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"Larry Dighera" wrote in message
... In the channel between Santa Barbara and the Channel Islands the swells can often be 20' to 30' feet without whitecaps! Swells are given that name specifically because they are different from what is generally considered a wave. In particular, they are usually farther apart (and often higher). Not that I have personal experience -- I try to stay away from waterways with swells -- but my understanding is that landing a seaplane in swells is similar to ditching procedures. That is, try to land parallel to the swell, not across it. It's an entirely different technique from normal landings on waves. Pete |
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On Tue, 6 Dec 2005 10:03:22 -0800, "Peter Duniho"
wrote in :: "Larry Dighera" wrote in message .. . In the channel between Santa Barbara and the Channel Islands the swells can often be 20' to 30' feet without whitecaps! Swells are given that name specifically because they are different from what is generally considered a wave. In particular, they are usually farther apart (and often higher). It was the early '70s when one of my father's partners invited me for a cruise on his 24' sail boat to Anacapa Island off the Ventura, California coast. The trip over was pleasant, but the next morning on the way back was really something. It was foggy with visibility about 1/4 mile. The sea was like I had never experienced before, and I had recently crewed on a Newport Beach to Encinada race in which several boats were dismasted/run aground, and we were healed over so far that the Genoa was dragging in the water, but no one could get on deck to reef it in. The swells in the channel were so high, that one moment you were on the crest and couldn't see the water around the boat, and the next moment you were in a trough so deep that you could only see the sky directly overhead. I couldn't believe it! If one had broken over us, that would have been it for sure. I have a much healthier respect for the sea now. Not that I have personal experience -- I try to stay away from waterways with swells -- but my understanding is that landing a seaplane in swells is similar to ditching procedures. That is, try to land parallel to the swell, not across it. That would have been the only practical way to land, but I doubt the swells were far enough apart to prevent digging a wing in. It's an entirely different technique from normal landings on waves. Would you aim for a trough or a crest? |
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"Larry Dighera" wrote in message
... Would you aim for a trough or a crest? I would aim for the crest, for the same issue you already mentioned: the risk of catching a wing. I hope never to have to test the knowledge. Landing on swells seems unreasonably tricky to me. ![]() Pete |
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