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#1
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Yesterday I was making a stab at doing a 5 hour duration flight in a 1-34. I was wearing a 303 back pack from Strong as the back cushion and used the bottom seat cushion. I had a lumbar pad in the chute and felt comfy for about 45 minutes after take off. At one hour I knew I was gonna be hurting if I made 5 hours. I made 3.5 hours and could have stayed up another 1.5 easily, the lift was awesome although the bottoms kept getting in the way. I was a hurting puppy most of last night and fortunately have a number of physician friends who came thru for me on a Saturday. I will live.
The seat pan seems to be the problem to me. The three different segments with the transition from one to the other do not seem to be compatible with the human back. I'm thinking I could put all the astronaut foam and support in there but would still have a problem. Any ideas? Has anyone found a truly comfy way to configure this type of seat:? Walt |
#2
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I feel your pain!
the confor foam (Astronaut foam) is the best thing since sliced bread.....I won't fly without it! I have several vertsions of these foams on my website check them there under seat cushions and seat foam tim Please visit the Wings & Wheels website at www.wingsandwheels.com "Walt Connelly" wrote in message ... Yesterday I was making a stab at doing a 5 hour duration flight in a 1-34. I was wearing a 303 back pack from Strong as the back cushion and used the bottom seat cushion. I had a lumbar pad in the chute and felt comfy for about 45 minutes after take off. At one hour I knew I was gonna be hurting if I made 5 hours. I made 3.5 hours and could have stayed up another 1.5 easily, the lift was awesome although the bottoms kept getting in the way. I was a hurting puppy most of last night and fortunately have a number of physician friends who came thru for me on a Saturday. I will live. The seat pan seems to be the problem to me. The three different segments with the transition from one to the other do not seem to be compatible with the human back. I'm thinking I could put all the astronaut foam and support in there but would still have a problem. Any ideas? Has anyone found a truly comfy way to configure this type of seat:? Walt -- Walt Connelly __________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 5889 (20110219) __________ The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus. http://www.eset.com __________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 5889 (20110219) __________ The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus. http://www.eset.com |
#3
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On Feb 19, 5:14*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: Yesterday I was making a stab at doing a 5 hour duration flight in a 1-34. *I was wearing a 303 back pack from Strong as the back cushion and used the bottom seat cushion. *I had a lumbar pad in the chute and felt comfy for about 45 minutes after take off. *At one hour I knew I was gonna be hurting if I made 5 hours. I made 3.5 hours and could have stayed up another 1.5 easily, the lift was awesome although the bottoms kept getting in the way. *I was a hurting puppy most of last night and fortunately have a number of physician friends who came thru for me on a Saturday. *I will live. The seat pan seems to be the problem to me. The three different segments with the transition from one to the other do not seem to be compatible with the human back. *I'm thinking I could put all the astronaut foam and support in there but would still have a problem. *Any ideas? *Has anyone found a truly comfy way to configure this type of seat:? Walt -- Walt Connelly The problem I had in the 1-34 was that I couldn't raise the front of the seat to distribute my weight around my bottom to the back of my thighs evenly. So most of my weight was all right on my tail bone (coccyx area). After a flight of an hour or two I was really uncomfortable having to shift weight back and forth from "cheek" to "cheek". Afterwards I would be sore for a few days. I found that a dense wedge-shaped cushion for the seat pan helped tremendously. The thin part towards the back and the thicker part towards the front. That gave the seat pan a much more ergonomic shape following the curve of my bottom. I believe I also used a thin cushion for my lower back, but the wedge seat pan cushion was by far the most important. Once I had that setup correctly, longer duration flights were really pretty comfortable. Being uncomfortable in the cockpit is a distraction you definitely don't need. Schweizer obviously didn't put much emphasis on ergonomic design when they built the 1-34. Just wait til you fly something with pilot comfort as an integral part of the design. You'll love it! Even something as old as my LS1f has an excellent seat design. The LS cockpit might be small, but it's amazing how comfortable it is over long flights. |
#4
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On Feb 19, 11:54*pm, Westbender wrote:
On Feb 19, 5:14*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly. wrote: Yesterday I was making a stab at doing a 5 hour duration flight in a 1-34. *I was wearing a 303 back pack from Strong as the back cushion and used the bottom seat cushion. *I had a lumbar pad in the chute and felt comfy for about 45 minutes after take off. *At one hour I knew I was gonna be hurting if I made 5 hours. I made 3.5 hours and could have stayed up another 1.5 easily, the lift was awesome although the bottoms kept getting in the way. *I was a hurting puppy most of last night and fortunately have a number of physician friends who came thru for me on a Saturday. *I will live. The seat pan seems to be the problem to me. The three different segments with the transition from one to the other do not seem to be compatible with the human back. *I'm thinking I could put all the astronaut foam and support in there but would still have a problem. *Any ideas? *Has anyone found a truly comfy way to configure this type of seat:? Walt -- Walt Connelly The problem I had in the 1-34 was that I couldn't raise the front of the seat to distribute my weight around my bottom to the back of my thighs evenly. So most of my weight was all right on my tail bone (coccyx area). After a flight of an hour or two I was really uncomfortable having to shift weight back and forth from "cheek" to "cheek". Afterwards I would be sore for a few days. I found that a dense wedge-shaped cushion for the seat pan helped tremendously. The thin part towards the back and the thicker part towards the front. That gave the seat pan a much more ergonomic shape following the curve of my bottom. I believe I also used a thin cushion for my lower back, but the wedge seat pan cushion was by far the most important. Once I had that setup correctly, longer duration flights were really pretty comfortable. Being uncomfortable in the cockpit is a distraction you definitely don't need. Schweizer obviously didn't put much emphasis on ergonomic design when they built the 1-34. Just wait til you fly something with pilot comfort as an integral part of the design. You'll love it! Even something as old as my LS1f has an excellent seat design. The LS cockpit might be small, but it's amazing how comfortable it is over long flights.