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#1
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Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread
runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. As the Phoebus pilot pointed out a tail chute is ideal for this - providing that it can be made to actuate and jettison reliably. (I found the design used on the Kestrel particularly good and I never once had a failure for landing use) On the other hand they are expensive and inconvenient to replace and there are several ways that they can fail. So can anyone think of a better idea than a chute? The best I can come up with is some sort of flush fitted rectangular-with the-long-edge-horizontal rear hinged airbrakes (like old fashioned automobile suicide doors) located on the fuselge sides somewhere in the region below or below/behind the wings. If they opened to about 45 degrees with a spring actuator (and limited by sliding metal stays that hinge/attach to the front of the panel and whose inner ends slid along in runners) then they would provide a lot of drag without any deep internal mechanism (such as wing airbrakes have). Once they have done their job the rear end of the brakes could be released by a spring loaded mechanism similar to the front end so that the brakes would then instantly spring to as position set out from and parallel to the fuselage so that there would be very little drag - only that provided by the stays at both ends and the brake panels edge on to the wind. That configuration would be good enough to fly home with. It would only be possible to reset these brakes on the ground and they would not replace conventional wing airbrakes for approach control - although they could have a secondary use for emergency approach control. I am envisaging something the could be included in new designs although there does not seem to be any obvious reason why such a device could not be retrofitted as a fairly major modification. The contours of the brake panels would be specific to the individual fuselage type but the mechanism could be generic. The assembly would be fairly shallow and complete within itself apart from e.g. a cable release attachment. I am not advocating a technical solution to this problem in place of spin recovery practice but I do think that there must be something that the combined intellects of the gliding community can come up with other than observing that if we get into that particular overspeeding/steep attitude condition we are stuffed. Anyone got any simpler or better ideas? I am definitely not an engineer. John Galloway |
#2
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I'd vote for the tail 'chute.
It has been approved before, it has other uses than in a near Vne incident, the modification is relatively easy and it's light weight. True, it's not 100% reliable but neither are the personal 'chutes we wear yet they are deemed very useful. Bill Daniels "John Galloway" wrote in message ... Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. As the Phoebus pilot pointed out a tail chute is ideal for this - providing that it can be made to actuate and jettison reliably. (I found the design used on the Kestrel particularly good and I never once had a failure for landing use) On the other hand they are expensive and inconvenient to replace and there are several ways that they can fail. So can anyone think of a better idea than a chute? The best I can come up with is some sort of flush fitted rectangular-with the-long-edge-horizontal rear hinged airbrakes (like old fashioned automobile suicide doors) located on the fuselge sides somewhere in the region below or below/behind the wings. If they opened to about 45 degrees with a spring actuator (and limited by sliding metal stays that hinge/attach to the front of the panel and whose inner ends slid along in runners) then they would provide a lot of drag without any deep internal mechanism (such as wing airbrakes have). Once they have done their job the rear end of the brakes could be released by a spring loaded mechanism similar to the front end so that the brakes would then instantly spring to as position set out from and parallel to the fuselage so that there would be very little drag - only that provided by the stays at both ends and the brake panels edge on to the wind. That configuration would be good enough to fly home with. It would only be possible to reset these brakes on the ground and they would not replace conventional wing airbrakes for approach control - although they could have a secondary use for emergency approach control. I am envisaging something the could be included in new designs although there does not seem to be any obvious reason why such a device could not be retrofitted as a fairly major modification. The contours of the brake panels would be specific to the individual fuselage type but the mechanism could be generic. The assembly would be fairly shallow and complete within itself apart from e.g. a cable release attachment. I am not advocating a technical solution to this problem in place of spin recovery practice but I do think that there must be something that the combined intellects of the gliding community can come up with other than observing that if we get into that particular overspeeding/steep attitude condition we are stuffed. Anyone got any simpler or better ideas? I am definitely not an engineer. John Galloway |
#3
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Now I'm second thinking myself.
