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#11
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I don't understand the NOAH system. Why not just put a ballistic recovery
chute in the glider? That way you don't need to worry about getting out, you are somewhat protected when you hit the ground, and your chute will deploy even if you pull the cord at 300 ft. Mike Schumann "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message . .. "bagmaker" wrote in message ... - You've had a whack, but everything feels fine. Do you stay in the glider, or leave? Just how reliable are the parachutes we use? I understand that they're fairly simple quick-opening designs, but there's no reserve, right? Has a glider-pilot parachute ever failed? Dan - Dan, Simply, there is no blanket answer, way too many variables exist. Derek Piggot writes a fascinating account of his bail-out in some of his gliding books, I would suggest reading them. Gliding Kiwi has a great article this month on a NZ instructor landing a rudderless puch with a PAX - more heart stopping reading! Basically if it does fly after a hit, check to see that it will keep flying with some harsh movements -height limits withstanding- long enough to land. Landing manuevering can be rough, you want to be sure the thing doesnt fail at 100 feet after nursing down from a good bail out height. Rough rule has been bandied about RAS about 1500 ft as a minimum bail-out altitude, many would disagree, but if you dont have a choice..... Bottom line is you are worth more than a glider, if in doubt, get out fly safe Bagger I've twice faced the decision to jump or land a crippled glider. The first was a Pratt-Read badly damaged from a mid-air. I had fresh jump training, a fresh repack and a stable jump platform but I decided to land it anyway. The critical decision was whether I could control the glider from the time it decended below a safe jump altitude until it was on the ground. I could and did. For the record, the other pilot in the mid-air did the same thing. The second was an experimental flying wing where a suposedly secure lead shot bag shifted in flight so as to jam the elevator/aileron bellcranks. I found I could steer with rudder and slow it to 70Kts with trim. That let me hit the runway on a fast, shallow glide. It was a rough landing but the glider and I survived to fly again. In both cases there was intense discussion post flight about the wisdom of my decisions. A slim majority said the conservative action was to have abandoned ship. My view was if the thing is more or less controllable, and you have a big airfield to aim at, land it. If it is an airplane loaded with fuel, that might shift the decision toward jumping. However, a glider that can be flown to hit a large flat area at a shallow angle is likely to be safer than the 'chute. If there is any doubt that the glider will remain controllable - jump. The real problem here is struggling to rise from a reclining position and crawl over the side with a 15 pound 'chute on your back. That's difficult. Being old, out of shape and/or overweight makes it impossible. This is where the NOAH system from DG is so significant. Of all the safety related things that one could spend money on, the NOAH system tops the list for me. Bill Daniels -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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Gear warning system $20 Condom $1.50 "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message news:aZCFi.2495$rw3.2350@trndny04... Bill Daniels wrote: The real problem here is struggling to rise from a reclining position and crawl over the side with a 15 pound 'chute on your back. That's difficult. Being old, out of shape and/or overweight makes it impossible. This is where the NOAH system from DG is so significant. Of all the safety related things that one could spend money on, the NOAH system tops the list for me. It would be interesting to construct a list of these things, and prioritize them by their cost/benefit ratio. Bill seems like a very safety conscious pilot, so he probably is at the point where a NOAH system would give him the most safety increase for the buck. I'll bet a lot, maybe most, pilots aren't in that situation. A simple example is the Roeger hook (or a variant) that is part of every new glider with a forward opening canopy, ensuring it can be jettisoned safely. DG makes a retrofit available for all their older gliders, yet relatively few have purchased one. I know Schleicher offers retrofits for at least one glider (I bought and installed one), and perhaps others. How many pilots have a "spoilers open during takeoff" warning? I believe more pilots have died because of this than those that couldn't bail out of a glider because the G forces were to great. Here's a start on a safety equipment list, ordered by cost/benefit: A list for the *Serious Cross-Country Pilot* "spoilers open on takeoff" warning ($100) parachute ($1200) Roeger hook ($600 - my cost) PCAS transponder detector ($450) Transponder ($3000) NOAH ($5000) ELT ($1000 - 406 hz unit) PLB ($200 - $500) My list reflects my situation. I'm sure there should probably be several lists that account for where you fly and the kind of flying you do. What do other pilots think this list should include, where would you place things in the list, and what pilots is it intended for? