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#1
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I'm interested in learning how to get the maximum possible height on a
winch launch, without compromising safety in any way. This question has two parts really - how should the pilot fly the launch (pretty much how should he operate the elevator during the launch), how fast should the glider fly, and how should the winch driver feed the power in? For the sake of argument, let's assume the glider is a K13. For reference, I fly from an airfield with a 3,300' long cable, and the maximum height I achieve repeatedly is 1,700'. Headwind typically goes from around 10kts at the ground to something like (I estimate) 20kts at height. |
#2
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1) Listen to your instructor.
2) Do nothing different, you are already acheiving beyond average heights, changing your current habits is maybe looking for a problem. If I could get 1700 feet on 3300 feet of cable I would change absolutely nothing. Look no further. Bob Dan G wrote: I'm interested in learning how to get the maximum possible height on a winch launch, without compromising safety in any way. This question has two parts really - how should the pilot fly the launch (pretty much how should he operate the elevator during the launch), how fast should the glider fly, and how should the winch driver feed the power in? For the sake of argument, let's assume the glider is a K13. For reference, I fly from an airfield with a 3,300' long cable, and the maximum height I achieve repeatedly is 1,700'. Headwind typically goes from around 10kts at the ground to something like (I estimate) 20kts at height. |
#3
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If you join the Yahoo group "winchdesign" and look in the files section,
there are a series of truely excellent papers in the folder "Winch Dynamics and Performance" by George Moore. (soargsm) Essentially what George determened is that the major sensitivities a 1.Field length 2. Headwind 3. Cable tension as a percentage of glider flying weight. 4. Weight & drag of the cable There is very little extra height to be gained by agressive technique beyond just hitting your target airspeed and holding it there with smooth control inputs. This gives an angle of attack just slightly greater than that for best L/D. If you want help with this, put some AOA strings on the canopy sides and calibrate them for L/D max and Vmin sink. Of course, it goes without saying that you should never put yourself in danger by rotating into the climb so quickly that a recovery from a rope break is impossible. Smooth and accurate flying are what you want. So, if you want to get higher, get a longer field with more wind, replace steel with high strength Dyneema and get a winch that can accurately hold tension at 80 - 90% of the weak link. Bill Daniels "Dan G" wrote in message ups.com... I'm interested in learning how to get the maximum possible height on a winch launch, without compromising safety in any way. This question has two parts really - how should the pilot fly the launch (pretty much how should he operate the elevator during the launch), how fast should the glider fly, and how should the winch driver feed the power in? For the sake of argument, let's assume the glider is a K13. For reference, I fly from an airfield with a 3,300' long cable, and the maximum height I achieve repeatedly is 1,700'. Headwind typically goes from around 10kts at the ground to something like (I estimate) 20kts at height. |
#4
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Thanks Bill, that document is very interesting.
There is one thing in particular I am unsure about however - how much up elevator I should be putting in. With the K8, I fly the launch at 50-55kts with the stick fully back for perhaps the last 30% of the launch after smoothly transitioning from full forwards on the ground run through neutral once in the full climb, until I feel the glider being pulled level, when I relax the aft pressure in anticipation of putting the nose down to reuce cable tension prior to releasing. (This later movement often results in quite an increase in speed, which I convert to height after releasing. Is this an indication I'm releasing back pressure too early, or the winch driver not backing off the throttle enough?) With a K21, which winch drivers here (which includes me) are told to give "full power all the way up" from our Oldsmobile V8. Climb speed is at lesst 65kts and I'm reluctant to pull back too hard. Why? A K21 launches on a black weak link (1,000kg). I imagine full up elevator in a K21 would produce enough lift to break that at well below max winch speed, 81kts. Is there a way to calculate how much lifting force full up elevator should produce for any given airspeed? Or should I not be putting full up in? If not, just how far should I bring the stick back, and when? Bill Daniels wrote: If you join the Yahoo group "winchdesign" and look in the files section, there are a series of truely excellent papers in the folder "Winch Dynamics and Performance" by George Moore. (soargsm) Essentially what George determened is that the major sensitivities a 1.Field length 2. Headwind 3. Cable tension as a percentage of glider flying weight. 4. Weight & drag of the cable There is very little extra height to be gained by agressive technique beyond just hitting your target airspeed and holding it there with smooth control inputs. This gives an angle of attack just slightly greater than that for best L/D. If you want help with this, put some AOA strings on the canopy sides and calibrate them for L/D max and Vmin sink. Of course, it goes without saying that you should never put yourself in danger by rotating into the climb so quickly that a recovery from a rope break is impossible. Smooth and accurate flying are what you want. So, if you want to get higher, get a longer field with more wind, replace steel with high strength Dyneema and get a winch that can accurately hold tension at 80 - 90% of the weak link. Bill Daniels "Dan G" wrote in message ups.com... I'm interested in learning how to get the maximum possible height on a winch launch, without compromising safety in any way. This question has two parts really - how should the pilot fly the launch (pretty much how should he operate the elevator during the launch), how fast should the glider fly, and how should the winch driver feed the power in? For the sake of argument, let's assume the glider is a K13. For reference, I fly from an airfield with a 3,300' long cable, and the maximum height I achieve repeatedly is 1,700'. Headwind typically goes from around 10kts at the ground to something like (I estimate) 20kts at height. |