If the devices proposed added 20 pounds to the glider, wouldn't those same 20 pounds added as carbon fiber pultrusion rods in the spar caps increase both the ultimate load factor and Vne enough to resolve the problem in a better way? Bill Daniels (again) "Bill Daniels" wrote in message ... I'd vote for the tail 'chute. It has been approved before, it has other uses than in a near Vne incident, the modification is relatively easy and it's light weight. True, it's not 100% reliable but neither are the personal 'chutes we wear yet they are deemed very useful. Bill Daniels "John Galloway" wrote in message ... Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. As the Phoebus pilot pointed out a tail chute is ideal for this - providing that it can be made to actuate and jettison reliably. (I found the design used on the Kestrel particularly good and I never once had a failure for landing use) On the other hand they are expensive and inconvenient to replace and there are several ways that they can fail. So can anyone think of a better idea than a chute? The best I can come up with is some sort of flush fitted rectangular-with the-long-edge-horizontal rear hinged airbrakes (like old fashioned automobile suicide doors) located on the fuselge sides somewhere in the region below or below/behind the wings. If they opened to about 45 degrees with a spring actuator (and limited by sliding metal stays that hinge/attach to the front of the panel and whose inner ends slid along in runners) then they would provide a lot of drag without any deep internal mechanism (such as wing airbrakes have). Once they have done their job the rear end of the brakes could be released by a spring loaded mechanism similar to the front end so that the brakes would then instantly spring to as position set out from and parallel to the fuselage so that there would be very little drag - only that provided by the stays at both ends and the brake panels edge on to the wind. That configuration would be good enough to fly home with. It would only be possible to reset these brakes on the ground and they would not replace conventional wing airbrakes for approach control - although they could have a secondary use for emergency approach control. I am envisaging something the could be included in new designs although there does not seem to be any obvious reason why such a device could not be retrofitted as a fairly major modification. The contours of the brake panels would be specific to the individual fuselage type but the mechanism could be generic. The assembly would be fairly shallow and complete within itself apart from e.g. a cable release attachment. I am not advocating a technical solution to this problem in place of spin recovery practice but I do think that there must be something that the combined intellects of the gliding community can come up with other than observing that if we get into that particular overspeeding/steep attitude condition we are stuffed. Anyone got any simpler or better ideas? I am definitely not an engineer. John Galloway |
#4
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As regards tail chutes - I personally would be very
happy indeed if I could get a new glider for my personal use supplied with a tail chute and I have extolled their virtues as emergency devices several times previously on RAS. Unfortunately the fact is that there is a history practical problems with reliability - especially in club gliders and syndicates. (When I owned my own Kestrel I took the chute home after each flight, repacked it, and kept it in the airing cupboard to make sure it was dry. The Kestrel also had an excellent spring loaded actuator and a reliable mini-otfur type of release for jettisoning. I was very confident in it.) Unfortunately I just don't see tailchutes being put on to gliders as emergency speed limiting devices partly because the manufacturers would likely feel legally exposed by the inclusion of such hit or miss, owner-maintenance-dependent items for such a critical application. I started to think about whether there could be a more reliable hardware rather than fabric alternative device tailored more towards emergency speed control than approach control and the best I could come up with was what was in in the last posting. BTW I don't think that what I hand in mind would add anything like 20lbs a pair to the glider weight. My main motivation in starting this thread was to guage and encourage the support for the inclusion of off-wing emergency speed limiting devices and whatever turns out to be the best option has my support. As gliders get slippier and wings get thinner and design margins get tighter and average pilot ages and reaction times increase we either have to seek technical help or accept that numbers over VNE accidents are going to increase. Nothing will happen without recognition that there is a need and customer demand for a solution. John Galloway At 00:24 29 March 2004, Bill Daniels wrote: Now I'm second thinking myself. If the devices proposed added 20 pounds to the glider, wouldn't those same 20 pounds added as carbon fiber pultrusion rods in the spar caps increase both the ultimate load factor and Vne enough to resolve the problem in a better way? Bill Daniels (again) 'Bill Daniels' wrote in message ... I'd vote for the tail 'chute. It has been approved before, it has other uses than in a near Vne incident, the modification is relatively easy and it's light weight. True, it's not 100% reliable but neither are the personal 'chutes we wear yet they are deemed very useful. Bill Daniels 'John Galloway' wrote in message ... Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. As the Phoebus pilot pointed out a tail chute is ideal for this - providing that it can be made to actuate and jettison reliably. (I found the design used on the Kestrel particularly good and I never once had a failure for landing use) On the other hand they are expensive and inconvenient to replace and there are several ways that they can fail. So can anyone think of a better idea than a chute? The best I can come up with is some sort of flush fitted rectangular-with the-long-edge-horizontal rear hinged airbrakes (like old fashioned automobile suicide doors) located on the fuselge sides somewhere in the region below or below/behind the wings. If they opened to about 45 degrees with a spring actuator (and limited by sliding metal stays that hinge/attach to the front of the panel and whose inner ends slid along in runners) then they would provide a lot of drag without any deep internal mechanism (such as wing airbrakes have). Once they have done their job the rear end of the brakes could be released by a spring loaded mechanism similar to the front end so that the brakes would then instantly spring to as position set out from and parallel to the fuselage so that there would be very little drag - only that provided by the stays at both ends and the brake panels edge on to the wind. That configuration would be good enough to fly home with. It would only be possible to reset these brakes on the ground and they would not replace conventional wing airbrakes for approach control - although they could have a secondary use for emergency approach control. I am envisaging something the could be included in new designs although there does not seem to be any obvious reason why such a device could not be retrofitted as a fairly major modification. The contours of the brake panels would be specific to the individual fuselage type but the mechanism could be generic. The assembly would be fairly shallow and complete within itself apart from e.g. a cable release attachment. I am not advocating a technical solution to this problem in place of spin recovery practice but I do think that there must be something that the combined intellects of the gliding community can come up with other than observing that if we get into that particular overspeeding/steep attitude condition we are stuffed. Anyone got any simpler or better ideas? I am definitely not an engineer. John Galloway |
#5
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Sounds like a call to go back to an earlier 15 meter design spec that
required full speed limiting device - flaps, spoilers, brakes, chute or combination thereof. As a 303 pilot, I'm of course partial to the trailing edge brake/flap combination. The manual says they can be deployed up to VNE (and pragmatically, why not even faster--what the heck you're already a test pilot....). I've opened them and pointed the ship nearly vertical and didn't quite reach manuevering speed. Never popped them open at at anything above pattern speed--the manual warns of a 2g deceleration if abruptly deployed @ VNE. Brent "John Galloway" wrote in message ... Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. As the Phoebus pilot pointed out a tail chute is ideal for this - providing that it can be made to actuate and jettison reliably. (I found the design used on the Kestrel particularly good and I never once had a failure for landing use) On the other hand they are expensive and inconvenient to replace and there are several ways that they can fail. So can anyone think of a better idea than a chute? The best I can come up with is some sort of flush fitted rectangular-with the-long-edge-horizontal rear hinged airbrakes (like old fashioned automobile suicide doors) located on the fuselge sides somewhere in the region below or below/behind the wings. If they opened to about 45 degrees with a spring actuator (and limited by sliding metal stays that hinge/attach to the front of the panel and whose inner ends slid along in runners) then they would provide a lot of drag without any deep internal mechanism (such as wing airbrakes have). Once they have done their job the rear end of the brakes could be released by a spring loaded mechanism similar to the front end so that the brakes would then instantly spring to as position set out from and parallel to the fuselage so that there would be very little drag - only that provided by the stays at both ends and the brake panels edge on to the wind. That configuration would be good enough to fly home with. It would only be possible to reset these brakes on the ground and they would not replace conventional wing airbrakes for approach control - although they could have a secondary use for emergency approach control. I am envisaging something the could be included in new designs although there does not seem to be any obvious reason why such a device could not be retrofitted as a fairly major modification. The contours of the brake panels would be specific to the individual fuselage type but the mechanism could be generic. The assembly would be fairly shallow and complete within itself apart from e.g. a cable release attachment. I am not advocating a technical solution to this problem in place of spin recovery practice but I do think that there must be something that the combined intellects of the gliding community can come up with other than observing that if we get into that particular overspeeding/steep attitude condition we are stuffed. Anyone got any simpler or better ideas? I am definitely not an engineer. John Galloway |
#6
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On 28 Mar 2004 22:53:07 GMT, John Galloway
wrote: Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. Well, I have to admit that as fine as your solution sounds - it will only be the cure for an extremely small part of all glider accidents. How big is the fraction of overspeed/overG accidents after a spin recovery that went wrong? 0.1 percent? 0.2 percent? Certainly not higher - the only inflight breakups in such a situation I ever heard of were the ASW-22 prototype (1981), the eta and the US Nimbus, the first two being test flights of prototypes. In the 22 case it was clear that the airframe would break up before the flight beacuse it was not designed for the load factors that were created by extreme asymmetrical water ballast load. Bert Willing also exceeded the design limits of a 26 meter glider, but his glider survived the incident without damage. Investing a very small part of the costs for such a device in, say, three spin-training flights per year, is probably going to make things a lot safer. I think the money is far better invested in a rescue system, be it NOAH, bei it Soteira (which I prefer), or be it a BRS. A rescue system will be able to safe the pilot in a lot more cases than a strong airbrake. Bye Andreas |
#7
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There was also the U.K. based Nimbus 4 in Spain.
