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#1
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Saw the quote below in another thread regarding spoilers open while turning (it was actually in the comment section under the video ) and was wondering if anyone could comment? This is the proper spin recovery technique.
"The ASW 20 killed a number of pilots by spinning inverted out of a steep banked turn with positive flaps in thermals. They would go full stick forward and rudder against the apparent rotation in an effort to recover which simply held them in the spin. " |
#2
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 2:25:00 AM UTC-4, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
Saw the quote below in another thread regarding spoilers open while turning (it was actually in the comment section under the video ) and was wondering if anyone could comment? This is the proper spin recovery technique. "The ASW 20 killed a number of pilots by spinning inverted out of a steep banked turn with positive flaps in thermals. They would go full stick forward and rudder against the apparent rotation in an effort to recover which simply held them in the spin. Well, that's not the correct recovery techniques in *any* glider, is it? -Evan Ludeman / T8 |
#3
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'inverted' seems to be the key word.
At 11:41 02 June 2015, Tango Eight wrote: On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 2:25:00 AM UTC-4, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote: Saw the quote below in another thread regarding spoilers open while turning (it was actually in the comment section under the video ) and was wondering if anyone could comment? This is the proper spin recovery technique. "The ASW 20 killed a number of pilots by spinning inverted out of a steep banked turn with positive flaps in thermals. They would go full stick forward and rudder against the apparent rotation in an effort to recover which simply held them in the spin. Well, that's not the correct recovery techniques in *any* glider, is it? -Evan Ludeman / T8 |
#4
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 8:45:05 AM UTC-4, Greg O'Hagan wrote:
'inverted' seems to be the key word. Not correct technique for that, either. Next. -Evan Ludeman / T8 |
#5
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I know, perhaps that's why I said it?
In the UK we teach the recovery from an upright spin as follows: Full opposite rudder. Stick central and progressively forward until the spin stops. The stick may have to go all the way forward. When the spin stops, centralize the rudder and recover, carefully, from the resulting dive. The inverted spin recovery is a little different. Guess which bit? Note I have no experience of recovery from an inverted spin, however the following shows how its done. Note the position of the stick whilst maintaining the spin. Greg. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3Ung4gmrqSU At 14:02 02 June 2015, Tango Eight wrote: On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 8:45:05 AM UTC-4, Greg O'Hagan wrote: 'inverted' seems to be the key word. Not correct technique for that, either. Next. -Evan Ludeman / T8 |
#6
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If I am in a spin, I will do as taught and practiced, opposite rudder, stick forward, that is the proper spin recovery. Would you care to share your complete thought?
On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 4:41:08 AM UTC-7, Tango Eight wrote: Well, that's not the correct recovery techniques in *any* glider, is it? -Evan Ludeman / T8 |
#7
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In no glider I am familiar with, do spin recovery instructions include holding the stick "full forward". That's the potentially fatal error (not convinced this is a discussion based on things that really happened, but....)
