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I have about 1800 hours and I would say that 80% of
my flying is from winch launching. My club operates primarily from the winch launch. When our club was a bit busier we completed anything up to 120 winch launches a day. Winch launching, like anything in flying, is completely safe if people are trained properly. I am not going to teach people how to winch launch over the internet but I will say that the number one rule is never to get yourself into a situation from which you can not recover with the energy (whether kinetic or potential) you have. Put simply - never climb steeply from the ground, always maintain an shallow 'initial' climb until you reach a safe height and speed. Winch launching is more Labour intensive than aerotowing as you need a winch-driver, a cable retrieve driver, a competent and experienced person making the decisions and supervising and a wingrunner. However, for a training environment it is certainly much, much cheaper and fosters a 'club' atmosphere as everyone relies on eachother to make things happen. I do not know any statistics of winching vs. aerotowing and frankly I think that statistics are, in general, irrelevant in gliding (just look at the US contest finish stats, I counted 4 in the last 17 years but people think this is an area out of control in the US). But what I do know is that I have never been in a situation where I could not land safely on the airfield in the event of a launch failure and I have never just cleared the boundary hedge by a matter of inches (my gratitude to the tug pilot for not dumping me has been expressed many times in the form of beer) in a Duo full of water on a winch launch either. Having said that,I also feel that aerotows are also safe when given that the equipment is regularly inspected (whether it be the tug or rope) and that the landing options are fully researched/explained prior to take off. I have never not considered an aerotow because I felt it was unsafe. I guess my point is that both types are utterly safe if people are trained and have a plan if things go wrong, again like most situations in flying. |
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