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I love to spin. It's exciting. I took aerobatic training with Wayne
Handley and was taught spin recoveries by him. I have direct experience spinning the Puchacz at Minden. This is what I remember from my experience. Your mileage may vary. With friends (usually lighter than me) in the front, I spun it while sitting in the back seat more than a dozen times. The CG was within the published range and I didn't have any trouble with simple recovery- stick centered and forward and rudder away from the direction of rotation. Worked great. I should mention that I used to be 50 lbs heavier than I am now, but still in the published range for the plane. During the training towards my instructors rating, I spun the Puch twice with my instructor. The first 2 or so rotation spin I was able to recover normally, no sweat. The second manuver was quite different. I was asked to let the spin develop a little deeper for the second. After 4 or so rotations, the nose seemed to float up and the rotation *seemed* to slow considerably. I remember thinking that this is cool! Kind of like floating. When it was time for the recovery I applied the control inputs I'd been taught (as specified above) and much to my surprise, nothing different happened.....for a long time. I estimate that we completed another 5+ rotations nose high before it broke, rolled over and recovered. I had the stick centered and against the front stop with the rudder also pegged away from the rotation. We recovered with several (4 or 5) thousand feet under us (we'd been playing at cloudbase at about 15K). Once on the ground, we discussed this incident in the grumpy bar for at least an hour. I (and he) decided to never spin the Puch again. I didn't. I doubt he did either. I had heard of this happening before. I assumed that it was from operation outside of the design envelope. Apparently I was wrong. John Shelton probably said it best: "On my own as a test pilot, I will certainly get killed". I felt like a dumb-ass for quite a while (more than usual) after that. |
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Tim Shea wrote:
I love to spin. It's exciting. I took aerobatic training with Wayne Handley and was taught spin recoveries by him. I have direct experience spinning the Puchacz at Minden. This is what I remember from my experience. Your mileage may vary. With friends (usually lighter than me) in the front, I spun it while sitting in the back seat more than a dozen times. The CG was within the published range and I didn't have any trouble with simple recovery- stick centered and forward and rudder away from the direction of rotation. Worked great. I should mention that I used to be 50 lbs heavier than I am now, but still in the published range for the plane. During the training towards my instructors rating, I spun the Puch twice with my instructor. The first 2 or so rotation spin I was able to recover normally, no sweat. The second manuver was quite different. I was asked to let the spin develop a little deeper for the second. After 4 or so rotations, the nose seemed to float up and the rotation *seemed* to slow considerably. I remember thinking that this is cool! Kind of like floating. When it was time for the recovery I applied the control inputs I'd been taught (as specified above) and much to my surprise, nothing different happened.....for a long time. I estimate that we completed another 5+ rotations nose high before it broke, rolled over and recovered. I had the stick centered and against the front stop with the rudder also pegged away from the rotation. We recovered with several (4 or 5) thousand feet under us (we'd been playing at cloudbase at about 15K). Once on the ground, we discussed this incident in the grumpy bar for at least an hour. I (and he) decided to never spin the Puch again. I didn't. I doubt he did either. I had heard of this happening before. I assumed that it was from operation outside of the design envelope. Apparently I was wrong. John Shelton probably said it best: "On my own as a test pilot, I will certainly get killed". I felt like a dumb-ass for quite a while (more than usual) after that. Anyone else spin the Puch for more than three turns? What happened (obviously you survived)? I've heard that some other aircraft also have a flatter spin mode that after several turns that is hard to recover from. Any knowledge of why this happens? (Now where's my copy of Stick and Rudder?) Shawn |
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If you were within the permitted CoG range, and used
the standard recovery method, the spin behaviour you described is definitely non-compliant with JAR 22 certification rules. JAR22.221 states that a sailplane certificated for intentional spinning must be able to recover from a fully developed spin (5 turns) within 1 turn after recovery action is done. This has to be demonstrated in several loading and control conditions. Additionally, this paragraph states that it must be impossible to obtain uncontrollable spins with any use of the controls. The Puchacz may not have been certificated to JAR 22, but possibly to the older OSTIV rules. However, I very much doubt that this type of behaviour would have been acceptable under older certification rules, although the verification/testing requirements might have been less strict in earlier days. Geir At 01:00 28 January 2004, Tim Shea wrote: I love to spin. It's exciting. I took aerobatic training with Wayne Handley and was taught spin recoveries by him. I have direct experience spinning the Puchacz at Minden. This is what I remember from my experience. Your mileage may vary. With friends (usually lighter than me) in the front, I spun it while sitting in the back seat more than a dozen times. The CG was within the published range and I didn't have any trouble with simple recovery- stick centered and forward and rudder away from the direction of