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#31
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I am intrigued by the concept that dying is fun, do
you know something that I do not? Please share if you do. At 14:07 17 January 2005, Stefan wrote: Ian Strachan wrote: But why try it in the first place? Well, how about ... curiosity? After all, gliding is about fun and not rationalism. Stefan |
#32
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Don Johnstone wrote:
I am intrigued by the concept that dying is fun, do you know something that I do not? Obviously yes. I know how to recover from a spin. Please share if you do. No, I won't. But I advise you to meet a good instructor immediately. Stefan |
#33
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At 13:00 18 January 2005, Don Johnstone wrote:
At 11:00 18 January 2005, Ian Johnston wrote: On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 19:41:29 UTC, Don Johnstone wrote: : Spot on Ian. The rules for the Air Cadets in the UK, : RAF rules, prohibit intentional spinning below 2500ft : in a glider. If you are still spinning you abandon : at this height How many gliders will not recover from a spin with 2,500' to spare? Nobody living can answer that question What are the injury rates for parachute jumps from gliders? How many people survive spinning in? Don't know, but it is a measurable percentage. Probably about 5%, maybe less. |
#34
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Don Johnstone writes
: Spot on Ian. The rules for the Air Cadets in the UK, RAF rules, prohibit intentional spinning below 2500ft in a glider. If you are still spinning you abandon at this height How many gliders will not recover from a spin with 2,500' to spare? Nobody living can answer that question But by far the greater weight of living people can demonstrate that the glider will recover from a spin if you have 2500' to spare. In my case, for example, all of my own spin training and personal practice has been done from a height somewhat less than this. What are the injury rates for parachute jumps from gliders? How many people survive spinning in? How many recorded instances are there of gliders spinning in from 2500' ? In how many of those cases was there absolutely no suggestion that something else had put the glider into an untenable position and so prevented recovery? Although I fully appreciate ill-founded wisdom of initiating a low spin even for training purposes, surely nobody would argue that demonstration of spinning and tuition and practice in recovering from such an event isn't a vital part of ab-inito training? Yet my own ab-inito training was from a winch site across a British winter, so the vast majority of my training flights never exceeded 2000' agl, and they only made that on an especially good day. All of my spin practice occurred between 1000' and 1600'. And still does, for the most part. I just can't imagine abandoning a glider at 2500' because of a spin, at least not without other contributing factors. Perhaps if I'd initiated the spin at such a height that I'd had a few rotations of being unable to recover by that stage and I was convinced that further attempts to recover would be futile? But I'd be jumping on the assumption that the glider was broke, not because it was spinning. -- Bill Gribble /---------------------------------------\ | http://www.ingenuitytest.co.uk | | http://www.cotswoldgliding.co.uk | | http://www.scapegoatsanon.demon.co.uk | \---------------------------------------/ |
#35
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On 18 Jan 2005 10:16:04 GMT, "Ian Johnston"
wrote: : Until now I have not even seen a Puchacz in real life - but the sheer : number of spin accidents with experienced pilots suggests that : something is wrong, don't you agree? Not really. Spinnable gliders are going to be involved in more spinning accidents than non-spinnable gliders. You are correct, Ian - but here in Germany still a lot of Ka-7 and ASK-13 are in use which do spin well and are commonly used for spin training (not to mention other two-seaters that spin like the DG-500). Yet I have not heard of a spin accident in one of them so far, although their number far exceeds the number of Puchacz. Bye Andreas |
#36
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I too know how to recover from a spin, and I don't
need to find an instructor, I were one. The points Ian was making was why try something that had no useful purpose in teaching a speedy recovery from a spin. His other point was that perhaps test flying would be best left to test pilots who have been trained for that task and not carried out by people who are self taught and do not have the necessary skills and expertise. You do not know that you have exceeded the limits of your ability until you have and when it happens it is nice to have someone with you who has not. Thats what training is all about, finding your own limits. Flying is meant to be fun and it will be if you leave test flying to those who know what they are doing. At 13:00 18 January 2005, Stefan wrote: Don Johnstone wrote: I am intrigued by the concept that dying is fun, do you know something that I do not? Obviously yes. I know how to recover from a spin. Please share if you do. No, I won't. But I advise you to meet a good instructor immediately. Stefan |
