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#71
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Martin, you are entirely wrong. I'm not obsessed. Really. No, I mean
it. ;-) I use slips as a matter of course because I understand their USE and RISKS and I am competent. What I am obsessed with is finding the language that will let me explain clearly, succinctly, that crabbing and slipping are not means to the same end. Perhaps I should refocus attention on the word crabbing... which give the impression that it is a maneuver as opposed to being normal wings level flight. Maybe the better way to discuss this is to talk about approaches being coordinated or uncoordinated. We all agree that in order to transition to the ground in a crosswind situation, we must move from coordinated to uncoordinated flight. You have a choice when to apply controls to establish uncoordinated flight. You can do it just before touch down (in which case the turn that accompanies a skid is manageable), or you may do it earlier on final. What I want to knock down is this notion of either a crab or a slip as it infects our understanding of the purpose of the slip. In order to establish a new ground track, you must turn. A side slip is not a turn. All forces are balanced. As I've already described, many pilots are confused about this difference. They explain that the side slip works because the tilted left vector points into the crosswind, dragging the glider sideways and compensating for wind drift. This works in practice, but is wrong in fact because the tilted lift vector is exactly matched by fuselage drag. If there were an unbalance force, the glider's direction would continue to change... that is, circle. The point is to find a better way of saying this. The place I'm trying to get to is that when we compensate for crosswind on final, what we are really doing when we initiate the side slip is a turn... what is in the first instant a coordinated turn (remember which way the nose goes if we don't use coordinating rudder while we roll into the bank), which becomes a slipped turn as we reverse the progressively rudder against the turn to keep heading aligned with runway, until we reach a beta where the wing turning force is exactly compensated by the fuselage force. A better way to teach this and practice it is to keep the turn coordinated until the desired ground track is achieved. This demonstrates clearly the only way to establish a new ground track... by turning to what we typcially call a crabbed approach. Then, at the pilot's option, he may enter a slip, which will align the gliders heading with its ground track. This crearly demonstrates that the slip's only purpuse is alignment, just as the only purpose for the rudder kick before touchdown is alignment (the only purpose of which is to reduce side loading on the gear). The advantage of the slip is that, unlike the rudder kick, all foreces are balanced. If the touch down is delayed, you are much less likely to have to make large corrections in direction. In your experience, how many pilots stick with this sport. I've heard commercial operators say it's about 1 in 5. Twenty percent get it. Eighty percent don't. And of the 20% that get, how many really get it? I already know how to do it. Now I'm trying to "get it" in a way that I can easily explain, and maybe help that other 80% figure things out. Martin Eiler wrote: The following is a snip from one of Fiveniner's early posts regarding the use of side slips for dealing with wind drift while on final. At 00:00 20 February 2005, wrote: But the notion that the tilted lift vector is compensating for wind drift is flawed. Useful, but flawed. Having read all of his posts in this thread, it is apparent that he has supplied no real data capable of substantiating his position that side slips cannot compensate for wind drift. Yes, there is a portion of the soaring community that are die-hard crab pilots. That does not mean that their choice automatically validates his opinion that side slips can't compensate for cross wind. Those pilots who are experienced with side slips seem to agree with the SSA's Soaring Manual, in that a side slip does have some limitations, and consequently at some point, some amount of crab may be needed to be added to the side slip to achieve the desired result. Interestingly, after rereading his other posts, it becomes quite obvious that he is obsessed with the opinion that pilots should only be allowed to fly coordinated while at or below pattern altitude. Although he is entitled to his opinion, few other pilots would support the concept that a pilot who intentionally flies uncoordinated on final is operating dangerously. Generally speaking having lofty ideals is admirable, however it is more warmly accepted when an individual signs his post with his real name. M Eiler |
#72
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Sorry Marty. I type at warp speed and don't always leave a name at the
end. For 17 years my contest ID was 59, thus the yahoo address. And perhaps as a frequent contributor to the group, I've let my ego swell to the point that I figure others will recognize me by content or style. Chris O'Callaghan Ventus 2bx -- Oscar Charlie Frederick, Maryland Member of the Mid-Atlantic Soaring Association |
#73
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OK. I think this thread has served its purpose, at least for me. It
looks like the key may be centered on "coordination." Might I suggest to active instructors that you try my exercise and report back: coordinated turn to a heading that establishes ground track as you would at altitude, the entry and recovery from a slip to demonstrate gear alignment and return to wings level coordinated flight. You might preface this with a forward slip demonstration in light winds and comment on the misalignment of the gear with the runway and the need to align before touch down. When might this misalignment be useful? Let the student mull that over... then start talking about crosswind navigation and see if he makes the connection. I'm checking out for the next week. If someone has an epiphany, please copy me back channel. Cheers, Chris O'Callaghan |
#75
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Oups - I take back my first remark.
-- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" a écrit dans le message de news: ... Sorry Marty. I type at warp speed and don't always leave a name at the end. For 17 years my contest ID was 59, thus the yahoo address. And perhaps as a frequent contributor to the group, I've let my ego swell to the point that I figure others will recognize me by content or style. Chris O'Callaghan Ventus 2bx -- Oscar Charlie Frederick, Maryland Member of the Mid-Atlantic Soaring Association |
#76
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Yes, well said. But still wrong, in this sense:
Side slipping does not change your direction. What you have done is to define the limits of side slipping as an alignment maneuver. This doesn't make side slipping and crabbing additive. It simply says that you've been taught or you prefer to uncoordinate the aircraft early on final to align the gear with the runway. However, the rudder will only allow a finite maximum angle of yaw, which limits the amount of bank you can use before the wing turning force exceeds the fuselage force and you start turning. So put another way, a side slip is only useful for gear alignment up to some fixed crosswind component speed. Above that speed, you will need to add a skid before touch down... but wait... your rudder is already full over. How will you align the gear? Well, if you had both the full authority of the rudder and the adverse yaw or you ailerons, you might be able to manage it. But that would require a crabbed (coordinated) approach. Which just happens to be the same path you were moving through the air while side slipping "plus" crabbing. Do you see why I just can't stomach the notion of side slips and crabs being additive? There is a reverse logic at work here which gives the side slip a false role in crosswind management. Put another way, a side slip is only appropriate for light to moderate crosswind components and flat landing surfaces. The stronger the crosswind, the rougher the runway, the more critical it is to have maximum yaw performance at touch down. Side slips and skids are additive, but only to the degree that you have any rudder left to yaw the glider. Since everyone seems to have a preference, I would guess this is the worst of both worlds. Think of it another way... if I slow down on final, I'll need to change my direction to maintain a constant ground track. (This is simple trig that I'll leave to you.) I cannot accomplish this by adding side slip. A side slip changes heading only, not track. I must turn in order to maintain track. This isn't even apples and oranges. This trying to add fruits and vegetables. So here I am on final in calm conditions... I slip to the right. I recover. I slip to the left. I recover. Net force always equals zero. My flight path remains the same. Track, the same. Heading swings 20 degrees either side of the runway center line. Same thing in a cross wind. I establish a ground track. I point down the runway. I recover form the side slip. For amusement I slip in the other direction - with the downwind wing low (is this a side slip or a forward slip???!!!). I recover. Net force always equals zero. My track remains exactly the same while my heading swings through 40 total degrees, centered on my path through the air. I'll see if I can't find a new direction to come at this. Redefining the approach in terms of coordination may be the way. But I really do need to check out. Be back in a week or two. OC aka 59 aka Chris O'Callaghan |
#77
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#78
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#79
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#80
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T o d d P a t t i s t wrote:
However, your yaw string will NOT be straight when you apply rudder to line up and you will NOT be in coordinated flight. Got me. But then, who looks at the yaw string during the flare anyway? BTW: I know that in the US, you make a difference about "forward" and "side" slip. How would this one be called? Maybe a "wing level straight forward slip"? :-) I'd like to emphasize that I usually land in a crosswind pretty much as you are describing, I fly coordinated until Thank you, Todd. Makes me sleep better. :-) Stefan |
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