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This is , after all, forum for glider stories
As I have not yet seen a glider story in this thread, here are annecdotes from a WGC. WGC Vrsac 1972. After the first day, the one decent soaring day, the airmass turned humid and cloud flying was the only way to make progress; a few pilots had oxygen and everyone had at least a T and S; I was really glad I had borrowed an AH since many hours were spent in cloud. Base was rarely above 2500 ft. AHungarian pilot wsa killed after losing control in a Cb; there was collision and lots of hail damge, holes sometimes as big as your fist. Nick Goodhart went to 30k ft in his Kestrel jut after the start, and flew the course and won the day in a straight glide; likewise on the penultimate day, which most people spent between 1000 and 3000 ft AGL, Witanen waited til a Cb brewed up near the start , long after everyone else had left, climbed high enough to complete the 200km course in one glide, the only one to finish. The last day was perhaps the stormiest, cloudb base 2000ft andv virually no lift below it. It was dark under the extensive canopy of Cb blowoff. Many pilots simply abandoned the task (a 200 km Triangle) After the start I ws able to climb to 12 k ft and head out on a compass course in cloud. I asked my crew chief to do DR based on zero wind and a 60 kt cruise; after some time I got a glimpse of the ground down a hole and saw a railway line which was right on the c course line; then I was in cloud again for 15mins and emerged from the side of a Cu at 3000ft 10km from TP 1, an airfield; there were a lot of gliders down there already, and after turning the mark and looking along the second leg into into a black wall illuminated with lightning flashes, I decided this was enough , threw awqy 2000 ft and landed, thankfull to be alive and undamaged after ten testing days. Several others followed me ! George MOffat was there too, we hugged ech other to celebrate survival. John Firth, an old, no longer bold pilot. At 23:32 09 February 2015, Bill D wrote: On Monday, February 9, 2015 at 3:53:17 PM UTC-7, Bob T wrote: On Monday, February 9, 2015 at 11:42:24 AM UTC-7, Bill D wrote: On Monday, February 9, 2015 at 10:21:03 AM UTC-7, JJ Sinclair wrote: With storms pounding both coasts, I thought it would be fun to tell o= ut best (worst) storm story. I'll kick it off with my favorite. 1950's, ol= d JJ was a boom operator on a tanker crew and we were on a refueling missio= n over Colorado. There was a big thunderstorm between us and the rendezvous= point. The newly formed USAF was not to be stopped by any weather, latter = on LeMay decreed that "No peacetime mission required penetrating a thunders= torm", but in 1953 we charged right on in! The cloud turned a pale green, e= xcept when lightning struck, then everything turned red! Vertical gusts wer= e unreal, everyone tightened up their straps and hung on. As the props de-i= ced, some of it would hit the fuselage and it was like being inside a drum = with someone beating on it with a bat! After about 5 minutes of this, the A= C screamed; Navigator, should we keep going or turn around? In a calm voice= , the Navigator replied, I don't know, sir, the hail just knocked out my ra= dar! I believe the Navigator was the only one on the crew that wasn't scar= ed ****less!=20 We finally flew out the other side and then made a precautionary land= ing at Denver. I can still see the big hole in the ray dome and a good 10 i= nches of ice built up on the little stub antennas. OK, Who's next? JJ =20 Back in the early 1960's I was working with Paul MacCready's company Me= teorology Research. Inc on a cloud seeding project near Flagstaff, AZ. Thi= s involved flying light airplanes such as C-180's and Twin Commanders into = CB's to dump silver iodide and dry ice pellets and then to collect things l= ike cloud particles and measure electric fields. =20 One of the big concerns was that our cloud seeding might inadvertently = generate a big hailstorm doing immense damage to the surrounding area. Pau= l was particularly concerned about that. =20 Being a young idiot among a few similar inclined young geeks, we hit up= on a practical joke. We had a large freezer where we kept hailstones found= after storms. We also had some chemically pure H2O. The idea was to supe= r-cool the H2O and then repeatedly dip the end of a string into it forming = an ice-ball much as one makes a candle. Once the ice-ball reached a suffic= iently terrifying size - about 8" dia. - we used the shop band saw to cut i= t in half revealing very hail-stone like layers. We then showed this to Pa= ul and his fellow scientists at the 'appropriate' time. When we saw the re= action was getting totally out of hand, we were forced to reveal our subter= fuge. I don't think some ever forgave us. =20 I was a grad student at NAU in Flagstaff at the time. We never saw any h= uge hail, but one day after the seeding we did get hail piled 6" - 8" deep= all around the place. If I remember it was Vince Schaefer who had a big h= and in the experiments. Schaefer was involved. IIRC he was the first to demonstrate that cloud see= ding might be possible. |
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