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#1
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I committed one of the worst errors - an incomplete preflight check.
I did not check the hotelier locks to the spoiler rods with enough care before takeoff. Coming into the pattern I extended the spoilers and noticed immediately that something was wrong. The glider (SparrowHawk) was pulling to one side and the rate of descent was not as much as I expected. However the glider was easily controllable. A few seconds and I saw that the right spoiler was not deploying. What to do? A couple of attempts to close and open the spoilers did not actuate the right spoiler. Then, oh well, lets check and see the effect of landing with only one spoiler. The situation was less dramatic than expected. Maximum sink rate was halved and the SparrowHawk needed some cross control to fly straight but no problem. The landing was easy and controllable. The lessons to be learnt from this are 2 fold: 1) landing a glider with only one spoiler should be easy for most pilots and 2) do a serious preflight inspection especially after assembly. Dave |
#2
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You did better than a very experienced local club member who had the
same problem many years ago in a DG300. He had one air brake open on tow, released early instead of gaining altitude and time, misjudged the approach and rolled it up in a ball. In the worst case you should be committed to an approach and landing with both airbrakes full open. Don't we practice that? Andy |
#3
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![]() Andy wrote: You did better than a very experienced local club member who had the same problem many years ago in a DG300. He had one air brake open on tow, released early instead of gaining altitude and time, misjudged the approach and rolled it up in a ball. In the worst case you should be committed to an approach and landing with both airbrakes full open. Don't we practice that? Andy |
#4
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Same thing happened to my partner in the ASW17/23m we had due to a
universal coupling failing at one of the rod ends in the left wing. Ground checked okay, but failed on final. Some damage to the wing underside and a hunt for parts, but we were flying the mighty 17 again before long. Rich |
#5
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rich schrieb:
Same thing happened to my partner in the ASW17/23m we had due to a universal coupling failing at one of the rod ends in the left wing. Ground checked okay, but failed on final. Some damage to the wing underside and a hunt for parts, but we were flying the mighty 17 again before long. Rich We had the same happen in a ASK-21 on final. Looked spectacular, but fortunately the rear-pilot was experienced enough to keep calm. Touchdown was a bit sideways but rather normal - no damage. Reason: after rigging the plane it was checked by someone who did not know the (then new) Hotelier connections on the '21. ouch... and the person he asked to check his work later forgot.... Cu around and happy landings! Markus |
#6
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On 21 Sep 2005 21:16:29 -0700, "Andy" wrote:
You did better than a very experienced local club member who had the same problem many years ago in a DG300. He had one air brake open on tow, released early instead of gaining altitude and time, misjudged the approach and rolled it up in a ball. Hmmm... the DG-300 has fully automatic control hookups for the flaps. How could that happen? Bye Andreas |
#7
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At 15:06 22 September 2005, Andreas Maurer wrote:
On 21 Sep 2005 21:16:29 -0700, 'Andy' wrote: You did better than a very experienced local club member who had the same problem many years ago in a DG300. He had one air brake open on tow, released early instead of gaining altitude and time, misjudged the approach and rolled it up in a ball. Hmmm... the DG-300 has fully automatic control hookups for the flaps. How could that happen? Bye Andreas The last DG300 I flew was standard Class, what flaps? |
#9
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I landed our ASW22A with one brake deployed. It had
been flown previously that day by my syndicate partner, without problem. Luckily I usually pop the brakes on the downwind or base leg just to check all is well. In this instance (at Dunstable) after a bang, the LHS brake deployed OK, but the RHS stayed down. There was a roll and yaw. I shut the brake(s) quickly looked again and the RHS was now open and LHS closed, with the opposite affect. Gulp, panic at thought of landing Open class without brakes, etc. Landing was just OK with a slight groundloop (stick forward and lots of brake (tail lifts, so no probs). The Hotelier for the brake had popped off after a previous flight. We used safetys after that with no further problems. 1) I still pop the brakes to check on base or final (and often just after settled into first climb). Cheap insurance. 2) On the assembly, I always give the Hoteliers a good tug to ensure they're WELL AND TRUELY connected. Stay safe. Pete. At 15:48 22 September 2005, Chris Rollings wrote: I recollect once watching someone land an ASW20 with only one brake deployed. The pilot didn't even notice there was a problem, just wondered why one wing dropped a little earlier than usual. Lucky, I would agree. At 04:12 22 September 2005, wrote: I committed one of the worst errors - an incomplete preflight check. I did not check the hotelier locks to the spoiler rods with enough care before takeoff. Coming into the pattern I extended the spoilers and noticed immediately that something was wrong. The glider (SparrowHawk) was pulling to one side and the rate of descent was not as much as I expected. However the glider was easily controllable. A few seconds and I saw that the right spoiler was not deploying. What to do? A couple of attempts to close and open the spoilers did not actuate the right spoiler. Then, oh well, lets check and see the effect of landing with only one spoiler. The situation was less dramatic than expected. Maximum sink rate was halved and the SparrowHawk needed some cross control to fly straight but no problem. The landing was easy and controllable. The lessons to be learnt from this are 2 fold: 1) landing a glider with only one spoiler should be easy for most pilots and 2) do a serious preflight inspection especially after assembly. Dave |
#10
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Guess I'm just unlucky as I've had this twice.
Many years ago in a Kestrel 19 the brake drive in one wing failed. Didn't even notice till I'd landed and saw one brake out and one in. Second time was test flying a club Grob Acro after C of A and rigging. It had some cosmetic work done on the brake slots. On the ground everything worked perfectly, it had a rigging check, DI, and 2 pre flights because we initially had a ground run cable break. On approach the brakes would not open, but did so after applying quite alot of pressure. In fact one opened and the other side wing pushrod bent. After repairs we tried again, after first getting a lot of people pushing up on the wings, the brakes were OK. Top of the launch, they would not open until we pushed over for some reduced G. It turned out that the cosmetic repairs had closed up the end gap which the caps need to move about 3 mm tipwise before opening, and the caps were jamming. It needed a lot of removal before they worked properly. The point is that there were no control problems whatsoever with one brake in and one out. Dave Salmon At 04:12 22 September 2005, wrote: I committed one of the worst errors - an incomplete preflight check. I did not check the hotelier locks to the spoiler rods with enough care before takeoff. Coming into the pattern I extended the spoilers and noticed immediately that something was wrong. The glider (SparrowHawk) was pulling to one side and the rate of descent was not as much as I expected. However the glider was easily controllable. A few seconds and I saw that the right spoiler was not deploying. What to do? A couple of attempts to close and open the spoilers did not actuate the right spoiler. Then, oh well, lets check and see the effect of landing with only one spoiler. The situation was less dramatic than expected. Maximum sink rate was halved and the SparrowHawk needed some cross control to fly straight but no problem. The landing was easy and controllable. The lessons to be learnt from this are 2 fold: 1) landing a glider with only one spoiler should be easy for most pilots and 2) do a serious preflight inspection especially after assembly. Dave |
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