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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On Tue, 11 Sep 2007 20:34:14 +0000, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Here's a start on a safety equipment list, ordered by cost/benefit: A list for the *Serious Cross-Country Pilot* "spoilers open on takeoff" warning ($100) parachute ($1200) Roeger hook ($600 - my cost) PCAS transponder detector ($450) Transponder ($3000) NOAH ($5000) ELT ($1000 - 406 hz unit) PLB ($200 - $500) My list reflects my situation. I'm sure there should probably be several lists that account for where you fly and the kind of flying you do. What do other pilots think this list should include, where would you place things in the list, and what pilots is it intended for? The obvious omission: Flarm (US $400 - $500). My first hand experience is that in terms of cost/benefit, it belongs up with the chute, maybe even above it. Even if you are fortunate enough not to need one of these devices, remember it also offers protection for the other pilot who might not see you. It is time someone developed a version that is accepted world wide and can be fitted to power aircraft as well, while keeping the costs "VFR affordable". Ian |
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![]() "Mike Schumann" wrote in message .. . I don't understand the NOAH system. Why not just put a ballistic recovery chute in the glider? That way you don't need to worry about getting out, you are somewhat protected when you hit the ground, and your chute will deploy even if you pull the cord at 300 ft. Mike Schumann Mike, I think this is still open to debate. I have stated that I have an aversion to landing in a sitting position with no crush structure under me. The Cirrus SR22 uses the landing gear which punches up through the wing to absorb impact. A glider doesn't have that. However, I'm going to keep an open mind. There is a strange dynamic going on with the existing ballistic 'chute systems. There have been a lot of deployments - a lot more than anyone thought there would be. On one side the proponents say the system is working. On the other side, detractors say many of the deployments were unneccessary. One theory is that many pilots fly in a state of near panic. Give them a panic button and they'll push it. If no panic button, they'll just fly back and land. If this is true, insurance claims are going to skyrocket for ballistic 'chute equipped aircraft. Bill Daniels |
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There are some good article on the DG web site about
safety features, they do explain why they went for the NOAH system. given the cost and structural issues with balistic recorery systems and the life of plastic gliders (50-100 years?) it would be a very long time before many people had one. I dont think they can cope with water ballast (200kg+ in newer 15/18m) 80-90% of new German gliders have an engine, so space and the extra weight are also issues, even turbos reduce weak weather perfformance the Noah can be retrofitted to a lot of the existing DG fleet and is not prohibitively expensive. To be fair it is also more likely to give DG a return on the investment. The system will only work with a mushroom type instrument binnacle or similar which you legs can get round either side the reaon for the Noah is why i would lean toward using the stable platform. Some test were done a while ago to simulate bailout with spin G loading by strapping weights to pilots of various ages, and seing if they could roll out of a static cockpit, the older ones simply could not get out of the cockpit as for the airbrake open warning DG also make the Piggot Hook, which is a sawtooth plate which catches the airbrake handle if it trys to slide back when not locked, could easily be copied and retrofitted to lots of types, especially in Experemental world. Pete At 21:01 11 September 2007, Mike Schumann wrote: I don't understand the NOAH system. Why not just put a ballistic recovery chute in the glider? That way you don't need to worry about getting out, you are somewhat protected when you hit the ground, and your chute will deploy even if you pull the cord at 300 ft. Mike Schumann 'Bill Daniels' wrote in message ... 'bagmaker' wrote in message ... - You've had a whack, but everything feels fine. Do you stay in the glider, or leave? Just how reliable are the parachutes we use? I understand that they're fairly simple quick-opening designs, but there's no reserve, right? Has a glider-pilot parachute ever failed? Dan - Dan, Simply, there is no blanket answer, way too many variables exist. Derek Piggot writes a fascinating account of his bail-out in some of his gliding books, I would suggest reading them. Gliding Kiwi has a great article this month on a NZ instructor landing a rudderless puch with a PAX - more heart stopping reading! Basically if it does fly after a hit, check to see that it will keep flying with some harsh movements -height limits withstanding- long enough to land. Landing manuevering can be rough, you want to be sure the thing doesnt fail at 100 feet after nursing down from a good bail out height. Rough rule has been bandied about RAS about 