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I don't think the positition of the horizon should
make any difference. In mountains it's irrelevant and different tugs will climb at different rates - a powerful tug will be more pitched up and adopt a higher position relative to the horizon than a low power one (relative to the thrust line, the prop-wash and the best position of the glider just above the prop-wash). One of the advantages of being as low as possible is not just the extra time that it takes to get to 'upset' position (which is small) but the fact that you are less likely to lose sight of the tug in the first place. Once you can't see the tug, things can go wrong very quickly. I've flown in Australia with their low tow and whilst I'm sure each method has its merits, I am personally much more comfortable with the UK position, don't like having to transition through the propwash at low level and find that teaching a 'correct' position that looks almost identical to the position on the ground before All Out is easier too. Rob At 16:48 09 January 2004, Eric Greenwell wrote: Andy Durbin wrote: As a US instructor I have flown with many pilots that received their initial training from other instructors. I have often been surprised at the tow position taken by such pilots. I usually urge them to keep lowering the tow position until they feel the wake, then to move just high enough that the wake is not a factor. That tow position may be 10 or 15 ft lower than that initially used. Where is the towplane, relative to the horizon? A pilot flying a high high tow has less time to react to a potential upset than one flying the UK recommended low high tow. The fact that US pilots seem to be trained to use high high tow may explain why tug upsets continue to happen even when a nose or forward hook is used. 10 or 15 feet doesn't sound like it would give much extra time, not like the low tow position Australia uses. -- ----- change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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