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Walt, The 1-34 is a great glider...way under rated. I fly the 1-34 a lot....did my gold badge, and distance diamonds etc...and some flights near 8 hours....By making some minor set up changes I could sleep all night in it! You're right about the FRONT of the seat pan... If you look under there, you should see two little "legs" made out of phenolic blocks. These legs lift the leading edge of the seat pan maybe 1/2" or so. Maybe these are missing..not even in there at all. What I did was to fabricate some longer legs from some hardwood (maple) so that the leading edge of the seat pan is lifted way up....like two inches, maybe three....(the more the better within reason).. Before I made these legs, I used to simply jam in some wood crossways under the leading edge of the seat to raise that leading edge of the seat pan. But I worried that it might slip out during flight and jam the stick. The idea is with the leading edge of the seat pan elevated, you can set the seat back to recline, and the weight load of your body is taken by the underside of the thighs.....weight is taken away from the tail bone and ass..... I also use a large lumbar pad....either between me and the parachute, or between the parachute and the seat....often I fly without parachute...Arching the back with the lumbar will also transfer load to the underside of the thighs and away from the ass.. The seat pan is curved like a half moon.....this does not fit my back.....I like an arch in my back....with the lumbar padding. Be sure to carefully set the headreast....not too far forward, not too far back.....having just slight support available for the head will relax everything else.... Learn how to change the rudder pedal setting during flight.....I like the rudders one notch closer during tow and the intiial part of the flight, then I move the rudder pedals one notch forward and recline slightly more for most of the flight...but change the setting sometimes just to "stretch" or add load to my feet and relax the back.... For cold weather, get a section of dense, almost shag carpet. Fabricate this carpet to go from the leading edge of the seat, to forward beyond the runnder pedals.....it should wrap upwards on each side of the fuselage. Its a little tricky to fit this in without conflict with the rudders and seat adjust cable and release cable, but can be done. It is a night and day difference in warmth when you don't have your legs touching the super cold aluminum fuselage skin. Hope some of these ideas will help! Cookie |
#5
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Hi Walt,
I can relate. Being quite tall, I've had many very uncomfortable glider flights. Perhaps that is why I sell CONFOR foam. It has been a very popular item. I use it in my glider and on my office chairs. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com/e-a-r.htm I wish I could speak to your particular glider layout, but I'm not sure I understand the exact configuration. Feel free to call me to discuss it. Best Regards, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. "Walt Connelly" wrote in message ... Yesterday I was making a stab at doing a 5 hour duration flight in a 1-34. I was wearing a 303 back pack from Strong as the back cushion and used the bottom seat cushion. I had a lumbar pad in the chute and felt comfy for about 45 minutes after take off. At one hour I knew I was gonna be hurting if I made 5 hours. I made 3.5 hours and could have stayed up another 1.5 easily, the lift was awesome although the bottoms kept getting in the way. I was a hurting puppy most of last night and fortunately have a number of physician friends who came thru for me on a Saturday. I will live. The seat pan seems to be the problem to me. The three different segments with the transition from one to the other do not seem to be compatible with the human back. I'm thinking I could put all the astronaut foam and support in there but would still have a problem. Any ideas? Has anyone found a truly comfy way to configure this type of seat:? Walt -- Walt Connelly |
#6
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Not that I have anything against the special foam....but...
The secret is to get the SHAPE of the seat to fit your body.....again on the 1-34 the deal is to get the weight supported by your legs... back side of the thighs.... and not have weight on your tail bone or butt. The secret is to get the leading edge of the seat "up". By now the "factory" cushions are like 40 years old, and are either long gone or in really bad shape. Correctly shaped cushions will help a lot too. Experiment "on the ground" with various seat positions, rudder positions and cushions until your are really comfortable. Once you set things shaped to fit, THEN add a layer of "space man foam" and you'll be really ready for a 12 hour flight, or a nap in the cockpit. Cookie |
#7
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I have to agree on getting the shape right, In installed a PIk20 copy
of a seatpan in my HP16. I could easily fly 3 hours sometimes before the seat started to get uncomfortable and I was sitting directly on the fiberglass seat pan. I added 1" Space Foam(sytle) to it and 6-7 hours is now easily doable. Brian |
#8
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On Feb 20, 1:08*pm, "
wrote: Not that I have anything against the special foam....but... The secret is to get the SHAPE of the seat to fit your body.....again on the 1-34 the deal is to get the weight supported by your legs... back side of the thighs.... and not have weight on your tail bone or butt. *The secret is to get the leading edge of the seat "up". By now the "factory" cushions are like 40 years old, and are either long gone or in really bad shape. *Correctly shaped cushions will help a lot too. Experiment "on the ground" with various seat positions, rudder positions and cushions until your are really comfortable. Once you set things shaped to fit, THEN add a layer of "space man foam" and you'll be really ready for a 12 hour flight, or a nap in the cockpit. Cookie Exactly right! |
#9
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Thanks for all the replies and advice. I will try to adjust the leading edge of the seat pan and go for some comfor or space foam. I might take the lumbar pad out of my chute for a while to see if that makes a difference. I think it was part of the problem causing a weight shift.
Walt |
#10
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![]() I have a "long" type of parachute. Where does the space foam go? Between me and the chute or between the chute and the fiberglass seat pan? Thanks for the clarification. |
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