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#1
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If you can't control a take off with a cg hook, you probably shouldn't be in a glider in the first place.
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#2
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On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 2:43:57 PM UTC-6, Tango Whisky wrote:
If you can't control a take off with a cg hook, you probably shouldn't be in a glider in the first place. That's a pretty arrogant and insulting comment. Maybe not everybody has your incredible genetically engineered skills and your interplanetary sourced perfect glider, and doesn't get to fly in your exalted unicorn-populated airfield conditions. And perhaps, some of us learned with nose hooks and are just now transitioning to CG hooks. Be grateful that your parents conceived you while performing CG related activity, although ineptly. I have flown with nose, chin and CG hooks. In a crosswind with a partial load of water and a lazy wingrunner, the release option is at the forefront of my mind for the entire takeoff roll, especially with the CG hook. I am glad that your amazing abilities are so amazing. I hope I never have to meet you, as I would probably have to shoot myself. But I wouldn't be the first casualty. |
#3
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On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 5:55:26 PM UTC-7, wrote:
On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 2:43:57 PM UTC-6, Tango Whisky wrote: If you can't control a take off with a cg hook, you probably shouldn't be in a glider in the first place. That's a pretty arrogant and insulting comment. Maybe not everybody has your incredible genetically engineered skills and your interplanetary sourced perfect glider, and doesn't get to fly in your exalted unicorn-populated airfield conditions. And perhaps, some of us learned with nose hooks and are just now transitioning to CG hooks. Be grateful that your parents conceived you while performing CG related activity, although ineptly. I have flown with nose, chin and CG hooks. In a crosswind with a partial load of water and a lazy wingrunner, the release option is at the forefront of my mind for the entire takeoff roll, especially with the CG hook. I am glad that your amazing abilities are so amazing. I hope I never have to meet you, as I would probably have to shoot myself. But I wouldn't be the first casualty. :-), |
#4
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#5
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At 02:11 28 August 2019, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On Tue, 27 Aug 2019 17:55:24 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 2:43:57 PM UTC-6, Tango Whisky wrote: If you can't control a take off with a cg hook, you probably shouldn't be in a glider in the first place. That's a pretty arrogant and insulting comment. Maybe not everybody has your incredible genetically engineered skills and your interplanetary sourced perfect glider, and doesn't get to fly in your exalted unicorn-populated airfield conditions. And perhaps, some of us learned with nose hooks and are just now transitioning to CG hooks. Be grateful that your parents conceived you while performing CG related activity, although ineptly. I have flown with nose, chin and CG hooks. In a crosswind with a partial load of water and a lazy wingrunner, the release option is at the forefront of my mind for the entire takeoff roll, especially with the CG hook. I am glad that your amazing abilities are so amazing. I hope I never have to meet you, as I would probably have to shoot myself. But I wouldn't be the first casualty. May I quote your posting to my student pilots? For generations they have flown their aerotows with only a CG hook... without any incidence. I am sure they are happy to hear that apparently they belong to the species "super human". My advice would be, only listen to DG100 0wners. Everyone else is making comparisons based on having experience of all flying tail planes in other types, and they all behave differently. Split canopies are not a problem, after a flight or two, you wont even notice it. |
#6
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Op woensdag 28 augustus 2019 09:45:05 UTC+2 schreef Simon France:
At 02:11 28 August 2019, Andreas Maurer wrote: On Tue, 27 Aug 2019 17:55:24 -0700 (PDT), wrote: On Tuesday, August 27, 2019 at 2:43:57 PM UTC-6, Tango Whisky wrote: If you can't control a take off with a cg hook, you probably shouldn't be in a glider in the first place. That's a pretty arrogant and insulting comment. Maybe not everybody has your incredible genetically engineered skills and your interplanetary sourced perfect glider, and doesn't get to fly in your exalted unicorn-populated airfield conditions. And perhaps, some of us learned with nose hooks and are just now transitioning to CG hooks. Be grateful that your parents conceived you while performing CG related activity, although ineptly. I have flown with nose, chin and CG hooks. In a crosswind with a partial load of water and a lazy wingrunner, the release option is at the forefront of my mind for the entire takeoff roll, especially with the CG hook. I am glad that your amazing abilities are so amazing. I hope I never have to meet you, as I would probably have to shoot myself. But I wouldn't be the first casualty. May I quote your posting to my student pilots? For generations they have flown their aerotows with only a CG hook... without any incidence. I am sure they are happy to hear that apparently they belong to the species "super human". My advice would be, only listen to DG100 0wners. Everyone else is making comparisons based on having experience of all flying tail planes in other types, and they all behave differently. Split canopies are not a problem, after a flight or two, you wont even notice it. DG-101 owner (long canopy, all flying tailplane): Using my CG hook, I only have issues on tow when the towplane exceeds 130 km/h, when flying through a thermal and he leaves and I'm still in, I have some trouble putting the nose down. Up to 120 km/h I have absolutely no problems. I prefer a slower tow, at 110-120 km/h, as I don't weigh much, I'm flying at minimum cockpit weight. |
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