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#1
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The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in
not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Bill Daniels |
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On Sep 4, 2:55 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote:
The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Bill Daniels agreed Bill. When I was training in Marfa this is how I was taught and this is how I teach my students. the rope doesnt get hooked until CBSIFTCB is complete. |
#3
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On Sep 4, 2:48 pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 2:55 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Bill Daniels agreed Bill. When I was training in Marfa this is how I was taught and this is how I teach my students. the rope doesnt get hooked until CBSIFTCB is complete. E? |
#4
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On Sep 4, 4:06 pm, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Sep 4, 2:48 pm, wrote: On Sep 4, 2:55 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Bill Daniels agreed Bill. When I was training in Marfa this is how I was taught and this is how I teach my students. the rope doesnt get hooked until CBSIFTCB is complete. E?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - frank, i usually do WET - Wind, Emergency plan, and Traffic while the slack is coming out. while important, i can fly without them. i would think that when doing auto or winch launching you would probably want to have them done before hooking up. my only experience flying or teaching is with aerotow. |
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On Sep 4, 3:53 pm, wrote:
On Sep 4, 4:06 pm, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Sep 4, 2:48 pm, wrote: On Sep 4, 2:55 pm, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Bill Daniels agreed Bill. When I was training in Marfa this is how I was taught and this is how I teach my students. the rope doesnt get hooked until CBSIFTCB is complete. E?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - frank, i usually do WET - Wind, Emergency plan, and Traffic while the slack is coming out. while important, i can fly without them. i would think that when doing auto or winch launching you would probably want to have them done before hooking up. my only experience flying or teaching is with aerotow. Fair enough. |
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#7
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On Sep 4, 5:49 pm, John Smith wrote:
schrieb: frank, i usually do WET - Wind, Emergency plan, and Traffic while the slack is coming out. while important, i can fly without them. i would think that when doing auto or winch launching you would probably want to have them done before hooking up. my only experience flying or teaching is with aerotow. W & T agreed, but emergency plan? You could fly without an emergency plan? On the winch maybe, because the options are pretty straight forward and no brainers, but if I had a rope brake during an aerotow shortly after being airborne, I damned sure would want to have a complete emergency plan handy. yes, the glider will takeoff fine without an emergency plan. no it will not necessarily takeoff fine with the canopy open, airbrakes out, controls misrigged, ballast condition wrong etc. |
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On Tue, 04 Sep 2007 16:09:12 -0700, wrote:
yes, the glider will takeoff fine without an emergency plan. Bold, Sir. Bye Andreas |
#9
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On Sep 4, 11:49 pm, John Smith wrote:
W & T agreed, but emergency plan? You could fly without an emergency plan? On the winch maybe, because the options are pretty straight forward and no brainers If I had a penny for every pilot who thought that, then turned his glider into a really big lawn dart... Dan |
#10
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The Emergency Plan Tony refers to is the "what to do if the tow fails"
plan. There are many versions of this which I've reduced to, "Tow failure below 200 ft lower the nose and land ahead, above 200 lower the nose and land ahead or behind". This is a simple verbal reminder that a tow failure CAN happen along with the simple most basic issues of critical speed and altitude. Many pilots I fly with (here in the US) still say "above 200 feet land back at the airport" because this is what we practice and demonstrate. However, if the towplane wasn't hitting on all cylinders for a mile and a half when the rope goes slack there may not be any way to get back to the airport! All the 200 feet mark really means is that: below 200 there isn't sufficient altitude or time for turns and above 200 you may have time and altitude for brief decisive maneuvering. "Tow failure below 200 ft lower the nose and land ahead, above 200 lower the nose and land ahead or behind", is simple, brief and to the point. If you are at 300 when the tow fails you CAN turn around but you aren't pre-programmed to do so. You may have sufficient runway remaining ahead or have a nice pasture off to the side. I insist that the CBSIFTCB-WET is done OUT LOUD every time and the rope is not accepted until at least CBSIFTCB is completed in order without interuptions. Out loud, informs instructors, impresses passengers, and allows ground crew to participate in crew resource management. Just because we fly (mostly) single seat aircraft doesn't mean we can't benefit from CRM. A single seat glider taking off with a wing runner has at least 3 people working together. The pilot is in command of the airplane but each member can perceive, process, communicate, and affect the flight. The last checklist item T for traffic is a perfect opportunity to signal the ground crew to look around before you initiate the take-off. It takes only a couple of seconds and they can see a lot that you can't from the cockpit. Using CRM on the glider field is an easy and cheap way to enhance safety and participation not only on the flight line but during preflight, assembly, fueling, ground movements... Why not use all your resources? Matt Michael |
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