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#19
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Similarly, landing on a hard (tar) runway with the wheel locked will give the
pilot the opportunity to purchase one of those expensive white stripes. On many single seaters if the pilot lets the nose touch the tar no amount of back on the stick is going to help till there is a significant amount of speed and gell coat reduction. Martin Gregorie wrote: Cats wrote: On Jan 11, 1:33 pm, Martin Gregorie wrote: snip There are or were about 4 Juniors in the USA. Williams Soaring had one in which I flew in 2001. It was the nicest Junior I've seen: in excellent condition and retro-fitted with a hydraulic brake which actually worked without binding. The brake activation was by applying full air brake rather than the usual lever on the front of the air brake handle. That would be nice. Wish my glider could have that! You've got the brake lever on the stick same as a Libelle, haven't you? That works for me. The one snag with the air brake deployment with a tail dragger is when you're going for a short field landing on wet grass. If the wheel is locked when you touch down a variety of interesting things might happen including but not limited to sliding into the far hedge. One of our Discii nearly got totaled in similar circumstances - very wet field, pilot landing toward hard things, hit the brake and locked up the wheel which caused it to aquaplane. The Williams Junior was operated off a hard runway, so this wasn't an issue. In any case, as I'm sure you know, standard Junior brakes are digital - either they don't work at all or they drag when off and stand it on its nose when used. The brake lever on air brake handle is a bit awkward too. Not that this bothers me - I think I've used them about twice in well over 50 landings: properly held off they don't run far at all. Mainly it was nice to fly a Junior with a good, progressive wheel brake. |
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