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#11
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![]() wrote in message oups.com... Yanking the stick back to neutral to fix the horizon on the canopy at the top of a cable break recovery qualifies as departing from normal flight conditions. We agree. This is the reason for the training scenario which teaches avoidance of this situation. But I certainly see the problem you face. We train pilots to take note of a stick well aft as one sign of an imminent stall. They might not so quickly recognize that the glider can be stalled with the stick at neutral under these conditions. To stop the nose at the normal gliding attitude after a wire break requires a powerful elevator and full back stick. This is definitely a pilot induced stall resulting from a mis-use of the elevator. However, accident records show that this has occasionally been the cause of a spin accident so the training scenario was added. To repeat what I wrote earlier, this is merely a slight variant of an accelerated stall. If the stick were held neutral, the nose would fall through to a steep nose down attitude. This is not the best technique but it wouldn't result in a deep stall. Bill Daniels |
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