#37
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Don Johnstone wrote:
I too know how to recover from a spin, and I don't need to find an instructor, I were one. Then I'm even more puzzled that you consider exploring spins in a certified glider, which's spin recovery procedures are described in detail in the POH, as test piloting. I always thought test piloting was about exploring things which are not described in the POH. But then, I'm not an instructor. The points Ian was making was why try something that had no useful purpose I surely hope you don't ever make love to your wife whithout producing children, because this would not have any useful purpose. Stefan |
#38
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At 11:00 18 January 2005, Ian Johnston wrote:
On Fri, 14 Jan 2005 19:41:29 UTC, Don Johnstone wrote: : Spot on Ian. The rules for the Air Cadets in the UK, : RAF rules, prohibit intentional spinning below 2500ft : in a glider. If you are still spinning you abandon : at this height How many gliders will not recover from a spin with 2,500' to spare? What are the injury rates for parachute jumps from gliders? Ian -- I'm guessing that this 2500ft rule has nothing to do with glider spin recovery and altitude loss. It seems more logical that it is the altitude needed to deploy canopy, get out, have the chute open and slow down the not yet dead weight of the pilot. The US rule is that the spin must be stopped above 1500ft. |
#39
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Interesting........how is the information in the POH
obtained, yes the answer is test flying. But what is tested? There are requirements laid down that gliders must conform to in spin recovery. There are two ways of approaching testing. 1. Test to see if the glider complies with the requirements during the test flights. If it does it has passed. 2. Fly in all possible configuarations and allowable C of G positions and see how the glider behaves. Fly in configurations which are most unlikely to be met in normal service and with the C of G right on the theoretical limits and maybe beyond and assess the behaviour. Which approach do you think a glider manufacturer test pilot takes. Prove that the glider complies with the requirements or test right to the limits. The latter is the way that military aircraft are tested at great expense, do you honestly think that glider manufacturers can go to that expense. It has been said that the Puch has featured in several fatal spin ins. What was the cause? In the absence of any mechanical failure it is assumed that the failure to recover was caused by pilot mishandling, and that may be the case. We can never know that, the only person who could prove or disprove that is very difficult to communicate with unless you happen to know a medium. We do not KNOW that there is not a configuration or combination of configuration and airframe loading which will make a spin recovery impossible or more difficult and until someone survives such an occurrence we will not KNOW. We do know that no-one has found such a configuration and survived to tell anyone about it, which is not the same as saying it has never or cannot happen. You may think that my scenario is unlikely, I freely admit that I do but I do not intend to find out the hard way. Spinning below safe abandonment height leaves no option if it all goes to rats. What is a safe abandonment height, that is another question. I know what I think mine is. Do you know what yours is? I pray that I never have to find out if I am right. Make love to the wife.........do people still do that? :-) At 16:31 19 January 2005, Stefan wrote: Don Johnstone wrote: I too know how to recover from a spin, and I don't need to find an instructor, I were one. Then I'm even more puzzled that you consider exploring spins in a certified glider, which's spin recovery procedures are described in detail in the POH, as test piloting. I always thought test piloting was about exploring things which are not described in the POH. But then, I'm not an instructor. The points Ian was making was why try something that had no useful purpose I surely hope you don't ever make love to your wife whithout producing children, because this would not have any useful purpose. Stefan |
#40
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Don Johnstone wrote:
Which approach do you think a glider manufacturer test pilot takes. Prove that the glider complies with the requirements or test right to the limits. The latter is the way that military aircraft are tested at great expense, do you honestly think that glider manufacturers can go to that expense. JAR-22 certification requires exactly this. What is a safe abandonment height, that is another question. I know what I think mine is. Do you know what yours is? If you'd read my previous posts, you'd have seen that I wrote I'd never start a deliberate spin below 3000 ft AGL, nor would I explore stalls and control abuse in an unknown glider below this altitude. (This was the post Ian replied to.) I consider this quite conservative. Stefan |
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