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Puchacz fatal accident 18 Jan. 2004 at Husbands Bosworth.



 
 
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  #1  
Old January 13th 05, 06:40 PM
W.J. \(Bill\) Dean \(U.K.\).
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Default Puchacz fatal accident 18 Jan. 2004 at Husbands Bosworth.

The Air Accidents Investigation Branch of the Department for Trade have now
published their report on the accident at Husbands Bosworth on 18th January
2004, both pilots were killed. The report may be found at
http://www.aaib.gov.uk/sites/aaib/cms_resources/HCD.pdf , it runs to 21
pages.

W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.).
Remove "ic" to reply.



  #2  
Old January 13th 05, 08:18 PM
Don Johnstone
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I would urge all instructors to read the report carefully,
paying particular attention to the recomendations made
by the AAIB with regard to spin entry and abandonment
heights.

At 19:30 13 January 2005, W.J. \bill\ Dean \u.K.\.
wrote:
The Air Accidents Investigation Branch of the Department
for Trade have now
published their report on the accident at Husbands
Bosworth on 18th January
2004, both pilots were killed. The report may be
found at
http://www.aaib.gov.uk/sites/aaib/cms_resources/HCD.pdf
, it runs to 21
pages.

W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.).
Remove 'ic' to reply.







  #3  
Old January 13th 05, 08:29 PM
Stewart Kissel
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A very thorough report...don't see how the Puchasz
can be the culprit here....things that would concern
me a

1.) Spin entries are permitted at 1500', with an easy
spinning ship this does not give one a lot of leeway.

2.) Having an instructor with a bad ticker teaching
these manuevers.

3.) Combining (1) and (2) with a relatively green
trainee...who might not recognize when things head
south.

So although no blatant disregarding of rules happened,
it might be time to rethink a few issues.



At 19:30 13 January 2005, W.J. \bill\ Dean \u.K.\.
wrote:
The Air Accidents Investigation Branch of the Department
for Trade have now
published their report on the accident at Husbands
Bosworth on 18th January
2004, both pilots were killed. The report may be
found at
http://www.aaib.gov.uk/sites/aaib/cms_resources/HCD.pdf
, it runs to 21
pages.

W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.).
Remove 'ic' to reply.







  #4  
Old January 13th 05, 08:53 PM
Tony
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Posts: n/a
Default

Is this likely to result in JAR madical requirements for BGA instructors?


"W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.)." wrote in message
...
The Air Accidents Investigation Branch of the Department for Trade have
now
published their report on the accident at Husbands Bosworth on 18th
January
2004, both pilots were killed. The report may be found at
http://www.aaib.gov.uk/sites/aaib/cms_resources/HCD.pdf , it runs to 21
pages.

W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.).
Remove "ic" to reply.





  #5  
Old January 14th 05, 09:44 AM
Andrew Warbrick
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At 23:00 13 January 2005, T O D D P A T T I S T wrote:
Stewart Kissel
wrote:

A very thorough report...don't see how the Puchasz
can be the culprit here....


I read it and came away thinking the Puch was still
a
possible culprit.

How? As stated in the report the Puch spins readily
but recovers very easily. Quoted from the report:

'It can reasonably be concluded that the only control
mishandling of the PUCHACZ
that can lead to delay in spin exit is the retention
of full pro spin elevator…. '

It is actually difficult for us to teach proper spin
recover in the Puch simply because it recovers so easily.
You have to watch what rudder pedals are doing, common
problems a

1. Not removing pro spin rudder but moving the stick
forward (glider usually recovers).
2. Centralising the rudder and moving the stick forward
(glider pretty much always recovers).
3. Not removing opposite rudder promptly after spin
stops (danger of flicking the other way or overloading
the rudder).

The danger is that a pilot gets the impression 'all
I have to do to recover is relax the back pressure'
that'll kill you in a glider with genuinely nasty spin
recovery characteristics like the DG500.

1.) Spin entries are permitted at 1500', with an easy
spinning ship this does not give one a lot of leeway.


1500' should be enough, but the report indicated that
the
Puch was more difficult to recover than other trainers
and
implied that this might have contributed to the accident.



Eh? Where did it say that? It's easier to recover than
other trainers!

2.) Having an instructor with a bad ticker teaching
these manuevers.


Regardless of the advisability of instructing with
this
medical condition:

1) The instructor was still alive after the accident,
not
dead/incapacitated.

2) The instructor's legs were injured, and they seemed
to be
leg injuries consistent with conscious reaction to
the
imminent approach of the ground.

3.) Combining (1) and (2) with a relatively green
trainee...who might not recognize when things head
south.


The trainee's right leg was injured in a way the report
considered to be consistent with applying full opposite
rudder to the left spin.

They had made at least two successful full spin recoveries
prior to their final spin (perhaps more, the witnesses
didn't see the full flight).