In most modern gliders the drill is some version of 1) opposite rudder (& select neutral or negative flap setting in some types) until rotation ceases, 2) completely relax all back pressure on stick, possibly adding a little forward movement to break the stall, 3) recover from the resulting dive. Unless a home built, there's a POH. It's usually a good place to start! FWIW, my 20B is delightfully well behaved with modern winglets. A little less so with factory tips if the CG is near aft limit. The POH recommended procedures work just fine. -Evan Ludeman / T8 On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 9:59:03 AM UTC-4, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote: If I am in a spin, I will do as taught and practiced, opposite rudder, stick forward, that is the proper spin recovery. Would you care to share your complete thought? On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 4:41:08 AM UTC-7, Tango Eight wrote: Well, that's not the correct recovery techniques in *any* glider, is it? -Evan Ludeman / T8 |
#8
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Not a glider but, as the T-33a transitioned from a tail slide to an end
over end tumble, I applied the Dash One out of control procedu Throttle - Idle Ailerons and Rudder - Neutral Stick - Full Aft The aircraft shook and shuddered and transitioned into an inverted spin. The flight manual made no distinction between upright and inverted spins so I continued the above procedure into the spin recovery procedu Rudder - Opposite spin direction (look at the slip ball, not the trees, and keep the rudder against the spin) The aircraft transitioned into an erect spin (this I could handle!) Stick - Forward and neutralize rudder when the spin stops and recover from the dive. Watch out for that nasty secondary stall, the trees are getting closer! It's all about applying the correct controls for the situation and feeling the aircraft. Each aircraft has its quirks. If you're adventurous you should learn yours unless your flight manual prohibits such maneuvers. My LS-6 would roll over the top in a final turn stall, my LAK-17a is much more benign. On 6/2/2015 8:16 AM, Tango Eight wrote: In no glider I am familiar with, do spin recovery instructions include holding the stick "full forward". That's the potentially fatal error (not convinced this is a discussion based on things that really happened, but....) In most modern gliders the drill is some version of 1) opposite rudder (& select neutral or negative flap setting in some types) until rotation ceases, 2) completely relax all back pressure on stick, possibly adding a little forward movement to break the stall, 3) recover from the resulting dive. Unless a home built, there's a POH. It's usually a good place to start! FWIW, my 20B is delightfully well behaved with modern winglets. A little less so with factory tips if the CG is near aft limit. The POH recommended procedures work just fine. -Evan Ludeman / T8 On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 9:59:03 AM UTC-4, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote: If I am in a spin, I will do as taught and practiced, opposite rudder, stick forward, that is the proper spin recovery. Would you care to share your complete thought? On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 4:41:08 AM UTC-7, Tango Eight wrote: Well, that's not the correct recovery techniques in *any* glider, is it? -Evan Ludeman / T8 -- Dan Marotta |
#9
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On Tue, 02 Jun 2015 08:38:32 -0600, Dan Marotta wrote:
Not a glider but, as the T-33a transitioned from a tail slide to an end over end tumble, I applied the Dash One out of control procedu Throttle - Idle Ailerons and Rudder - Neutral Stick - Full Aft The aircraft shook and shuddered and transitioned into an inverted spin. The flight manual made no distinction between upright and inverted spins so I continued the above procedure into the spin recovery procedu Rudder - Opposite spin direction (look at the slip ball, not the trees, and keep the rudder against the spin) The aircraft transitioned into an erect spin (this I could handle!) Stick - Forward and neutralize rudder when the spin stops and recover from the dive. Watch out for that nasty secondary stall, the trees are getting closer! It's all about applying the correct controls for the situation and feeling the aircraft. Each aircraft has its quirks. If you're adventurous you should learn yours unless your flight manual prohibits such maneuvers. My LS-6 would roll over the top in a final turn stall, my LAK-17a is much more benign. Its interesting that nobody has mentioned what it said in the handbook for my ASW-20A: First action is to push flaps fully negative, then take normal spin recovery action (stick central, full opposite rudder), adding that the spin will very often stop when the flaps go negative. That is exactly what mine did. I haven't forgotten that instruction, though its 11 years since I last flew an ASW-20. I suspect a good reason for this instruction is that pushing the flaps has two immediate benefits: (1) it will help unstall the wing, which is why that, by itself can be enough to recover from the spin. (2) it sets VNE as high as possible, which never hurts where a steep dive is involved. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#10
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On Tuesday, June 2, 2015 at 2:25:00 AM UTC-4, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
Saw the quote below in another thread regarding spoilers open while turning (it was actually in the comment section under the video ) and was wondering if anyone could comment? This is the proper spin recovery technique. "The ASW 20 killed a number of pilots by spinning inverted out of a steep banked turn with positive flaps in thermals. They would go full stick forward and rudder against the apparent rotation in an effort to recover which simply held them in the spin. " Who exactly was able to determine whether the stick was pushed forward or back Certainly not the pilot, as he or she was allegedly "killed". |
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