1500 ft as a minimum bail-out altitude, many would disagree, but if you dont have a choice..... Bottom line is you are worth more than a glider, if in doubt, get out fly safe Bagger I've twice faced the decision to jump or land a crippled glider. The first was a Pratt-Read badly damaged from a mid-air. I had fresh jump training, a fresh repack and a stable jump platform but I decided to land it anyway. The critical decision was whether I could control the glider from the time it decended below a safe jump altitude until it was on the ground. I could and did. For the record, the other pilot in the mid-air did the same thing. The second was an experimental flying wing where a suposedly secure lead shot bag shifted in flight so as to jam the elevator/aileron bellcranks. I found I could steer with rudder and slow it to 70Kts with trim. That let me hit the runway on a fast, shallow glide. It was a rough landing but the glider and I survived to fly again. In both cases there was intense discussion post flight about the wisdom of my decisions. A slim majority said the conservative action was to have abandoned ship. My view was if the thing is more or less controllable, and you have a big airfield to aim at, land it. If it is an airplane loaded with fuel, that might shift the decision toward jumping. However, a glider that can be flown to hit a large flat area at a shallow angle is likely to be safer than the 'chute. If there is any doubt that the glider will remain controllable - jump. The real problem here is struggling to rise from a reclining position and crawl over the side with a 15 pound 'chute on your back. That's difficult. Being old, out of shape and/or overweight makes it impossible. This is where the NOAH system from DG is so significant. Of all the safety related things that one could spend money on, the NOAH system tops the list for me. Bill Daniels -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#16
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At 21:01 11 September 2007, Mike Schumann wrote:
I don't understand the NOAH system. Why not just put a ballistic recovery chute in the glider? That way you don't need to worry about getting out, you are somewhat protected when you hit the ground, and your chute will deploy even if you pull the cord at 300 ft. Mike Schumann 1. Not all gliders can have a BRS installed (probably goes for the NOAH as well) 2. With a BRS, you can not guarantee you will still be attached to the part of the glider with the BRS installed, nor that it will function properly in the case of catastrophic damage Even if you have the BRS, I highly recommend still flying with your emergency bailout chute, and please continue to 'worry' about how you may get out if you need to. If the BRS works- hey, great! If not you still have an option (not below 300 AGL though) There is already a known case of this very scenario, and it was a flutter breakup and not even a midair that caused it. Skillfully (not luckily cause' it's not called luck when you prepare for the unexpected) the pilot had his personal chute (and presence of mind) and was able to live to tell about it. Plus with a personal chute you can steer away form power lines or cliff faces and other hazards just as deadly as no protection at all. For the really safety minded (and thick walleted) a BRS, NOAH, a personal chute, a helmet (might have saved more lives than you may think) and all the other gizmos mentioned already, including the condom, although admittedly the helmet may significantly reduce the need for that one ![]() Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi |
#17
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My gut feeling is that one of the more likely scenarios is a mid-air at or
near pattern altitude. When you are this low, I doubt you have time to bail out, whether you have NOAH or not. This is where only a Balistic Recovery Chute can save your butt. Mike Schumann "Paul Hanson" wrote in message ... At 21:01 11 September 2007, Mike Schumann wrote: I don't understand the NOAH system. Why not just put a ballistic recovery chute in the glider? That way you don't need to worry about getting out, you are somewhat protected when you hit the ground, and your chute will deploy even if you pull the cord at 300 ft. Mike Schumann 1. Not all gliders can have a BRS installed (probably goes for the NOAH as well) 2. With a BRS, you can not guarantee you will still be attached to the part of the glider with the BRS installed, nor that it will function properly in the case of catastrophic damage Even if you have the BRS, I highly recommend still flying with your emergency bailout chute, and please continue to 'worry' about how you may get out if you need to. If the BRS works- hey, great! If not you still have an option (not below 300 AGL though) There is already a known case of this very scenario, and it was a flutter breakup and not even a midair that caused it. Skillfully (not luckily cause' it's not called luck when you prepare for the unexpected) the pilot had his personal chute (and presence of mind) and was able to live to tell about it. Plus with a personal chute you can steer away form power lines or cliff faces and other hazards just as deadly as no protection at all. For the really safety minded (and thick walleted) a BRS, NOAH, a personal chute, a helmet (might have saved more lives than you may think) and all the other gizmos mentioned already, including the condom, although admittedly the helmet may significantly reduce the need for that one ![]() Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#18
