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Standardization in Slack Rope Recovery?



 
 
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Old February 3rd 16, 04:48 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Mike the Strike
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Default Standardization in Slack Rope Recovery?

On Tuesday, February 2, 2016 at 9:31:22 PM UTC-7, Surge wrote:
Where I fly only low position aerotows are performed and even in turbulent conditions with glass gliders, rope slack doesn't seem to be much of a problem.

Are high position aerotows more prone to developing rope slack?


I flew in low tow in South Africa for many years and clearly remember a few instances of very slack rope. One time the tow plane flew into a strong thermal and slowed so fast that the tow rope snaked back over my canopy and far down the fuselage. This was in a Jantar-1 that had the hook under the front belly.

I was taught the offset and yaw recovery method rather than the dive and hope-for-the-best method and I use it fairly often in our strong summer conditions. I am much more scared of simulated rope breaks below 200-feet!

Mike
 




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