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#1
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The simple response to that is:Â* Don't drag it on the ground.Â* When I
was driving a winch back in the 90s, the technique was to increase throttle sufficiently after the glider releases to keep the parachute inflated and drop the chute right in front of the winch. The driver had to have the skill to stop the drum before the chute got jammed in the rollers.Â* On days without cross winds, just carry enough power to keep the chute inflated until it lands. On 11/11/2018 1:54 PM, Charlie M. (UH & 002 owner/pilot) wrote: My understanding, walking (let alone running) in heels is tough...no, never tried either..... As to suitability of one drag chute vs. another, seems like a major factor is if you drag it on the ground and whether or not it is pavement/macadam and load on the tow cable/wire. -- Dan, 5J |
#2
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On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 14:10:03 -0700, Dan Marotta wrote:
The simple response to that is:Â* Don't drag it on the ground.Â* When I was driving a winch back in the 90s, the technique was to increase throttle sufficiently after the glider releases to keep the parachute inflated and drop the chute right in front of the winch. The driver had to have the skill to stop the drum before the chute got jammed in the rollers.Â* On days without cross winds, just carry enough power to keep the chute inflated until it lands. Spot on for normal operation, but there is one unavoidable difference if you're using Spectra rope. On steel cable, you do the last launch of the day, suck the cable in, pack the winch up and tow it back to its roost and everything is fine. But if you do the same with Spectra rope, it will destroy the winch drums because tightly wound Spectra is likely to crush the drum in overnight cold, so after the last launch both cables are pulled out again. The winch then pulls them in slowly enough to avoid inflating the chute. This leaves the ropes loose enough on the drums to prevent crushing problems, but has also dragged the 'chutes along the ground for the length of your airfield. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#3
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I hesitate (not really) to ask how you learned what the Spectra could do.
I've only launched and driven with steel cable or plain rope with auto tow. On 11/11/2018 4:26 PM, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 14:10:03 -0700, Dan Marotta wrote: The simple response to that is:Â* Don't drag it on the ground.Â* When I was driving a winch back in the 90s, the technique was to increase throttle sufficiently after the glider releases to keep the parachute inflated and drop the chute right in front of the winch. The driver had to have the skill to stop the drum before the chute got jammed in the rollers.Â* On days without cross winds, just carry enough power to keep the chute inflated until it lands. Spot on for normal operation, but there is one unavoidable difference if you're using Spectra rope. On steel cable, you do the last launch of the day, suck the cable in, pack the winch up and tow it back to its roost and everything is fine. But if you do the same with Spectra rope, it will destroy the winch drums because tightly wound Spectra is likely to crush the drum in overnight cold, so after the last launch both cables are pulled out again. The winch then pulls them in slowly enough to avoid inflating the chute. This leaves the ropes loose enough on the drums to prevent crushing problems, but has also dragged the 'chutes along the ground for the length of your airfield. -- Dan, 5J |
#4
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On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 16:44:19 -0700, Dan Marotta wrote:
I hesitate (not really) to ask how you learned what the Spectra could do. There was feedback in S&G from early adopters about it and, when we bought the Skylaunch I'm fairly certain it was in the operating manual. Disclaimer: I regularly serve as part the airfield's normal operating crew, but at the launchpoint and driving the cable tow-out truck. I had some winch training on the Supercat, but don't drive the Skylaunch. I've only launched and driven with steel cable or plain rope with auto tow. I never seen auto tow used - its very much a dieing art over here due to the availability of good modern winches. Our longest cable run is just on 1km (3270 ft) long. Typical calm weather launches get to 1400ft but I've had 2600-2700 ft on windy days with a decent velocity gradient in both ASK-21 and SZD Juniors. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#5
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On Sunday, November 11, 2018 at 6:26:47 PM UTC-5, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 14:10:03 -0700, Dan Marotta wrote: The simple response to that is:Â* Don't drag it on the ground.Â* When I was driving a winch back in the 90s, the technique was to increase throttle sufficiently after the glider releases to keep the parachute inflated and drop the chute right in front of the winch. The driver had to have the skill to stop the drum before the chute got jammed in the rollers.Â* On days without cross winds, just carry enough power to keep the chute inflated until it lands. Spot on for normal operation, but there is one unavoidable difference if you're using Spectra rope. On steel cable, you do the last launch of the day, suck the cable in, pack the winch up and tow it back to its roost and everything is fine. But if you do the same with Spectra rope, it will destroy the winch drums because tightly wound Spectra is likely to crush the drum in overnight cold, so after the last launch both cables are pulled out again. The winch then pulls them in slowly enough to avoid inflating the chute. This leaves the ropes loose enough on the drums to prevent crushing problems, but has also dragged the 'chutes along the ground for the length of your airfield. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org Martin, steel cables do have the tendency to crush drums when not wound up after the last launch loosely, particularly if you were winching during a warm/hot summer day and experience a drop in temperature over night. Spectra is less affected by temperature swings but it is so tightly packed on the drum after the launch that it can crush a drum if left in that condition. We always pay out the line after the last launch and haul it it in at moderate speed, i.e. 1st gear at idle. Dragging the chute several thousand feet over any kind of surface is just plain nuts! No wonder you are wearing it out in no time. Tie an old tire to the end, if you desire some resistance. Uli 'AS' |
#6
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Did Bill and Martin just agree on a winch related topic?!
