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In May 1-th - the day we got in to the EU - a Blanik broke in the middle of the flight. Possible
reason - overspeed on spin exit. Possible cause for overspeed - not known yet. Pilot exited, but too low and parachute had no time for opening. Sad story with sad ending. We have one glider pilot and one of our best kept Blaniks less. I was in the air with Blanik as well in the same day in another club (my Jantar was sitting on the ground, waiting for eleron repair). The day was fantastic. Cloudbase 7500 ft and usual lift was 8-10 knots. Something better can hardly be found in Estonia. Regards, Kaido www.purilend.ee |
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On Mon, 3 May 2004 10:05:14 +0300, "iPilot"
wrote: In May 1-th - the day we got in to the EU - a Blanik broke in the middle of the flight. Possible reason - overspeed on spin exit. Possible cause for overspeed - not known yet. Pilot exited, but too low and parachute had no time for opening. Sad story with sad ending. We have one glider pilot and one of our best kept Blaniks less. I was in the air with Blanik as well in the same day in another club (my Jantar was sitting on the ground, waiting for eleron repair). The day was fantastic. Cloudbase 7500 ft and usual lift was 8-10 knots. Something better can hardly be found in Estonia. Regards, Kaido www.purilend.ee We had one of those with a Blanik in Australia a few years ago, two fatal. Spin training, no parachutes being worn. Story is the spin turned to spiral, overspeed, fuselage bent/twisted preventing control. Glider shed major parts on way down before hitting ground. Mike Borgelt |
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![]() "Mike Borgelt" wrote in message ... We had one of those with a Blanik in Australia a few years ago, two fatal. Spin training, no parachutes being worn. Story is the spin turned to spiral, overspeed, fuselage bent/twisted preventing control. Glider shed major parts on way down before hitting ground. Mike Borgelt No parachutes? How's that possible. We have parachutes on sailplanes mandatory. As well as radios. That didn't help in this case, though, but parachute would have helped if the pilot had jumped earlier. I think that the requirements to wear parachute and use radio are important in case of sailplanes. Reasoning: 1. We fly most of our flights close to the flyability limits of the glider (close to stall speed and sometimes close to Vne). 2. We fly pretty much close together and glider is very "invisible" in sky at some angles I personally would feel very uncomfortable in glider without parachute. |
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a picture can be found he http://www.sloleht.ee/index.aspx?r=1...5.04&id=156372
"iPilot" wrote in message ... In May 1-th - the day we got in to the EU - a Blanik broke in the middle of the flight. Possible reason - overspeed on spin exit. Possible cause for overspeed - not known yet. Pilot exited, but too low and parachute had no time for opening. Sad story with sad ending. We have one glider pilot and one of our best kept Blaniks less. I was in the air with Blanik as well in the same day in another club (my Jantar was sitting on the ground, waiting for eleron repair). The day was fantastic. Cloudbase 7500 ft and usual lift was 8-10 knots. Something better can hardly be found in Estonia. Regards, Kaido www.purilend.ee |
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On Tue, 4 May 2004 12:08:13 +0300, "iPilot"
wrote: "Mike Borgelt" wrote in message .. . We had one of those with a Blanik in Australia a few years ago, two fatal. Spin training, no parachutes being worn. Story is the spin turned to spiral, overspeed, fuselage bent/twisted preventing control. Glider shed major parts on way down before hitting ground. Mike Borgelt No parachutes? How's that possible. We have parachutes on sailplanes mandatory. As well as radios. That didn't help in this case, though, but parachute would have helped if the pilot had jumped earlier. I think that the requirements to wear parachute and use radio are important in case of sailplanes. Reasoning: 1. We fly most of our flights close to the flyability limits of the glider (close to stall speed and sometimes close to Vne). 2. We fly pretty much close together and glider is very "invisible" in sky at some angles I personally would feel very uncomfortable in glider without parachute. I agree with you 100%. Unfortunately our national body for gliding likes to make lots of rules and "supervise" everyone while ignoring basic safety requirements. Mike Borgelt |
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