Two or three full spins and recoveries down from 3000
to 1500' sounds about right, usually you have to have
at least a few seconds of debrief after each recovery
along the lines of 'you forgot this or that, try again'.
Personally I'm happy enough demonstrating a spin entry
and recovery at 1500' but I won't let the P2 initiate
the spin below 2000' except maybe if every entry and
recovery up to then has been 'textbook'. Having said
which, quite often at my club we can climb to 3200',
push out over flat ground, practice spinning down to
1800' then climb back up to 3200' on the ridge again
for another go.

Sure it's possible that they
did two correctly, and then screwed up. It's also
possible,
the instructor had a partial attack, slumped to block
the
stick, then recovered, etc. But the bottom line is
we still
don't know why.



I'm sorry, 'slumped to block the stick', the last time
I flew HCD (a long time ago admittedly) I'm pretty
sure it had a five point harness, how the heck do you
'slump to block the stick' wearing a five point harness?

I do, however, have to agree, we will never know exactly
what happened in this awful tragedy and any further
speculation over it is probably counter productive.


  #6  
Old January 14th 05, 11:26 AM
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Andrew Warbrick wrote:
At 23:00 13 January 2005, T O D D P A T T I S T wrote:
Stewart Kissel
wrote:

A very thorough report...don't see how the Puchasz
can be the culprit here....


I read it and came away thinking the Puch was still
a
possible culprit.

How? As stated in the report the Puch spins readily
but recovers very easily. Quoted from the report:

'It can reasonably be concluded that the only control
mishandling of the PUCHACZ
that can lead to delay in spin exit is the retention
of full pro spin elevator.... '

It is actually difficult for us to teach proper spin
recover in the Puch simply because it recovers so easily.
You have to watch what rudder pedals are doing, common
problems a

1. Not removing pro spin rudder but moving the stick
forward (glider usually recovers).
2. Centralising the rudder and moving the stick forward
(glider pretty much always recovers).
3. Not removing opposite rudder promptly after spin
stops (danger of flicking the other way or overloading
the rudder).

The danger is that a pilot gets the impression 'all
I have to do to recover is relax the back pressure'
that'll kill you in a glider with genuinely nasty spin
recovery characteristics like the DG500.

1.) Spin entries are permitted at 1500', with an easy
spinning ship this does not give one a lot of leeway.


1500' should be enough, but the report indicated that
the
Puch was more difficult to recover than other trainers
and
implied that this might have contributed to the accident.



Eh? Where did it say that? It's easier to recover than
other trainers!

2.) Having an instructor with a bad ticker teaching
these manuevers.


Regardless of the advisability of instructing with
this
medical condition:

1) The instructor was still alive after the accident,
not
dead/incapacitated.

2) The instructor's legs were injured, and they seemed
to be
leg injuries consistent with conscious reaction to
the
imminent approach of the ground.

3.) Combining (1) and (2) with a relatively green
trainee...who might not recognize when things head
south.


The trainee's right leg was injured in a way the report
considered to be consistent with applying full opposite
rudder to the left spin.

They had made at least two successful full spin recoveries
prior to their final spin (perhaps more, the witnesses
didn't see the full flight).


Two or three full spins and recoveries down from 3000
to 1500' sounds about right, usually you have to have
at least a few seconds of debrief after each recovery
along the lines of 'you forgot this or that, try again'.
Personally I'm happy enough demonstrating a spin entry
and recovery at 1500' but I won't let the P2 initiate
the spin below 2000' except maybe if every entry and
recovery up to then has been 'textbook'. Having said
which, quite often at my club we can climb to 3200',
push out over flat ground, practice spinning down to
1800' then climb back up to 3200' on the ridge again
for another go.

Sure it's possible that they
did two correctly, and then screwed up. It's also
possible,
the instructor had a partial attack, slumped to block
the
stick, then recovered, etc. But the bottom line is
we still
don't know why.



I'm sorry, 'slumped to block the stick', the last time
I flew HCD (a long time ago admittedly) I'm pretty
sure it had a five point harness, how the heck do you
'slump to block the stick' wearing a five point harness?

I do, however, have to agree, we will never know exactly
what happened in this awful tragedy and any further
speculation over it is probably counter productive.


Three statistics would be interesting to compare, although I doubt if
there is data for all of them.

1. Number of accidents and/or fatalities resulting from spin training.

2. Number of accidents and/or fatalities from accidents in which pilots
had previously undergone the above-mentioned spin training.

3. Number of spin recoveries resulting in accident avoidance from
pilots who had previously undergone the above-mentioned spin training.

I'm hoping that the lives saved through the spin recovery training far
exceeds the lives lost.

  #7  
Old January 14th 05, 02:18 PM
Andreas Maurer
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Default

On 14 Jan 2005 09:44:06 GMT, Andrew Warbrick
wrote:

How? As stated in the report the Puch spins readily
but recovers very easily.


It is actually difficult for us to teach proper spin
recover in the Puch simply because it recovers so easily.


Considering the sheer number of spin accidents with instructors on
board of Puchacz I dare to doubt that statement.

The danger is that a pilot gets the impression 'all
I have to do to recover is relax the back pressure'
that'll kill you in a glider with genuinely nasty spin
recovery characteristics like the DG500.


DG500 nasty spin recovery characteristics?
Which ones? I'm doing a lot of spin training in the DG-505 with 17.2m
wingtips and the spin behaviour is really nice.