rotation. Worked great. I should mention that I used to be 50 lbs heavier than I am now, but still in the published range for the plane. During the training towards my instructors rating, I spun the Puch twice with my instructor. The first 2 or so rotation spin I was able to recover normally, no sweat. The second manuver was quite different. I was asked to let the spin develop a little deeper for the second. After 4 or so rotations, the nose seemed to float up and the rotation *seemed* to slow considerably. I remember thinking that this is cool! Kind of like floating. When it was time for the recovery I applied the control inputs I'd been taught (as specified above) and much to my surprise, nothing different happened.....for a long time. I estimate that we completed another 5+ rotations nose high before it broke, rolled over and recovered. I had the stick centered and against the front stop with the rudder also pegged away from the rotation. We recovered with several (4 or 5) thousand feet under us (we'd been playing at cloudbase at about 15K). Once on the ground, we discussed this incident in the grumpy bar for at least an hour. I (and he) decided to never spin the Puch again. I didn't. I doubt he did either. I had heard of this happening before. I assumed that it was from operation outside of the design envelope. Apparently I was wrong. John Shelton probably said it best: 'On my own as a test pilot, I will certainly get killed'. I felt like a dumb-ass for quite a while (more than usual) after that. |
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![]() "Shawn Curry" wrote in message link.net... Tim Shea wrote: I love to spin. It's exciting. I took aerobatic training with Wayne Handley and was taught spin recoveries by him. I have direct experience spinning the Puchacz at Minden. This is what I remember from my experience. Your mileage may vary. With friends (usually lighter than me) in the front, I spun it while sitting in the back seat more than a dozen times. The CG was within the published range and I didn't have any trouble with simple recovery- stick centered and forward and rudder away from the direction of rotation. Worked great. I should mention that I used to be 50 lbs heavier than I am now, but still in the published range for the plane. During the training towards my instructors rating, I spun the Puch twice with my instructor. The first 2 or so rotation spin I was able to recover normally, no sweat. The second manuver was quite different. I was asked to let the spin develop a little deeper for the second. After 4 or so rotations, the nose seemed to float up and the rotation *seemed* to slow considerably. I remember thinking that this is cool! Kind of like floating. When it was time for the recovery I applied the control inputs I'd been taught (as specified above) and much to my surprise, nothing different happened.....for a long time. I estimate that we completed another 5+ rotations nose high before it broke, rolled over and recovered. I had the stick centered and against the front stop with the rudder also pegged away from the rotation. We recovered with several (4 or 5) thousand feet under us (we'd been playing at cloudbase at about 15K). Once on the ground, we discussed this incident in the grumpy bar for at least an hour. I (and he) decided to never spin the Puch again. I didn't. I doubt he did either. I had heard of this happening before. I assumed that it was from operation outside of the design envelope. Apparently I was wrong. John Shelton probably said it best: "On my own as a test pilot, I will certainly get killed". I felt like a dumb-ass for quite a while (more than usual) after that. Anyone else spin the Puch for more than three turns? What happened (obviously you survived)? I've heard that some other aircraft also have a flatter spin mode that after several turns that is hard to recover from. Any knowledge of why this happens? (Now where's my copy of Stick and Rudder?) Shawn OK, this is speculation. Remember the old spin-the-hammer trick from freshman physics? It seems solid objects don't like to spin around their long axis - they prefer to spin about their shortest. Imagine a glider with the CG in the middle of the allowed range but the mass distributed far away from the CG in heavy wings and long fuselage with a heavy load in the cockpit balanced with a weight in the tail. Might it tend to flatten and spin about the vertical axis? BTW, any time I feel a glider hesitate to recover from a spin, I'm going to throw full aileron into the spin. (As per the POH of most Eastern European gliders.) Bill Daniels Bill Daniels |
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You shouldn't spin more than 3 turns unless you're practicing for aerobatic
flight. In a case as you describe, application of full PRO-SPIN controls for a few seconds should have been performed prior to a second attempt at recovery. And recovery should be rudder and stick at the same time (as recomended by Dick Johnson after his testing) or with the Rudder leading the recovery by 1 second or so (as recomended by the Puchacz's POH). Commencing recovery with the Stick first is not recomended, and it may in fact retard recovery significantly. Also, chances are that you didn't have the stick and/or rudder against the stops, for simple reasons such as Trim not being Neutral (as recommended by the manual), or the Ailerons might not have been Neutral (as they should), or the CG may have been slightly off-limits. The same things would cause similar behaviour in any other modern training glider. In a regular spin, with 3 or less rotations, some of these things are less of an issue, but they have to be observed anyway. Recovery however has to be the same way in a fully developed spin : -Anti-spin rudder to the stop -After 1 second or less, release back pressure on the stick or even move it forward, all-the-way if you have to. Rotation should stop. If it doesn't, apply