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#1
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boy this group has changed unfortunately since i last checked it out.
what happened? where are the students? where's the V speed questions? ok. here's mine. tailwind landings... i read in aopa flight training an article that said that deflection is different in quartering tailwind while taxiing and while on short final. again, both quartering tailwind situations but one while taxiing and one on short final. what do you do on final? i know that while taxiing you dive away from the wind; i.e. if from back left you push yoke down and turn right..? thanks and i do hope the posts here go back to what they were. there are so many other places to post pilot stuff. it was good here when everything was just student questions and CFI's who care about teaching. |
#2
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![]() wrote in message ... boy this group has changed unfortunately since i last checked it out. what happened? where are the students? where's the V speed questions? rec.aviation.student |
#3
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#4
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) wrote:
thanks and i do hope the posts here go back to what they were. there are so many other places to post pilot stuff. it was good here when everything was just student questions and CFI's who care about teaching. LOL! You should have taken that left at Albuquerque. By not doing so you ended up in rec.aviation.piloting, not rec.aviation.student. -- Peter ----== Posted via Newsfeed.Com - Unlimited-Uncensored-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeed.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 100,000 Newsgroups ---= 19 East/West-Coast Specialized Servers - Total Privacy via Encryption =--- |
#5
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In article , G.R. Patterson III wrote:
That said, I won't be landing my Maule with a tailwind, quartering or otherwise. I don't really like doing it, but we did land in tailwinds routinely whilst towing gliders at one glider club I towed for. On busy days we'd do the downwind landing to cut turnaround time for the next tow. This was in a Pawnee. Fortunately, the field was grass and 300 feet wide which helped mitigate some of the groundloop risks. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#6
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Dylan Smith dylan wrote:
I don't really like doing it, but we did land in tailwinds routinely whilst towing gliders at one glider club I towed for. On busy days we'd do the downwind landing to cut turnaround time for the next tow. What gliderport is that?? At the gliderport where I fly, we have Pawnee tow planes and one paved and two dirt runways, no 300-ft-wide grass area like you described. The tow planes don't do downwind landings to save time, busy or not. If the glider in front of you takes a pattern tow, how much time is going to be saved by the tow plane doing a downwind landing? a minute? two MAYBE? if the glider in front of you takes a 3K-ft tow (that takes several minutes), the little time saved doing a downwind landing is insignificant anyway. I'm curious as to how "busy" it has to be to justify that? Are you talking about 3 gliders waiting to be towed? or 10? Either way, unless you have 10 people waiting in line *all day long*, how much time is really saved by doing a downwind landing vs. a conventional one? not to mention the obvious SAFETY issue -- if you have THAT many gliders ready to go that you're concerned about a minute or two of their "wait time", there are also going to be GLIDERS landing *into* the wind at the same time! Sounds like a recipe for disaster, just to maybe get a couple more tows in. Is a glider pilot going to refuse to wait the extra couple of minutes for the Pawnee to make a landing into the wind? I don't think so. Sad ... $$ is really always the bottom line motivator, huh? --Shirley |
#7
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![]() Dylan Smith wrote: This was in a Pawnee. It might be fine under the conditions you describe. Maule recommends against downwind landings, and I'm the one who pays the bills if I wreck it, so I will not be landing downwind under any foreseeable circumstances. George Patterson Love, n.: A form of temporary insanity afflicting the young. It is curable either by marriage or by removal of the afflicted from the circumstances under which he incurred the condition. It is sometimes fatal, but more often to the physician than to the patient. |
#8
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In article , Shirley wrote:
I'm curious as to how "busy" it has to be to justify that? Are you talking about 3 gliders waiting to be towed? or 10? Either way, unless you have 10 people waiting in line *all day long*, how much time is really saved by doing a downwind landing vs. a conventional one? It's quite common to have a full grid of gliders waiting to be launched for most of the day. Downwind landings are only done if the wind is less than 10 knots. The glider port isn't really a runway as such, it's a large graded cow pasture (probably the best part of a mile long, and at least 300 foot width usable). not to mention the obvious SAFETY issue -- if you have THAT many gliders ready to go that you're concerned about a minute or two of their "wait time", there are also going to be GLIDERS landing *into* the wind at the same time! Simultaneous landings are common. It's a judgement issue. So far, in over 20 years of operation, they have never had a tow plane accident. just to maybe get a couple more tows in. Is a glider pilot going to refuse to wait the extra couple of minutes for the Pawnee to make a landing into the wind? I don't think so. No - the tow plane gives way to gliders - just as the FARs say it should. Additionally, the tow plane tends to land on one side of the field and the gliders on the other. It's down to the tow pilot's judgement when to land and when a downwind landing is safe. They don't just blindly land regardless of what's going on on the ground. Not every glider club is suitable for these style of operations. I would never do a downwind landing intentionally in even 1 knot of tailwind at Andreas - it's hard surfaced and the Auster is a squirelly plane to land even in the best of conditions. Pawnees on the other hand have good over-the-nose visibility and are probably the easiest taildragger to land that I've ever set foot in. Sad ... $$ is really always the bottom line motivator, huh? It's a not-for-profit club, so I think not. Getting gliders in the air is the motivator, that's why the club exists. -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
#9
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"Dylan Smith" wrote in message
... In article , G.R. Patterson III wrote: That said, I won't be landing my Maule with a tailwind, quartering or otherwise. I don't really like doing it, but we did land in tailwinds routinely whilst towing gliders at one glider club I towed for. On busy days we'd do the downwind landing to cut turnaround time for the next tow. This was in a Pawnee. Fortunately, the field was grass and 300 feet wide which helped mitigate some of the groundloop risks. We'd do the same while towing banners; our field was 1800' long, with obstructions at one end. Just beyond the obstruction (our hanger) was a noise sensative area that we couldn't fly over. I'd always take off away from the hanger, even on a 100F day with a 10 knot tailwind, I'd STILL use less than half the runway (in a 160hp PA-12). Landings would USUALLY be towards the hanger, unless it was over 15 knots directly down the runway. One guy did get in trouble landing downwind early in the season when the field was more like a rice paddy than a runway, he didn't hold the stick back, and had the power back when he hit a mud puddle. It put him over on his nose. No injuries or major damage though, thank god. -- |
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