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#1
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I'm wondering if anyone regularly rolls gliders
down a cliff for launch. I was thinking that a suitable slope off the edge of a cliff would work just as well as any tow/winch/auto/bungee/rotax. And if there is reliable lift nearby, you can come back and land. I know this is commonly done with hang gliders, but haven't heard of a location that does this with gliders. Maybe somewhere in the Sierras or Alps or something like that? Any of you Europeans heard of something like this regularly used for gliders? I'm thinking of a place where you launch, then find lift, do some circles, and then come back and land. |
#2
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![]() Mark James Boyd wrote in message news:3f7f48f1$1@darkstar... I'm wondering if anyone regularly rolls gliders down a cliff for launch. I was thinking that a suitable slope off the edge of a cliff would work just as well as any tow/winch/auto/bungee/rotax. And if there is reliable lift nearby, you can come back and land. I know this is commonly done with hang gliders, but haven't heard of a location that does this with gliders. Maybe somewhere in the Sierras or Alps or something like that? Any of you Europeans heard of something like this regularly used for gliders? I'm thinking of a place where you launch, then find lift, do some circles, and then come back and land. At the Midland Gliding Club in the UK they still bungee launch when the conditions are suitable. Back in the 70's I regularly launched this way. On one occasion the ring was not properly inserted into the (recessed) tow hook on my Dart 17r even though a check indicated that it was. The 6 man launch team stretched out the bungee ( 3 each side on the Y shape) and I had rolled forward about six feet when the ring came off the hook. Unable to stop as the glider rolled on down the rapidly steepening hill, the launching crew threw themselves down as my wings passed over them. The glider rolled down the hill slowly accelerating until a bump threw us in the air. With a lot of forward stick I dived into the valley until it was safe to pull back and climb away in the lift. The wind on the ridge was probably about 20/25 knots so flying speed was attained fairly quickly. Its not something I would like to repeat though. |
#3
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Check out Mike Sandlin's "Bug" and "Goat" ultralight gliders. He is
regularly doing a rolling launch from the same sites that hang gliders use. http://home.att.net/~mikesandlin/bug_in_action.htm http://home.att.net/~m-sandlin/goat.htm RF Mark James Boyd wrote: I'm wondering if anyone regularly rolls gliders down a cliff for launch. I was thinking that a suitable slope off the edge of a cliff would work just as well as any tow/winch/auto/bungee/rotax. And if there is reliable lift nearby, you can come back and land. I know this is commonly done with hang gliders, but haven't heard of a location that does this with gliders. Maybe somewhere in the Sierras or Alps or something like that? Any of you Europeans heard of something like this regularly used for gliders? I'm thinking of a place where you launch, then find lift, do some circles, and then come back and land. |
#4
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Mark James Boyd napisal(a):
I'm wondering if anyone regularly rolls gliders down a cliff for launch. I was thinking that a suitable slope off the edge of a cliff would work just as well as any tow/winch/auto/bungee/rotax. And if there is reliable lift nearby, you can come back and land. I know this is commonly done with hang gliders, but haven't heard of a location that does this with gliders. Maybe somewhere in the Sierras or Alps or something like that? Any of you Europeans heard of something like this regularly used for gliders? I'm thinking of a place where you launch, then find lift, do some circles, and then come back and land. It has been done regularly (provided proper wind direction&speed) at the famous Bezmiechowa airfield in southern Poland. In 2001 we went there with a group of friends from the Aeroklub Poznanski to try it out. The weather was perfect for the task. 3 days, many, many flights (Bocian, Puchacz, SZD-55) - GRAVITY LAUNCHES ONLY. No winch, no towplane, no bungee, no release. See my start in SZD-55; http://www.aeroklub.poznan.pl/szybow...ez01/bez09.htm or an animation on a "Bocian"'s launch... http://www.aeroklub.poznan.pl/szybow...ez01/bez22.htm or the whole picture story of the expedition starting he http://www.aeroklub.poznan.pl/szybow...ez01/bez01.htm and to continue click the 'unvisited' link to the right of the thumbnails... Note the wind strength on the trees and on the windsock. Just one turn after being airborne was enough to get higher than the start point and above the heads of those down on the ground. Unforgettable! Not to mention the NIGHT RIDGE SOARING from a gravity launch on a "Bocian"... No kidding. BTW: Why "the famous Bezmiechowa airfield"? Alone in 1939 about 400 glider pilots were trained there. Check FAI files for pre-war records flown from Bezmiechowa: 1938-5-18 Tadeusz Gora in a cross country flight between Bezmiechowa and Wilno achieved distance of 577.8 km in recognition of which FAI awarded him the first ever Lilienthal Medal. 1937-5-14 Miss Wanda Modlibowska finished her 24h 14 min flight which set a new duration record. In the links above, old historic pictures are added to give an idea what Bezmiechowa used to be until the total distruction in WWII. Slowly being rebuilt in recent years - very far away from its former glamour. Tomasz Sielicki |
#5
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clic this link :
http://www.alisport.com/photo/movie_eng.mpg "Mark James Boyd" a écrit dans le message de news: 3f7f48f1$1@darkstar... I'm wondering if anyone regularly rolls gliders down a cliff for launch. I was thinking that a suitable slope off the edge of a cliff would work just as well as any tow/winch/auto/bungee/rotax. And if there is reliable lift nearby, you can come back and land. I know this is commonly done with hang gliders, but haven't heard of a location that does this with gliders. Maybe somewhere in the Sierras or Alps or something like that? Any of you Europeans heard of something like this regularly used for gliders? I'm thinking of a place where you launch, then find lift, do some circles, and then come back and land. |
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