG out of the forward limit. OK as long as speed is sufficient to keep elevator authority. No Guy, my Puchacz went to Brazil and all the ad's were complied with! Cheers, JJ rudder? what's that? Brad "Cessna driver" It's the thing behind you that wags when you step on the nose-wheel pedals. Mike |
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