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#1
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![]() "K.P. Termaat" wrote in message ... This happened trying to land back at the field after a cable break. Very sad indeed. www.fsv-unterjesingen.de/DnLoads/Seilriss.avi Karel, NL Note that the departure occurred with the nose well below the horizon. It appeared that the glider was stalled and sinking toward the ground for most of the turn before the departure. Perhaps the pilot ignored airspeed pre-stall warnings because the perceived priority was to get lined up with the runway. Question, was this low altitude turn-back necessary because there not enough landable area into the wind? One wonders if the maneuver would have been successful if the glider had been accurately flown. Bill Daniels |
#2
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My condolences to the family and friends. Very sad.
I write an instructor's column for our club's newsletter, and this month's subject is about flying in windy conditions. The wind sock in the video appears to indicate the windspeed was in excess of 15knots (assuming a standard windsock). Before every flight, but especially in windy conditions, an emergency plan needs to be considered! If you have a large crosswind, a turn in the wrong direction after a rope break may blow you helplessly too far away from the runway. If you have a strong headwind on takeoff, a turn back to the runway may not even be an option! The resulting tailwind landing may cause you to completely overfly the runway, or may cause you to lose control during the landing rollout. Every situation is different, but you need to make this decision before you close the canopy, not at 300 feet. Finally, if you ever find yourself in a situation where you are low-and-slow, "fly the glider!" An off-field landing under control is always better than an on-field landing out of control. Aim for something soft and cheap. Ignore your ego, kiss the glider good-bye, and save your butt! Chris Fleming "Bill Daniels" wrote in message ... Note that the departure occurred with the nose well below the horizon. It appeared that the glider was stalled and sinking toward the ground for most of the turn before the departure. Perhaps the pilot ignored airspeed pre-stall warnings because the perceived priority was to get lined up with the runway. Question, was this low altitude turn-back necessary because there not enough landable area into the wind? One wonders if the maneuver would have been successful if the glider had been accurately flown. Bill Daniels |
#3
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From what I heard on the German forum, there was no fatality involved in
this accident. -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "C.Fleming" a écrit dans le message de ... My condolences to the family and friends. Very sad. I write an instructor's column for our club's newsletter, and this month's subject is about flying in windy conditions. The wind sock in the video appears to indicate the windspeed was in excess of 15knots (assuming a standard windsock). Before every flight, but especially in windy conditions, an emergency plan needs to be considered! If you have a large crosswind, a turn in the wrong direction after a rope break may blow you helplessly too far away from the runway. If you have a strong headwind on takeoff, a turn back to the runway may not even be an option! The resulting tailwind landing may cause you to completely overfly the runway, or may cause you to lose control during the landing rollout. Every situation is different, but you need to make this decision before you close the canopy, not at 300 feet. Finally, if you ever find yourself in a situation where you are low-and-slow, "fly the glider!" An off-field landing under control is always better than an on-field landing out of control. Aim for something soft and cheap. Ignore your ego, kiss the glider good-bye, and save your butt! Chris Fleming "Bill Daniels" wrote in message ... Note that the departure occurred with the nose well below the horizon. It appeared that the glider was stalled and sinking toward the ground for most of the turn before the departure. Perhaps the pilot ignored airspeed pre-stall warnings because the perceived priority was to get lined up with the runway. Question, was this low altitude turn-back necessary because there not enough landable area into the wind? One wonders if the maneuver would have been successful if the glider had been accurately flown. Bill Daniels |
#4
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That's great news!
"Bert Willing" wrote in message ... From what I heard on the German forum, there was no fatality involved in this accident. -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "C.Fleming" a écrit dans le message de ... My condolences to the family and friends. Very sad. Chris Fleming |
#5
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Bert Willing wrote:
From what I heard on the German forum, there was no fatality involved in this accident. Good to hear he's OK. I've only been able to play the audio of this clip and it didn't sound good. Anyone else w/similar problems? I'm loading a Quicktime update to see if that helps. Newest winblows media playa gags on it totally. Shawn |
#6
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Shawn Curry wrote:
Good to hear he's OK. I've only been able to play the audio of this clip and it didn't sound good. Actually, it sounds very good: "Für den Piloten endete dieser Crash mit ein paar Schnittwunden." Stefan |
#7
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Stefan wrote:
Shawn Curry wrote: Good to hear he's OK. I've only been able to play the audio of this clip and it didn't sound good. Actually, it sounds very good: "Für den Piloten endete dieser Crash mit ein paar Schnittwunden." Stefan OooKaaay. Sorry not much help. Bit of French maybe but German? Nope. The concerned sounding voice of a woman (?) and lots of crunching sounds is all I could decipher. That and the word "crash" Shawn |
#8
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Shawn Curry wrote:
Actually, it sounds very good: "Für den Piloten endete dieser Crash mit ein paar Schnittwunden." OooKaaay. Sorry not much help. Bit of French maybe but German? Nope. The concerned sounding voice of a woman (?) and lots of crunching sounds is all I could decipher. That and the word "crash" Ok. The woman basically says. "Oh ****! Let's go there!" The commentator says that it was a sunday routine flight, then the cable broke, and then the abovementioned sentence which basically means: "The pilot suffered a couple of cuts." Stefan |
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