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At 23:36 28 May 2020, Jonathan St. Cloud
Any real world data? How many of you have broken a glider in a plowed field? They can be very inviting and many are very good landing sites, but know your area. I have both seen and worked in plowed fields that I would not attempt to land in. And I have seen some beautiful fields. Jon, that is exactly the point - Real World - The real world is very different in different places. We had a ton of broken gliders from landing in plowed fields during the 1985 WGC in Italy. Over there the soil is clay, and that summer was dry. The clay was so compacted that the farmers used bulldozers to pull the plows because the tractors weren't strong enough. The furrows were sometimes a foot to 1.5 feet deep, and the clods that were tilled up were large and like boulders. During practice, I landed in one that had only 6" furrows, but was hard as brick. The jarring caused the gear handle on my Discus-b to come out of the down detent, and the gear collapsed, so I wound up sliding on my belly for a short ways. Klaus Holighaus spent most of the night fixing the small belly hole himself, and I flew the rest of the contest with a ~1ft green spot on the belly. Dick Brandt made me a hard rubber wedge to place in the gear handle track after the gear was lowered in order to keep the gear handle from popping out again. Our coach, Walter Neubert, had loaned his brand new ASW-20 to Henri Stouffs of Belgium. Hernri absolutely totaled it out landing in a plowed field with deeper furrows and bigger clods. The damage list went on and on. The bottom line is that not all plowed fields are alike or landable. It all depends on the the local area, the kind of soil, the moisture content, the farming methods, the wx, etc. To try and give someone universal advice that all plowed fields are good off field landing options is just being way too short sighted for me. You have to know the local agriculture at the time of year that you are flying, and then qualify the off field landing options. RO |
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