Bye
Andreas
  #8  
Old January 14th 05, 04:13 PM
Andrew Warbrick
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At 15:00 14 January 2005, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On 14 Jan 2005 09:44:06 GMT, Andrew Warbrick
wrote:

How? As stated in the report the Puch spins readily
but recovers very easily.


It is actually difficult for us to teach proper spin
recovery in the Puch simply because it recovers so
easily.


Considering the sheer number of spin accidents with
instructors on

board of Puchacz I dare to doubt that statement.


Have you ever spun one? I will repeat myself, it recovers
from most spins with most cockpit loads if you let
go the stick, so on the majority of occasions the instructor
has to be vigilant that the pupil applies the correct
recovery or an incorrect recovery technique will have
been learnt.


The danger is that a pilot gets the impression 'all
I have to do to recover is relax the back pressure'
that'll kill you in a glider with genuinely nasty spin
recovery characteristics like the DG500.


DG500 nasty spin recovery characteristics?
Which ones? I'm doing a lot of spin training in the
DG-505 with 17.2m
wingtips and the spin behaviour is really nice.


Bye
Andreas


The DG-500 is fully compliant with JAR22 when the CofG
is within limits. When the CofG is near the aft limit
it requires the correct spin recovery to be applied,
in the correct order, or the ground will do the recovery
for you, it will continue to autorotate with the stick
on the front stop if you just heave the stick forward
without first centralising the ailerons and applying
full opposite rudder. It may be possible to recover
by applying the full opposite rudder after heaving
the stick forward but it will be a delayed recover
due to control surface masking.

A pilot who has acquired the impression from the Puch
that all is required is to let go or relax the back
pressure could be killed in this situation.



  #9  
Old January 14th 05, 05:34 PM
Andreas Maurer
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Default

On 14 Jan 2005 16:13:14 GMT, Andrew Warbrick
wrote:

Have you ever spun one? I will repeat myself, it recovers
from most spins with most cockpit loads if you let
go the stick, so on the majority of occasions the instructor
has to be vigilant that the pupil applies the correct
recovery or an incorrect recovery technique will have
been learnt.


Until now I have not even seen a Puchacz in real life - but the sheer
number of spin accidents with experienced pilots suggests that
something is wrong, don't you agree?

I wonder about "letting go the stick" and letting the glider recover
itself - is this really being taught as a procedure? We teach our
student pilots to center the stick, and apply opposite rudder - in
that order. Letting go the stick is an unknown procedure for me, I
have to admit.


The DG-500 is fully compliant with JAR22 when the CofG
is within limits. When the CofG is near the aft limit
it requires the correct spin recovery to be applied,
in the correct order, or the ground will do the recovery
for you, it will continue to autorotate with the stick
on the front stop if you just heave the stick forward
without first centralising the ailerons and applying
full opposite rudder. It may be possible to recover
by applying the full opposite rudder after heaving
the stick forward but it will be a delayed recover
due to control surface masking.


Hmm... looks like the missing 80 cm of wingspan on the 505 really seem
to make a difference here - our 505 recovers nicely even at fully aft
CG positions.


A pilot who has acquired the impression from the Puch
that all is required is to let go or relax the back
pressure could be killed in this situation.


I don't think this is the problem. A typical Puchacz spin accident has
the instructor onboard, and I'm pretty sure that most of these
instructors knew about the correct spin recovery procedure.

Here in Germany we also had our share of Puchacz spin accident. One
was a successful spin recovery that went into an opposite spin - the
IP was not able to recover the second spin before impact.



Bye
Andreas
  #10  
Old January 15th 05, 10:00 AM
Janusz Kesik
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Default


Uzytkownik "Andreas Maurer" napisal w wiadomosci
...
On 14 Jan 2005 16:13:14 GMT, Andrew Warbrick
wrote:

Have you ever spun one?



Until now I have not even seen a Puchacz in real life - but the sheer
number of spin accidents with experienced pilots suggests that
something is wrong, don't you agree?


Why doesn't it surprise me? Most of the pilots who write the worst opinions
on Puchacz never have flown it, or even seen it.

I don't think this is the problem. A typical Puchacz spin accident has
the instructor onboard, and I'm pretty sure that most of these
instructors knew about the correct spin recovery procedure.


I think that they're often crashed in spins just because they're most often
used ships for spin training. Just because they spin in a textbook way and
need a textbook recovery to get out of a spin, not only 'releasing the
stick' just like the Bocian or Junior.

Here in Germany we also had our share of Puchacz spin accident. One
was a successful spin recovery that went into an opposite spin - the
IP was not able to recover the second spin before impact.


Maybe they were too surprised by the fact that the glider entered another
spin due to inproper recovery action that they had lost a little bit too
much time.

Regards,


--
Janusz Kesik
Poland
to reply put my name.surname[at]gazeta.pl
-------------------------------------
See Wroclaw (Breslau) in photography,
The XIX Century, the Festung Breslau, and photos taken today.
http://www.wroclaw.dolny.slask.pl


 




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