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On 9/20/2019 1:21 AM, waremark wrote:
Many gliders are not approved for deliberate spinning. Do you guys recommend spinning them anyway? My approach to spin avoidance is to monitor the airspeed, and to teach that if the nose ever goes down uncommanded to push the stick forwards. Practice, practce, practice. Leads to (immediate) reaction(s), reaction(s), reaction(s). Good and useful stuff...at many levels IMO. Most of my flight time is in 3 ship types: 1-26; (V-tailed) HP-14; Zuni. The latter two both registered in the (USA's) Experimental category. The only one I spun was the 1-26.Seventeen turns max one direction; 6 turns max the other (after which it always self recovered in [as I recall] a slipping, spiraling, dive...which I never let continue very long). Difficult (in the asleep at the switch sense of things) to induce any sort of departure from controlled flight at my (light) weight, much less a spin...but a great ship in which to practice inadvertent departures...and fun to spin, too. Difficult to imagine a safer/better glider in which to "practice spinning." SN105, and - as always, when dealing with spinning - YMMV! I intentionally never spun the HP because I was unconvinced it had sufficient tail-feather power to break a fully-developed spin, and, no one was paying me to be a test pilot. Nor did my uncommanded-departure-practice suggest 'instant spinning' was in my immediate future. Like the 1-26 it, too, required serious/continuing inattention to induce even a hint of wing drop, and 'instantaneous' forward stick and opposite rudder quickly set things right within 90-degree of heading change (the most I ever let it go). The Zuni (as shown in the ship logs) *was* spun by a(n unpaid, I think, and intentional) test pilot, but never by me beyond the departure-related wing drop/initial rotation because of personal-skill-related concerns associated with overspeeding the diving recovery...buttressed by my personal rationale/concerns about the 'guaranteed repeatability' of fully-developed spin behavior in any bird. That said, it too was docility personified in its 'asleep at the switch' departure-related behaviors (which varied with flap settings). How do I know? Practice, practice, practice... And so...just to be explicit, *I* certainly don't recommend anyone play Joe Test Pilot in the spinning sense - *especially* if the ship's POH explicitly prohibits spins. There's a continuum of ship-behavior (and time) between an uncommanded departure from controlled flight, and a fully-developed spin, and 'practicing sensibly' along that continuum is what I seriously recommend. Readers are free to interpret such free advice as they wish...or misinterpret it, too. Memory, and muscle memory, are your friends when it comes to the unavoidable, ever-thin(ning) margin patterns and the (should be, dry chuckle) dreaded uncommanded departure from controlled flight...which continues to be a common source of pilot fatalities...a good 80+ years after general pilot knollich of spins, their causes, recommended-recovery-methodology therefrom (or not, sigh...) were 'essentially understood.' Practice - and common sense - can be your friends. :-) Bob W. --- This email has been checked for viruses by AVG. https://www.avg.com |
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