full pro-spin controls, verify the ailerons in neutral (stick not in any of the sides) and trim in neutral, then repeat recovery. "Tim Shea" wrote in message m... I love to spin. It's exciting. I took aerobatic training with Wayne Handley and was taught spin recoveries by him. I have direct experience spinning the Puchacz at Minden. This is what I remember from my experience. Your mileage may vary. With friends (usually lighter than me) in the front, I spun it while sitting in the back seat more than a dozen times. The CG was within the published range and I didn't have any trouble with simple recovery- stick centered and forward and rudder away from the direction of rotation. Worked great. I should mention that I used to be 50 lbs heavier than I am now, but still in the published range for the plane. During the training towards my instructors rating, I spun the Puch twice with my instructor. The first 2 or so rotation spin I was able to recover normally, no sweat. The second manuver was quite different. I was asked to let the spin develop a little deeper for the second. After 4 or so rotations, the nose seemed to float up and the rotation *seemed* to slow considerably. I remember thinking that this is cool! Kind of like floating. When it was time for the recovery I applied the control inputs I'd been taught (as specified above) and much to my surprise, nothing different happened.....for a long time. I estimate that we completed another 5+ rotations nose high before it broke, rolled over and recovered. I had the stick centered and against the front stop with the rudder also pegged away from the rotation. We recovered with several (4 or 5) thousand feet under us (we'd been playing at cloudbase at about 15K). Once on the ground, we discussed this incident in the grumpy bar for at least an hour. I (and he) decided to never spin the Puch again. I didn't. I doubt he did either. I had heard of this happening before. I assumed that it was from operation outside of the design envelope. Apparently I was wrong. John Shelton probably said it best: "On my own as a test pilot, I will certainly get killed". I felt like a dumb-ass for quite a while (more than usual) after that. |
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In article ,
Geir Raudsandmoen om wrote: If you were within the permitted CoG range, and used the standard recovery method, the spin behaviour you described is definitely non-compliant with JAR 22 certification rules. JAR22.221 states that a sailplane certificated for intentional spinning must be able to recover from a fully developed spin (5 turns) within 1 turn after recovery action is done. This has to be demonstrated in several loading and control conditions. Fine. Additionally, this paragraph states that it must be impossible to obtain uncontrollable spins with any use of the controls. But how on earth can that be demonstrated? No matter *what* you do, you can't get into an uncontrollable spin? But there are an infinite number of possible things you *might* do with the controls. They can't ALL be tested. -- Bruce |
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Shawn Curry wrote in message hlink.net...
Tim Shea wrote: I love to spin. Anyone else spin the Puch for more than three turns? What happened (obviously you survived)? I've heard that some other aircraft also have a flatter spin mode that after several turns that is hard to recover from. Any knowledge of why this happens? (Now where's my copy of Stick and Rudder?) Shawn The Puke will usually recover quickly within the first 3 or so turns, but it does go int a more stable, nose higher-type rotation after maybe 4 or 5. I've spun both the 55 and the 59 out of wave, maybe 15 turns or so, and experianced what Tandem Tim described. I also got into this mode in the 103 once, believe it or not, spinning it up over 17K. I believe it has most to do with the gyroscopic inertia that builds after a few turns. SInce I was plenty high, ( in each case) my first thought was to loosen the belts & lean forward, but I wanted to try control input first. I held full opposite rudder, and centered & full forward stick. In each case, they dropped through & recovered, but you had to sit through a few rev's just holding those inputs and Believe that it will eventually work. I was ready to try other options & inputs, but I wanted to see if the hold-it & wait method would work. It was a bit unnerving, the 103 went on for maybe 3 turns, the Puch maybe 4, and the 59 maybe 5 or 6. (I don't remember if I had the tips on) and I would never enter that mode again without 2 miles between me and the nearest planet, and a rented plane. If you instruct to fully developed rotation, start recovery in the Puch as soon as it falls through, or within 1 turn, and don't stick yer toes under the back seat pedals. I fully agree with putting the emphasis on incipiant recovery, tho I think there's value in training a pilot to remain calm & methodical in an unexpected emergancy event, when the world is spinning way faster than it should. For those up to it, it does a nice snap at 55~60, nose up a little, & full rudder, elevator & aileron. If you hold it all the way through, it comes around a second time with the nose real high. (Flame suite on for the safety nazis) Remember to live live at your own risk, Choose your level of involvement to be just under your ability, and remember... You've gotta be tough... If you're gonna be stupid. -Dan |
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The Puchacz WAS certified to JAR 22. When it was first
