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Where is this happening? CO? (Yes I looked for this info on the website.)
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On 09/01/2018 11:46 AM, son_of_flubber wrote:
Where is this happening? CO? (Yes I looked for this info on the website.) LLC is registered in Bend, OR |
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On Sunday, September 2, 2018 at 7:43:29 AM UTC-5, gotovkotzepkoi wrote:
Germans have had an electric winch for a long time. Nothing now. Don't hold your breath for one built in the US. Won't happen. Charge with an internal combustion engine? What's the point? Why not just use a piston engine for the winch then? -- gotovkotzepkoi Dear goto, I listened to Bill Daniels' presentation on his new electric winch at Reno and was highly impressed with the innovative and technically convincing design and features. As a German trained engineer and someone who has done thousands of winch launches of gliders and who was trained on a winch my hopes are high that this project is successful. The Bill Daniels winch allows for electric, diesel or gas powered versions, btw. Educate yourself before spewing off under a not-funny pseudonym! Herb |
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The German winch can be found he http://www.startwinde.de/
I know one club in the Netherlands using it. I only heared good comments. They have a battery pack on board and feedercables in the airfield, below the grass. |
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On Sun, 02 Sep 2018 09:15:40 -0600, Dan Marotta wrote:
Didn't the German winch require being hooked up to the electrical grid? It seems the one currently under discussion would be self contained and portable (on the back of a truck). All the electric winch designs I know about (and I assume the new US design is similar) require three things: a power supply, a large electric motor and a battery bank to act as a buffer between the first two items. The German Electrowinde winch needs a 12-20 kw mains supply to feed a 220kw motor via its battery buffer, so the batteries aren't just for decoration. It seems to me that the winch motor and battery bank capacity will be much the same whether the winch is configured as a towable trailer, on a truck chassis or built into a permanent building: they all need the same three part power train and it really doesn't matter whether the power source is the mains, a COTS 12-12kw trailer generator parked alongside or a truck with all three items installed on it. A major issue for a mains-powered electric winch, in the UK anyway, is the cost of cabling the airfield. We looked at it some years back: there are four places were we put our winch - normally on one end of 04/22 and less often on one end of 16/34 (obviously this is wind dependent), so we'd need to wire up all four points on the field with buried cables, and the winch points for 34 and 22 are both around 1km from the club house and hence the nearest mains supply. Wiring our airfield would be quite expensive. Consequently, we've gone with a Skylaunch running on LPG (cheap and environmentally benign fuel). And we already had the tractor used to move it between garage and the day's winchpoint. What's the point? Why not just use a piston engine for the winch then? Because a (much) smaller engine driving a generator to keep the battery bank topped up is probably more economical to run than a socking great V8 being running intermittently at high power, particularly when you include the cost of wear and tear from temperature-cycling the big engine. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
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At 17:57 02 September 2018, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Sun, 02 Sep 2018 09:15:40 -0600, Dan Marotta wrote: Didn't the German winch require being hooked up to the electrical grid? It seems the one currently under discussion would be self contained and portable (on the back of a truck). All the electric winch designs I know about (and I assume the new US design is similar) require three things: a power supply, a large electric motor and a battery bank to act as a buffer between the first two items. The German Electrowinde winch needs a 12-20 kw mains supply to feed a 220kw motor via its battery buffer, so the batteries aren't just for decoration. It seems to me that the winch motor and battery bank capacity will be much the same whether the winch is configured as a towable trailer, on a truck chassis or built into a permanent building: they all need the same three part power train and it really doesn't matter whether the power source is the mains, a COTS 12-12kw trailer generator parked alongside or a truck with all three items installed on it. A major issue for a mains-powered electric winch, in the UK anyway, is the cost of cabling the airfield. We looked at it some years back: there are four places were we put our winch - normally on one end of 04/22 and less often on one end of 16/34 (obviously this is wind dependent), so we'd need to wire up all four points on the field with buried cables, and the winch points for 34 and 22 are both around 1km from the club house and hence the nearest mains supply. Wiring our airfield would be quite expensive. Consequently, we've gone with a Skylaunch running on LPG (cheap and environmentally benign fuel). And we already had the tractor used to move it between garage and the day's winchpoint. What's the point? Why not just use a piston engine for the winch then? Because a (much) smaller engine driving a generator to keep the battery bank topped up is probably more economical to run than a socking great V8 being running intermittently at high power, particularly when you include the cost of wear and tear from temperature-cycling the big engine. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org I hear there's an electric winch at the gliding club at Unterwossen in Germany. AIUI it is very fixed - in a concrete bunker. The site is in a valley on the edge of the Alps so launching is always in the same direction. I've wondered if the best way to launch is by gravity, a weight falling into a mine shaft and attached to the glider by a cable. If you have a supply of water then the weight is by filling a tank. At the end of the launch you dump the water, pull the much lighter tank back up, then refill it. Given enough room you could have a circular airfield round the mine shaft. The only energy that you need to supply is to retrieve the tank and cable. A few things to sort out but it's a start. Chris |
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On Sunday, September 2, 2018 at 5:43:29 AM UTC-7, gotovkotzepkoi wrote:
Germans have had an electric winch for a long time. Nothing now. Don't hold your breath for one built in the US. Won't happen. Charge with an internal combustion engine? What's the point? Why not just use a piston engine for the winch then? -- gotovkotzepkoi It is why all locomotives are diesel-electric: you get full torque at zero RPM, no transmission is required, and line tension and acceleration are easily controlled. Of course, the engine can be much smaller as the winch time is a small percentage of clock time. Tom |
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I find all this stuff sexy, in Australia we all live in a bit of a fantasy of energy, we export our LPG, Coal and Oil like it’s going out of fashion and the “green” movements of our parties ensure that subsidies and grants are available to clubs and organisations for being green. My home club of Kingaroy would be a perfect site to go for a huge grant for four elec whinches 2xmain and 2x retrieve. The runway area is 2000m x100m of grass right next to a bitumen runway, there is power available within 200m of both winch sites. The only problem is the fact that it’s a certified runway with probably 1-2 private movements per hour, so the local Shire council are unlikely to approve winching. It’s a pity as there is a coal mine 20km away and there is a planned coal mine next to the airstrip and we have elections soon. If there was ever a time to pitch an alternative to burning smelly dinosaur bones and reducing the noise foot print for our solar powered sport now is it
![]() I guess the panacea is to have an electric winch next to a battery bank powered by solar panels. In Australia this is feesable given the space and sunshine, BUT here is the crux - it’s battery technology. The future will have elec self launch gliders, elec tow planes, elec winches and all of this will be powered by a battery system that is dual use. The batteries will be in runway edges, house bricks and other structural items not just a battery. You will wake up in your house that is a storage facility hooked to the grid, most of the time you will be a next exporter of energy. Jump in your electric car and drive up to the field. Unplug your elec self launch Libelle and plug your car in, your hangar will have a storage battery bank in the wall bricks. Tow your glider out to the runway with your elec golf cart and launch into the wild blue yonder with your retractable self launch system with prop goverening. Once airborne you will go find a big fat thermal and redeploy your self launch prop mast and reverse the prop to recharge your batteries thereby extending your range. The next type of comps will be range comps that will allow much greater distances and speeds, perhaps one day we will see solar panels on wings that can feed power to the battery system built into the composite fibres. Fly until sunset and head to the clubhouse for a beer. I just don’t understand why so many on here are negative to people trying to improve things, because let’s face it if we don’t improve things our sport is dead. Justin Quote:
Last edited by Skypilot : September 2nd 18 at 10:13 PM. |
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