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bumper wrote:
This bag would probably be made of coated nylon and be inflated with an easily refillable compressed air bottle. Inflation would be via a quarter-turn manual valve with no safety devices except perhaps a manual interlock pin (if a solenoid valve were used, a canopy-open interlock could be incorporated). The intent would be to design the "air-lift under cushion" for ground use only, to assist the pilot in exiting the ship. If this system were marketed, restricting it to ground use would hopefully help eliminate the liability concerns of a system intended to assist a bail out. A friend of mine (Bob Moore) had an "elderly pilot's assist" (not that I'm suggesting bumper is elderly, since I'm a bit older myself!) installed in his PIK 20 E. He used it to enter and exit the glider on the ground. It was a cloth bag with (I think) two aircraft tire tubes, one on top of the other, inside the bag. A small 12 VDC pump run from the glider battery inflated the tubes to raise the pilot; a valve released the air to lower the pilot. It allowed him another couple years of flying. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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Thanks for all your replies. I think this is something to think about
*before* it happens to you (and it can - a good friend was hit earlier this year, he landed safely minus some 40% of his DG's tailplane. He didn't know it had gone until he landed). I also agree that the use of FLARM is a no-brainer - oddly, there's still resistance to it in some quarters. On Sep 12, 5:08 am, "Mike Schumann" mike-nos...@traditions- nospam.com wrote: My gut feeling is that one of the more likely scenarios is a mid-air at or near pattern altitude. When you are this low, I doubt you have time to bail out, whether you have NOAH or not. This is where only a Balistic Recovery Chute can save your butt. Last year in Britain there was a mid-air at "1,500' above the airfield". One pilot left through a hole in his canopy resulting from the collision. If I remember correctly, eye-witnesses said the fairly old parachute he was using opened remarkably quickly, and the pilot survived. The other pilot, flying a ASW19, appears to have been unable to jettison his canpoy as the PDA and logger cables had been cable tied to the frame. http://www.aaib.dft.gov.uk/cms_resou...0and%20GDP.pdf Dan |
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On Sep 11, 7:01 am, Dan G wrote:
You've had a whack, but everything feels fine. Do you stay in the glider, or leave? Just how reliable are the parachutes we use? I understand that they're fairly simple quick-opening designs, but there's no reserve, right? Has a glider-pilot parachute ever failed? Dan Dan, I had the unfortunate experience of having to leave my glider in January after a mid air. The other glider had impacted my left wing and severed it about half a metre from the root,and also broke the tail boom midway between the wing and the tail. He was able to land but I had to make a quick exit, which was my first parachuting experience. I had no doubts that I would have to jump, and previous training and preparation took over. The glider had started a spin to the left and it took some time to get rid of the canopy (PUSH on it after you activate the releases!), but I was actually surprised how easy it was to get out of the cockpit. Having undone the harness it seemed like no trouble at all to just roll over the canopy rail and out into the wild blue yonder. I have a below knee artificial right leg so I had considered this scenario for some time, expecting to have a lot of trouble just getting my leg past the instrument panel, but no, it was really a piece of cake. I put it down to the fact the gravitational force was less as the glider was diving and all I had to do was push away from it. A NOAH sytem would have been redundant I feel. Luckily, the spin hadn't developed to the stage where the centrifugal forces were high, even though it had seemed to take forever to get out; in fact it was probably only seconds. The chute worked as advertised (it had been repacked 2 months previously), opening in 3 seconds (or so it seemed) and there was no way I was going to do any stabilising. I used that ripcord as soon as I could. Adrenalin does amazing things. I was upside down when the chute opened, but the shock of it soon had me the right way up. I did get some pretty severe bruising around the groin and shoulders, but I was alive and thats what counted. Then there was the landing. I couldn't see the ground properly because the shock of the opening chute ripped my glasses off, and I hit before I was ready, and I hit very heavily, once again with absolutely no proper tecnique, but I was alive. As far as I am concerned everything worked and the end result was good. I just hope no one else has to try out their parachute. Phil |
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