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#1
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The Wikipedia article on Peter Masak is scheduled to be featured in
tomorrow's update of the "Did you know" section of the Wikipedia main page as follows: Did you know...that American inventor Peter Masak developed glider winglets for gliding competitions that helped him win a U.S. national championship, and became standard equipment on new high-performance sailplanes in less than 10 years? You can read (and update) the article he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Masak |
#2
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Doug Haluza wrote:
The Wikipedia article on Peter Masak is scheduled to be featured in tomorrow's update of the "Did you know" section of the Wikipedia main page as follows: You can read (and update) the article he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Masak Thanks for the link. A very interesting article. The following paragraph caught my attention: He flew a later version of this glider, with factory built Ventus 2 wings, in the 2004 U.S. 15 Meter Nationals gliding competition being held at Mifflin County Airport, the same contest he won 11 years earlier. While flying a competition task, he crashed in a syncline fold in the Tussey Mountain ridge, a few miles south of the village of Alexandria, Pennsylvania at 40°29.94'N 78°08.49'W. He was attempting to cross the ridge line upwind, and encountered sinking air and turbulence in the lee of the mountain crest, resulting in an inadvertent stall/spin.[7] The crash was not survivable, and he was killed on impact. [8] Having recently lost a friend in a similar accident, it emphasizes that crossing a ridge, especially against the wind, can be a very dangerous maneuver. You might do it many times without incident, but if you allow yourself to get at all close to the ground, there's the danger that some time the various factors will converge to get you just a bit closer. There's a probability distribution on how low you'll go, and you don't want to test the tail of the distribution. The conclusion is obvious, but also obviously overlooked too often: Large ground clearances are good; small ones are more dangerous than we think. I'd say the same applies to ridge soaring, but I know many will disagree with me, so I won't. Martin |
#3
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There are two points about what is thought to have happened to Peter Masak
and to others. 1./ Don't get caught out crossing a ridge (or by any of the many other mistakes open to us). 2./ If you do get caught out and a crash of some sort becomes unavoidable, DON'T STALL/SPIN. W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove "ic" to reply. wrote in message ups.com... Doug Haluza wrote: The Wikipedia article on Peter Masak is scheduled to be featured in tomorrow's update of the "Did you know" section of the Wikipedia main page as follows: You can read (and update) the article he http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peter_Masak Thanks for the link. A very interesting article. The following paragraph caught my attention: He flew a later version of this glider, with factory built Ventus 2 wings, in the 2004 U.S. 15 Meter Nationals gliding competition being held at Mifflin County Airport, the same contest he won 11 years earlier. While flying a competition task, he crashed in a syncline fold in the Tussey Mountain ridge, a few miles south of the village of Alexandria, Pennsylvania at 40°29.94'N 78°08.49'W. He was attempting to cross the ridge line upwind, and encountered sinking air and turbulence in the lee of the mountain crest, resulting in an inadvertent stall/spin.[7] The crash was not survivable, and he was killed on impact. [8] Having recently lost a friend in a similar accident, it emphasizes that crossing a ridge, especially against the wind, can be a very dangerous maneuver. You might do it many times without incident, but if you allow yourself to get at all close to the ground, there's the danger that some time the various factors will converge to get you just a bit closer. There's a probability distribution on how low you'll go, and you don't want to test the tail of the distribution. The conclusion is obvious, but also obviously overlooked too often: Large ground clearances are good; small ones are more dangerous than we think. I'd say the same applies to ridge soaring, but I know many will disagree with me, so I won't. Martin. |
#4
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That's great. Peter was great! --JHC
Doug Haluza wrote: The Wikipedia article on Peter Masak is scheduled to be featured in tomorrow's update of the "Did you know" section of the Wikipedia main page as follows: |
#5
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![]() W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). wrote: There are two points about what is thought to have happened to Peter Masak and to others. 1./ Don't get caught out crossing a ridge (or by any of the many other mistakes open to us). 2./ If you do get caught out and a crash of some sort becomes unavoidable, DON'T STALL/SPIN. W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). Remove "ic" to reply. You need to read the NTSB report for more background, the Wikipedia article is an abridged version. He was not crossing the ridge line directly, but was working a higher ridge line into the corner of a fold toward the lower ridge. The Wikipedia article has the coordinates, and they hotlink to a list of maps, so you can see the topographic and satellite views of the area. Anyway, he was not caught out where a crash was inevitable. There were good fields behind him near Alexandria, and he was high enough to reach them easily, and had enough room to turn around safely. But something happened to cause him to *inadvertently* stall/spin, with insufficient altitude for recovery. He was flying his very experimental glider with a Ventus B fuselage, Ventus 2 wings, and probably the tailplane of his own design. Since he was in competition, he probably set the C.G. far back near the aft limit, but with the experimental configuration, there was no factory defined limit, so who knows where it actually was. Only he knew what the stall characteristic of this configuration were. Tom Knauff retraced his flight track from the logger file in a touring motorglider, and commented that he probably would have done the same thing in the same situation, so although he was being aggressive, he was not being stupid. Had he made it, he would have probably won the day by a large margin, because he would have reached a distant W facing ridge nobody else did, which would have worked in the SW winds that day. |
#6
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A lot of opinions have been offered whether this was a stupid mistake,
or a tragic freak accident that could have happened to anyone. Thanks to previous posts, we can now decide for ourselves. Copy 40°29.94'N 78°08.49'W . paste into maps.google.com, click "satellite". A big green arrow will point to the location of the crash, and the hill Peter was ridge-soaring at the time. The wind was quite strong and from the SW -- basically straight down the main ridge at Mifflin, which did not work. I will always remember Peter as a great guy and a great pilot, and I'll remember the day of his accident with sadness. John Cochrane BB |
#7
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There are two tragedies in Peter's story, I think. The first is the
loss of someone who was, by all accounts I've heard, a thoroughly decent, generous and fine man. The second is the realization that even someone as experienced as Peter can be lost to a stall/spin. -John |
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