imported into the UK I repeated the tests, prior to the BGA granting it certification. The testing included five turns spins with the C of G at the manufacturers aft limit; recovery was normal in well under one turn. Having said that: 1. I once had a similar experience to the one described, when flight testing the Grob Twin II for BGA certification. Earlier spins at mid-range C of G had been typically Grob - self recovery after less than a turn. I expected that it would be just possible to hold it in at aft C of G. In fact the spin started to flatten after about two turns. I initiated recovery immediately, it took three turns to recover (I was considering abandoning the aircraft at that point). After lots of phone calls to the manufacturer (who said it had never happened in their testing), we resumed testing (Cautiously) and approached the aft C of G in small increments. Eventually we got to the C of G position at which I had had the problem - the spin was perfectly normal! So far I was aware, I had used exactly the same spin entry technique in both cases. Clearly there must have been some small difference (ailerons not quite central, or some such) that made an important difference. Whatever the cause, I couldn't get it to repeat, all subsequent spins were unremarkable. Rogue spins can happen, IN ANY TYPE. 2. The Puchacz described may have had some repair, or equipment change, that moved the C of G further aft, and this failed to get into the aircraft's records (appalling, I know, but it has happened). 3. The elevator deflections may have become mis-set, allowing greater upward deflection, and less downward. This can happen unintentionally, I don't know how, but it would very likely produce the result described. At 01:36 28 January 2004, Geir Raudsandmoen wrote: If you were within the permitted CoG range, and used the standard recovery method, the spin behaviour you described is definitely non-compliant with JAR 22 certification rules. JAR22.221 states that a sailplane certificated for intentional spinning must be able to recover from a fully developed spin (5 turns) within 1 turn after recovery action is done. This has to be demonstrated in several loading and control conditions. Additionally, this paragraph states that it must be impossible to obtain uncontrollable spins with any use of the controls. The Puchacz may not have been certificated to JAR 22, but possibly to the older OSTIV rules. However, I very much doubt that this type of behaviour would have been acceptable under older certification rules, although the verification/testing requirements might have been less strict in earlier days. Geir At 01:00 28 January 2004, Tim Shea wrote: I love to spin. It's exciting. I took aerobatic training with Wayne Handley and was taught spin recoveries by him. I have direct experience spinning the Puchacz at Minden. This is what I remember from my experience. Your mileage may vary. With friends (usually lighter than me) in the front, I spun it while sitting in the back seat more than a dozen times. The CG was within the published range and I didn't have any trouble with simple recovery- stick centered and forward and rudder away from the direction of rotation. Worked great. I should mention that I used to be 50 lbs heavier than I am now, but still in the published range for the plane. During the training towards my instructors rating, I spun the Puch twice with my instructor. The first 2 or so rotation spin I was able to recover normally, no sweat. The second manuver was quite different. I was asked to let the spin develop a little deeper for the second. After 4 or so rotations, the nose seemed to float up and the rotation *seemed* to slow considerably. I remember thinking that this is cool! Kind of like floating. When it was time for the recovery I applied the control inputs I'd been taught (as specified above) and much to my surprise, nothing different happened.....for a long time. I estimate that we completed another 5+ rotations nose high before it broke, rolled over and recovered. I had the stick centered and against the front stop with the rudder also pegged away from the rotation. We recovered with several (4 or 5) thousand feet under us (we'd been playing at cloudbase at about 15K). Once on the ground, we discussed this incident in the grumpy bar for at least an hour. I (and he) decided to never spin the Puch again. I didn't. I doubt he did either. I had heard of this happening before. I assumed that it was from operation outside of the design envelope. Apparently I was wrong. John Shelton probably said it best: 'On my own as a test pilot, I will certainly get killed'. I felt like a dumb-ass for quite a while (more than usual) after that. |
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Reading of these brave souls who have been testing the Puchaz spinning
characteristics with multi-turn spins at high altitudes reminds me of an anecdotal rumour which reached me about at least one other glider type, and I think also some power aircraft, which similarly misbehaved until many turns/it got lower. It made me wonder a few things: At the heights people here have been writing about - 10 to 17 thousand feet - what is the true airspeed at which it enters the spin on command and how does that differ from the lower altitude airspeed used for certification tests? Bear in mind also one poster's comments that a glider does not instantly cease forward motion and go instead into vertical motion with a rotational component - in the absence of infinite forces, the first is subject to some deceleration taking time and space, and the second some vertical acceleration taking time and height. Similarly, what is the true vertical velocity at onset and when stable in the spin? What is the ratio of those two velocities compared with the ratio at test air densities? Does the rotation rate remain identical, whether at height (lower air densities) or at lower altitude (higher density)? Does all that have an effect on true angle of attack? Could such things account for high altitude spins when fully developed requiring more turns to recover? I wonder if the people who conduct these high altitude tests were in a regime not tested by the maker or the certification test pilots such as Chris Rollings? Chris N. |
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