The ASW20CL on 11th January 1987 was an overspeed accident. It did not break up, control was lost and it hit the ground at very high speed. I should have thought there was a case for an optional tail chute on machines such as the big Nimbus and perhaps the Duo Discus, it was fitted to the Janus and the Nimbus 2. The ASW17 was available with a belly chute. W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove "ic" to reply. "Andreas Maurer" wrote in message ... On 28 Mar 2004 22:53:07 GMT, John Galloway wrote: Through the contributions to the avoiding VNE thread runs the theme of the difficulty of avoiding overspeeding and/or overstressing some modern designs in accidental spin recovery. This is made more difficult than in older composite gliders because they had a little more drag and a little more (fortuitous) margin in the g limits. Is it not blindingly obvious that there is a need for an emergency drag device that does not reduce the G limits of gliders? Clearly if we all handled the recovery from inadvertent spins etc perfectly all would be well but equally clearly that does not always happen and it is a shame to lose pilots in this situation. Well, I have to admit that as fine as your solution sounds - it will only be the cure for an extremely small part of all glider accidents. How big is the fraction of overspeed/overG accidents after a spin recovery that went wrong? 0.1 percent? 0.2 percent? Certainly not higher - the only inflight breakups in such a situation I ever heard of were the ASW-22 prototype (1981), the eta and the US Nimbus, the first two being test flights of prototypes. In the 22 case it was clear that the airframe would break up before the flight because it was not designed for the load factors that were created by extreme asymmetrical water ballast load. Bert Willing also exceeded the design limits of a 26 meter glider, but his glider survived the incident without damage. Investing a very small part of the costs for such a device in, say, three spin-training flights per year, is probably going to make things a lot safer. I think the money is far better invested in a rescue system, be it NOAH, bee it Soteira (which I prefer), or be it a BRS. A rescue system will be able to safe the pilot in a lot more cases than a strong airbrake. Bye Andreas |
#8
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On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 23:50:20 +0100, "W.J. \(Bill\) Dean \(U.K.\)."
wrote: There was also the U.K. based Nimbus 4 in Spain. This makes it 4 accidents in the last 23 years. ![]() The ASW20CL on 11th January 1987 was an overspeed accident. It did not break up, control was lost and it hit the ground at very high speed. Interesting case - is there a detailed rport available online? I should have thought there was a case for an optional tail chute on machines such as the big Nimbus and perhaps the Duo Discus, it was fitted to the Janus and the Nimbus 2. The ASW17 was available with a belly chute. I agree 100% - a tail chute (or better a belly chute) might be a good idea. I would not regard it as a primary Vne-avoidance device, but rather a useful help to keep the speed down after an inflight breakup (e-g. after a collision with loss of wing or tail), giving the pilot more time to get out and maybe even stabilizing the falling wreckage. Bye Andreas |
#9
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I am afraid not.
I do not know whether this accident was investigated direct by the AAIB or whether it was delegated to the BGA, but in either case U.K. accidents as far back as that are not on-line. W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove "ic" to reply. "Andreas Maurer" wrote in message ... On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 23:50:20 +0100, "W.J. \(Bill\) Dean \(U.K.\)." wrote: snip The ASW20CL on 11th January 1987 was an overspeed accident. It did not break up, control was lost and it hit the ground at very high speed. snip Interesting case - is there a detailed rport available online? Bye Andreas |
#10
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Subject: Devices for avoiding VNE?
From: "W.J. \(Bill\) Dean \(U.K.\)." c Date: 30/03/2004 10:15 GMT Standard Time Message-id: I am afraid not. I do not know whether this accident was investigated direct by the AAIB or whether it was delegated to the BGA, but in either case U.K. accidents as far back as that are not on-line. W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove "ic" to reply. "Andreas Maurer" wrote in message ... On Mon, 29 Mar 2004 23:50:20 +0100, "W.J. \(Bill\) Dean \(U.K.\)." wrote: snip The ASW20CL on 11th January 1987 was an overspeed accident. It did not break up, control was lost and it hit the ground at very high speed. snip Interesting case - is there a detailed rport available online? Bye Andreas I don't know if this accident was the subject of a _formal_ AAIB investigation; I do know that one of their guys spent some time with the wreckage and talking to Schleicher, amongst others. From what I remember (I was at the airfield the day this happened but didn't witness the crash) the glider was observed to be hillsoaring and climbing in weak thermals near the site. Eyewitness say it departed from level flight (in what way I'm not sure) then went into a steepening dive from which it did not recover. The height it started the dive from was estimated at 1200-1600', which ties in with the speed it hit the ground. I don't remember if there was ever a 'probable cause' given but several factors were quoted post-investigation: a) The pilot was new to type and fairly inexperienced (in gliders). b) She was of quite light build. c) She was an experienced hang-glider pilot. d) The glider was being flown in comps. by another syndicate member and had been ballasted in the tail to take it close to the aft CG limit (when flown by her partner). There is/was plenty of fuel for the speculative fire but I don't think we'll ever know exactly why this happened... P.S. I think it was actually a ASW-20_B_L, not that it makes an incredible difference. |
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