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#1
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Guillotine? How about simply mounting a release mechanism to the back of
the tow vehicle with the release cable within reach of the driver or observer? That's the way they do it on the dry lake in Nevada and I was not the least concerned about accepting ground launches. And, of course, there's always the weak link at the glider end... "Martin Gregorie" wrote in message ... On Fri, 10 May 2013 06:19:27 -0700, son_of_flubber wrote: Okay. I do have a few observations/opinions: 1)That the payout winch payouts more line and keeps line tension constant when the glider hits lift seems an inherent advantage of this approach when compared to a traditional winch launch. As Bill says, a payout winch can't easily compensate for sink or a rear gust at the start of a launch in calm conditions. 2)Don's suggestion that traditional winch launching is proven and that there is therefore no reason to experiment with payout winching misses the point. In a country where beefy pickup trucks are common, the start-up costs for payout winching are much lower than traditional winching. Secondly, far fewer humans need to be deployed and coordinated to run a payout winch. The relevant question is "Which is better to use on a dry lake bed, 1)autotow with payout winch or 2)traditional autotow? What are the tradeoffs? As Don mentioned, we've been shown videos of payout winches with *no gillotine fitted*. Its relatively rare, but cases of failures to release have happened and are highly liable to be fatal without prompt use of the guillotine. Even with a guillotine, what are the chances of a solo payout winch driver noticing the problem in time? Even if he does notice, how fast can he get to the guillotine's release and operate it? I wouldn't accept a winch or auto-tow launch if there wasn't a functional guillotine installed so that its release was instantly accessible to the driver and/or the person monitoring the launch. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#2
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The rope on a payout winch is on a drum not simply attached to the rear of a truck. Straight auto-tow uses a release. A payout winch needs a guillotine.
On Saturday, May 18, 2013 10:03:48 AM UTC-6, Dan Marotta wrote: Guillotine? How about simply mounting a release mechanism to the back of the tow vehicle with the release cable within reach of the driver or observer? That's the way they do it on the dry lake in Nevada and I was not the least concerned about accepting ground launches. And, of course, there's always the weak link at the glider end... "Martin Gregorie" wrote in message ... On Fri, 10 May 2013 06:19:27 -0700, son_of_flubber wrote: Okay. I do have a few observations/opinions: 1)That the payout winch payouts more line and keeps line tension constant when the glider hits lift seems an inherent advantage of this approach when compared to a traditional winch launch. As Bill says, a payout winch can't easily compensate for sink or a rear gust at the start of a launch in calm conditions. 2)Don's suggestion that traditional winch launching is proven and that there is therefore no reason to experiment with payout winching misses the point. In a country where beefy pickup trucks are common, the start-up costs for payout winching are much lower than traditional winching. Secondly, far fewer humans need to be deployed and coordinated to run a payout winch. The relevant question is "Which is better to use on a dry lake bed, 1)autotow with payout winch or 2)traditional autotow? What are the tradeoffs? As Don mentioned, we've been shown videos of payout winches with *no gillotine fitted*. Its relatively rare, but cases of failures to release have happened and are highly liable to be fatal without prompt use of the guillotine. Even with a guillotine, what are the chances of a solo payout winch driver noticing the problem in time? Even if he does notice, how fast can he get to the guillotine's release and operate it? I wouldn't accept a winch or auto-tow launch if there wasn't a functional guillotine installed so that its release was instantly accessible to the driver and/or the person monitoring the launch. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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On Sat, 18 May 2013 10:03:48 -0600, Dan Marotta wrote:
Guillotine? How about simply mounting a release mechanism to the back of the tow vehicle with the release cable within reach of the driver or observer? That's the way they do it on the dry lake in Nevada and I was not the least concerned about accepting ground launches. And, of course, there's always the weak link at the glider end... The guillotine *is* the winch-end release mechanism. What else can you do but cut the rope if the glider can't release? Jettisoning the drum and guides, leaving them swinging beneath the glider isn't a good solution! And, as others have pointed out, if you're not using a stiff 2-3 metre strop (4.5mm steel cable inside plastic hose) on the glider's end of the shock rope, then a hesitation or snatch as the take-off run starts can wrap the cable round your wheel. That's something that's known to prevent the glider from releasing its end of the cable. I've just reviewed the video that started this thread and can't see any sign that such a strop is in use or any indication that the weak link, if there is one, at the glider end is correct for the glider. In the UK the weak link housing is an integral part of the strop and the plastic hose is colour coded to match the weak link: hence the pilot, or anybody else at the launch point, can visually check that the correct weak is being used when the cable is accepted prior to launch. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#4
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Oops! I was thinking of a straight auto tow. I forgot about the payout
winch part. You are, of course, correct in the need for a guillotine in this application. "Martin Gregorie" wrote in message ... On Sat, 18 May 2013 10:03:48 -0600, Dan Marotta wrote: Guillotine? How about simply mounting a release mechanism to the back of the tow vehicle with the release cable within reach of the driver or observer? That's the way they do it on the dry lake in Nevada and I was not the least concerned about accepting ground launches. And, of course, there's always the weak link at the glider end... The guillotine *is* the winch-end release mechanism. What else can you do but cut the rope if the glider can't release? Jettisoning the drum and guides, leaving them swinging beneath the glider isn't a good solution! And, as others have pointed out, if you're not using a stiff 2-3 metre strop (4.5mm steel cable inside plastic hose) on the glider's end of the shock rope, then a hesitation or snatch as the take-off run starts can wrap the cable round your wheel. That's something that's known to prevent the glider from releasing its end of the cable. I've just reviewed the video that started this thread and can't see any sign that such a strop is in use or any indication that the weak link, if there is one, at the glider end is correct for the glider. In the UK the weak link housing is an integral part of the strop and the plastic hose is colour coded to match the weak link: hence the pilot, or anybody else at the launch point, can visually check that the correct weak is being used when the cable is accepted prior to launch. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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