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Our club has yet to try winching, though a half-dozen members have
experienced it elsewhere sometime across the last fifty years. Reading Piggot, I discover the command "All Out" for the beginning of the launch. Is this the customary command in other places besides England? Why this? What does it reall mean? At first I took it to mean "Everyone stand clear" or some such, but apparently it means "Give 'er the gun" in US slang. Does this Britishism have some colloquial meaning for them that doesn't exist elsewhere? Seems to me, such a command would be the same one a glider pilot who has no wing runner (aero retrieve from a landout) uses on the radio to tell a tow pilot to begin the launch after the rope is taut. I've heard, "Go, go, go." which I don't really like but can't say why. What have you heard? Anyone have any comments to offer? |
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On Apr 9, 8:15 am, Nyal Williams wrote:
Our club has yet to try winching, though a half-dozen members have experienced it elsewhere sometime across the last fifty years. Reading Piggot, I discover the command "All Out" for the beginning of the launch. Is this the customary command in other places besides England? Why this? What does it reall mean? At first I took it to mean "Everyone stand clear" or some such, but apparently it means "Give 'er the gun" in US slang. Does this Britishism have some colloquial meaning for them that doesn't exist elsewhere? Seems to me, such a command would be the same one a glider pilot who has no wing runner (aero retrieve from a landout) uses on the radio to tell a tow pilot to begin the launch after the rope is taut. I've heard, "Go, go, go." which I don't really like but can't say why. What have you heard? Anyone have any comments to offer? |
#3
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On Apr 9, 8:15*am, Nyal Williams wrote:
Our club has yet to try winching, though a half-dozen members have experienced it elsewhere sometime across the last fifty years. Reading Piggot, I discover the command "All Out" for the beginning of the launch. *Is this the customary command in other places besides England? *Why this? *What does it reall mean? *At first I took it to mean "Everyone stand clear" or some such, but apparently it means "Give 'er the gun" in US slang. Does this Britishism have some colloquial meaning for them that doesn't exist elsewhere? Seems to me, such a command would be the same one a glider pilot who has no wing runner (aero retrieve from a landout) uses on the radio to tell a tow pilot to begin the launch after the rope is taut. *I've heard, "Go, go, go." which I don't really like but can't say why. What have you heard? *Anyone have any comments to offer? As an expatriot Brit, "all out" to me means full speed - whether it's the winch or tow plane. Webster's New World Dictionary defines all out as "completely, wholeheartedly" Mike |
#4
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In the UK the commands for both aerotows and winch launches are 'Take up
slack' which means slowly take up any excess slack cable, followed by 'All out', which means that all the slack has been taken out and you now gun the throttle to start the launch. For winch launching we normally use light signals, which are a slow flashing white light for take up slack, followed by faster flashes for all out. Stop is a continuous light. However you can also use radio, if you can guarantee nobody stomping on a vital transmission, or as the Germans do, use a fixed land line telephone. If your winch run is fairly short and flat, you can also use a signalling bat. Derek Copeland At 15:15 09 April 2009, Nyal Williams wrote: Our club has yet to try winching, though a half-dozen members have experienced it elsewhere sometime across the last fifty years. Reading Piggot, I discover the command "All Out" for the beginning of the launch. Is this the customary command in other places besides England? Why this? What does it reall mean? At first I took it to mean "Everyone stand clear" or some such, but apparently it means "Give 'er the gun" in US slang. Does this Britishism have some colloquial meaning for them that doesn't exist elsewhere? Seems to me, such a command would be the same one a glider pilot who has no wing runner (aero retrieve from a landout) uses on the radio to tell a tow pilot to begin the launch after the rope is taut. I've heard, "Go, go, go." which I don't really like but can't say why. What have you heard? Anyone have any comments to offer? |
#5
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It's unique, because you want a unique signal for a unique situation.
"All Out" or "Full Power" are phrases that wouldn't be misconstrued. "NO" on the radio sounds very much like "GO". You should pull the yellow handle and use "STOP" but in the heat of the moment... Jim What was the film about skydiving where someone had a load of laundry instead of a chute, their friend found out, and wrote NO GO on the ground, but read upside down it looked like GO ON???? |
#6
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Nyal,
In our club in Germany, if I can remember, there were three commands. 1. Fertig (Ready, the pilot is ready to be launched.) 2. Seil straff (All of the slack is out of the cable) 3. Frei (The glider has cleared the ground) These commands were relayed to the winch operator via a "field telephone", the kind where you would turn the little crank to ring the bell on the other end of the line. In this club, winch launching was, and probably still is, the primary way of launching. They do A LOT of winching. I wonder if they have changed their ways and have different commands now. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA PS: Happy Winching! |
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On Apr 9, 8:15*am, Nyal Williams wrote:
What have you heard? *Anyone have any comments to offer? I was going to guess that it referred to the dampers on steam engine boilers but this reference http://www.answers.com/topic/all-out states the term has been in use since 1300. That obviously predates the steam engine, but perhaps not other flue dampers. Dampers can be rotary valves or sliding plates. Pulling a sliding plate flue damper "all out" gives maximum flue draw and the hottest fire. Andy |
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Ray,
Mine was the Belgian Air Force club in Cologne. They did it in Flemish or French and that was in 1954; I don't remember the commands. (Pulling strings got me, an American GI attached to the Belgian Army I Corps, into the club. At 16:16 09 April 2009, rlovinggood wrote: Nyal, In our club in Germany, if I can remember, there were three commands. 1. Fertig (Ready, the pilot is ready to be launched.) 2. Seil straff (All of the slack is out of the cable) 3. Frei (The glider has cleared the ground) These commands were relayed to the winch operator via a "field telephone", the kind where you would turn the little crank to ring the bell on the other end of the line. In this club, winch launching was, and probably still is, the primary way of launching. They do A LOT of winching. I wonder if they have changed their ways and have different commands now. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA PS: Happy Winching! |
#9
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On Apr 9, 9:31*am, Andy wrote:
*Pulling a sliding plate flue damper "all out" gives maximum flue draw and the hottest fire. On further reflection the term could have come from pipe organs where "stops" are pulled out to control airflow and hence sound volume. Pipe organs predate 1300. ref http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipe_organ There must be a reference to the origin somewhere on the internet but I didn't find it yet. Andy |
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Andy,
Funny you should metion that; I used to work on pipe organs, but this never occurred to me. I'm really interested to know the history of the phrase. At 16:54 09 April 2009, Andy wrote: On Apr 9, 9:31=A0am, Andy wrote: =A0Pulling a sliding plate flue damper "all out" gives maximum flue draw and the hottest fire. On further reflection the term could have come from pipe organs where "stops" are pulled out to control airflow and hence sound volume. Pipe organs predate 1300. ref http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pipe_organ There must be a reference to the origin somewhere on the internet but I didn't find it yet. Andy |
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