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I think the main point against S turns is that they will not actually lose that much altitude -- unless you turn 90 degrees or more. If you are so high that full flap spoiler and slip are not going to work, then try to do S turns, but get nervous about it and don't head the nose more than 45 degrees away from the runway, you're just not going to get down that fast, and the runway will still slide along below you.
Then there is always the Marty Eiler special: Full spoiler, point the nose at the ground, go VNE to 5 feet off the deck. Even accounting for the float in ground effect, it uses up gobs of altitude. John Cochrane. |
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Then there is always the Marty Eiler special: Full spoiler, point the nose at the ground, go VNE to 5 feet off the deck. Even accounting for the float in ground effect, it uses up gobs of altitude.
John Cochrane. Any video links to this technique? Heard of it before, don't doubt it works, just like to see it. No, I'm not going to teach it to myself. |
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On Friday, February 17, 2017 at 3:45:08 PM UTC-6, Dave Walsh wrote:
At 19:16 17 February 2017, wrote: Then there is always the Marty Eiler special: Full spoiler, point the nose at the ground, go VNE to 5 feet off the deck. Even accounting for the float in ground effect, it uses up gobs of altitude. The Vne approach is an interesting idea that I won't be trying without 6000 feet of runway available! How do you get rid of all that speed 5 feet off the ground? It must produce an incredibly long float? When I took the glider acro course at Estrella back in the early 90s, one of the "party tricks" was to dive at Vne to the deck on entry to downwind, then fly the whole pattern in ground effect - you had to climb to turn base and final - aiming to be near the approach end of the runway, 10 ft over the desert, at about 60 knots. Then you just cracked the spoilers and landed.. Interesting, to say the least! It did teach you that once in ground effect, a little speed would take you a LONG WAY. Helps to have an airport out in the middle of nowhere (then); at my local field there would be too much dodging of houses, water tower, trucks on the interstate, etc..! (although I have tried it in Condor and it still works). Kirk 66 |
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And then there are gliders where side slipping with full air
brakes makes the glide angle better! Apparently. |
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On 2/18/2017 3:26 PM, Dave Walsh wrote:
And then there are gliders where side slipping with full air brakes makes the glide angle better! Apparently. Definitely true in my S/N 3 Zuni with full flaps on... Bob W. P.S. And a hearty "I second those sentiments!" found in the posts of Dave L. and Cindy B. earlier in this thread. Always good to have Plans B, C, & D ready-to-go...and the skills to implement 'em, too. |
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On Saturday, February 18, 2017 at 4:21:21 PM UTC-8, Bob Whelan wrote:
Always good to have Plans B, C, & D ready-to-go...and the skills to implement 'em, too. This thread on s-turns or slipping is all about airman skills that we should all posses or should learn enough to be comfortable with these skills. S-turns may be used in another application unforeseen, same for slips. You never know which skills or experiences you might have to apply to another situation to bring you home save. It is part of being a good airman. Often we fly precise, but that does not teach you the corners of your flight envelope. |
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On Sunday, 19 February 2017 06:35:49 UTC+2, Eric Greenwell wrote:
The technique is simple and easy to learn. Just don't start out with the extreme version John related! Basically, you are just increasing the rate of energy/altitude loss by 2 or 3 times normal by using full spoiler at high speeds. Try this for starters: -enter the pattern at least 1000' AGL -fly the pattern all the way until after you've turned final...NO spoilers or sideslip -continue down final without spoilers or side slip until it seems you are almost too high to get down to your aim point with full spoilers -open the spoilers fully, point the nose down until you are going 80-90 knots (but NO MORE than the max allowed speed for your landing configuration - flap setting is the usual thing limiting the allowed speed) -When the angle to your aim point looks about right for a half-spoiler approach, pull the nose up gradually to maintain that angle -when your speed drops to the desired speed on final, retract the spoilers to one-half -proceed with a normal landing Use the technique a few times, and it won't seem very extreme at all. The altitude loss is very rapid with full spoiler, gear down, and high speeds, and it's very effective at dumping excess altitude. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Dec 2014a" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://soaringsafety.org/prevention/...anes-2014A.pdf The irony of reading this, and then discovering link to something called "soaringsafety" below. |
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On Sun, 19 Feb 2017 02:11:37 -0800, krasw wrote:
The irony of reading this, and then discovering link to something called "soaringsafety" below. No irony: there's nothing dangerous about using brakes to scrub off excess height - its easy-peasy in a Discus 1 or K21: just follow Eric's excellent directions if you haven't done it before. Just make sure that you're not trying it for the first time on a short runway. You shouldn't need the extra length but it makes a nice comfort blanket. I haven't tried it yet in my Libelle because I haven't needed to: slipping one brings it down like a sack of anvils what with all the extra drag from pushing its razor-back tail boom sideways. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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