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#7
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On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 15:54:13 -0800, AS wrote:
steel cables do have the tendency to crush drums when not wound up after the last launch loosely, particularly if you were winching during a warm/hot summer day and experience a drop in temperature over night. When we used steel cable we didn't do anything special - just put the winch, a Supacat, away with the cables wound from the last launches. Maybe the Supacat drums were stronger than I realised: certainly the whole winch looked to have been made with surplus battleship parts from its air-cooled V8 diesel engine onward. When we replaced the Supacat with a Skylaunch (and later added a Tost that had been upgraded by Skylaunch) we switched to Spectra and the pull out and rewind loosely after the last launch. Our field is mown grass which doesn't obviously harm the heavy duty canvas and webbing parachutes we use. What I said initially applies only to those lightweight Fruity chutes. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#8
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It's true that Spectra (Dyneema) has a thermal coefficient of expansion at 180 - 200 M/(MxK) - roughly 20X that for steel and 10X that for aluminum. Leaving it wound tightly on a cold night probably has caused drums to fail.
However, there's no need to drag the 'chute - that's what old tires are for.. Keep a couple handy with an eye-bolt through the tread to attach the rope to. Pulling a tire across the whole airfield can be done quickly at the end of the day leaving the Spectra wound loosely enough not to cause problems. On Sunday, November 11, 2018 at 4:26:47 PM UTC-7, Martin Gregorie wrote: On Sun, 11 Nov 2018 14:10:03 -0700, Dan Marotta wrote: The simple response to that is:Â* Don't drag it on the ground.Â* When I was driving a winch back in the 90s, the technique was to increase throttle sufficiently after the glider releases to keep the parachute inflated and drop the chute right in front of the winch. The driver had to have the skill to stop the drum before the chute got jammed in the rollers.Â* On days without cross winds, just carry enough power to keep the chute inflated until it lands. Spot on for normal operation, but there is one unavoidable difference if you're using Spectra rope. On steel cable, you do the last launch of the day, suck the cable in, pack the winch up and tow it back to its roost and everything is fine. But if you do the same with Spectra rope, it will destroy the winch drums because tightly wound Spectra is likely to crush the drum in overnight cold, so after the last launch both cables are pulled out again. The winch then pulls them in slowly enough to avoid inflating the chute. This leaves the ropes loose enough on the drums to prevent crushing problems, but has also dragged the 'chutes along the ground for the length of your airfield. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
#9
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On Sunday, November 11, 2018 at 4:10:07 PM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote:
...On days without cross winds, just carry enough power to keep the chute inflated until it lands. I've never driven the winch, but I've sat in the cab and watched an international cadre of winching masters practice their art. At the two sites that I've done winch launches, operations continued in significant crosswind. Crosswinds seem to be less of a no-go with modern winches. Additional factors make landing the parachute right in front of the winch challenging for even expert winch operators: 1)2000 foot launches means more time to drift 2)less experienced pilots (like me) that insufficiently compensate for the crosswind (by flying the launch to the upwind side of the field). |
#10
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On Mon, 12 Nov 2018 20:06:57 -0800, son_of_flubber wrote:
I've never driven the winch, but I've sat in the cab and watched an international cadre of winching masters practice their art. At the two sites that I've done winch launches, operations continued in significant crosswind. Crosswinds seem to be less of a no-go with modern winches. On sites with severe cross-wind there's always the parachuteless option. I've seen (and flown with) this setup at The Mynd, The Mynd is on top of a long, steep north-south ridge with the runway parallel to the ridge and close behind the soaring slope. Beyond the runway there's an additional small rise with a valley containing moorland and trees. When the ridge is working, launches and landings are flown in a 90 degree cross-wind. Obviously they can't use a parachute on the launch cable because, when the ridge is working well, the end of the cable would end up over the hill and probably in the downwind forest: the airfield is 250m across at its widest and scrub and trees start 100m downwind of its lee edge. They use a single drum winch with no parachute and the retrieval winch at the launch point: the main cable ends in a metal triangle with the retrieval cable on one corner and the shock rope and strop on the other. No parachute. During the launch a light cable streams off the small retrieval winch. When the glider releases, the main winch is put in neutral and the retrieval winch engages, causing the cable to snap down onto the main runway, and shortly after that, its business end is back at the launchpoint ready for the next launch. The two winch drivers co-ordinate agreement about who is in gear and when by radio. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
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