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Actually, John, I've done better than that. I have several cable tension
traces from a Skylaunch made with a tensiometer load cell at the glider. The data shows horrific tension surges as the transmission shifts up and down during the launch. These surges were violent enough to break weak links and the cable. Surges such as these would be unacceptable in a $200 junkyard winch. Given the price of the Skylaunch, we should expect MUCH better. I stand by exactly what I wrote. It's extremely foolish to allow a winch transmission to shift - particularly when it's easy to prevent it. Just because big American V8's and automatic transmissions are dirt cheap is no reason to use them without the needed modifications. BTW, I do like the Skylaunch paint job. Bill Daniels "John Galloway" wrote in message ... Bill, If you were to stand beside a Skylaunch winch (which has a big American petrol/LPG V8 and a fully functioning 3 speed auto box) you would notice that the box is in 3rd gear by the time that the glider is leaving the ground and the rest of the launch is normally carried out in 3rd gear. John Galloway At 17:36 30 March 2007, Bill Daniels wrote: 'toad' wrote in message groups.com... Ok, thanks. That's the physics as I understood it. With a modern winch, I won't have to worry about reverse control. But with an old technology ground launch, I do. Todd Actually, it's neither difficult nor expensive to eliminate the worst problems with an automatic transmission. Replacing the stock valve body in the transmission with a 'manual valve body' allows the winch driver to lock out 1st and 2nd gears. (Google 'manual valve body'). These gadgets replace the stock 'PRND2L' shift pattern with 'RN321' which can be further restricted to 'N3' with a simple shift gate. This results in the transmission starting in 3rd and remaining there throughout the launch. For a bit more money and little more effort, the stock 1800 RPM stall torque converter can be replaced with a 'high stall' TC that lets the transmission slip up to say 2800 RPM during power up for a softer but still energetic launch. It also prevents a heavy glider in strong wind conditions from bogging down the winch engine. Don't do this without adding an effective transmission cooler. It won't be perfect, but it's FAR better than the stock setup. Bill Daniels |
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