#5
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Dan, your questions concern me. Full up elevator is dangerous on a winch
launch. All modern trainers like ASK 21's or Grob 103's will fly an almost perfect launch without the pilot touching the controls if trim and winch power are right. Demonstrating hands off launches is a good start to winch training. (The take home lession is the launch will be nearly perfect if the pilot doesn't screw it up.) You should be using just enough elevator to keep the airspeed where you want it. (Typically 55 - 60 knots, depending on the glider) The basic principle is that the winch driver controlls power and the glider pilot controlls airspeed. If it requires large amounts of up elevator to control airspeed, signal for less power. As you point out, some gliders with high CG locations like a K8 will need nearly full down elevator from the start to control the natural pitch up. It shouldn't need much up elevator at all later. The winch driver should be slowly backing off the power as the glider approaches the top of the launch. Take a good look at George Moores charts that show cable tension - tension is a direct function of winch power. In any event, there's very little additional height that can be achieved late in the launch. Pulling hard near the top just loads up the glider and may break the weak link. (You are using the correct Tost weak links, right?) Suggestion: Get a copy of a good glider flight simulator like Condor and practice lauches on a computer. There's a lot to learn with a good sim. I use Condor as an "animated white board" when I teach winch ground school. Bill Daniels "Dan G" wrote in message oups.com... Thanks Bill, that document is very interesting. There is one thing in particular I am unsure about however - how much up elevator I should be putting in. With the K8, I fly the launch at 50-55kts with the stick fully back for perhaps the last 30% of the launch after smoothly transitioning from full forwards on the ground run through neutral once in the full climb, until I feel the glider being pulled level, when I relax the aft pressure in anticipation of putting the nose down to reuce cable tension prior to releasing. (This later movement often results in quite an increase in speed, which I convert to height after releasing. Is this an indication I'm releasing back pressure too early, or the winch driver not backing off the throttle enough?) With a K21, which winch drivers here (which includes me) are told to give "full power all the way up" from our Oldsmobile V8. Climb speed is at lesst 65kts and I'm reluctant to pull back too hard. Why? A K21 launches on a black weak link (1,000kg). I imagine full up elevator in a K21 would produce enough lift to break that at well below max winch speed, 81kts. Is there a way to calculate how much lifting force full up elevator should produce for any given airspeed? Or should I not be putting full up in? If not, just how far should I bring the stick back, and when? Bill Daniels wrote: If you join the Yahoo group "winchdesign" and look in the files section, there are a series of truely excellent papers in the folder "Winch Dynamics and Performance" by George Moore. (soargsm) Essentially what George determened is that the major sensitivities a 1.Field length 2. Headwind 3. Cable tension as a percentage of glider flying weight. 4. Weight & drag of the cable There is very little extra height to be gained by agressive technique beyond just hitting your target airspeed and holding it there with smooth control inputs. This gives an angle of attack just slightly greater than that for best L/D. If you want help with this, put some AOA strings on the canopy sides and calibrate them for L/D max and Vmin sink. Of course, it goes without saying that you should never put yourself in danger by rotating into the climb so quickly that a recovery from a rope break is impossible. Smooth and accurate flying are what you want. So, if you want to get higher, get a longer field with more wind, replace steel with high strength Dyneema and get a winch that can accurately hold tension at 80 - 90% of the weak link. Bill Daniels "Dan G" wrote in message ups.com... I'm interested in learning how to get the maximum possible height on a winch launch, without compromising safety in any way. This question has two parts really - how should the pilot fly the launch (pretty much how should he operate the elevator during the launch), how fast should the glider fly, and how should the winch driver feed the power in? For the sake of argument, let's assume the glider is a K13. For reference, I fly from an airfield with a 3,300' long cable, and the maximum height I achieve repeatedly is 1,700'. Headwind typically goes from around 10kts at the ground to something like (I estimate) 20kts at height. |
#6
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Bill Daniels wrote:
Dan, your questions concern me. Full up elevator is dangerous on a winch launch. All modern trainers like ASK 21's or Grob 103's will fly an almost perfect launch without the pilot touching the controls if trim and winch power are right. You should be using just enough elevator to keep the airspeed where you want it. (Typically 55 - 60 knots, depending on the glider) The basic principle is that the winch driver controlls power and the glider pilot controlls airspeed. If it requires large amounts of up elevator to control airspeed, signal for less power. As you point out, some gliders with high CG locations like a K8 will need nearly full down elevator from the start to control the natural pitch up. It shouldn't need much up elevator at all later. The winch driver should be slowly backing off the power as the glider approaches the top of the launch. Take a good look at George Moores charts that show cable tension - tension is a direct function of winch power. In any event, there's very little additional height that can be achieved late in the launch. Pulling hard near the top just loads up the glider and may break the weak link. (You are using the correct Tost weak links, right?) We set the trim well forwards to give approach speed in the event of a launch failure (I am not going to stop doing that, but hypothetically where would you put the trim for best launch height?), and for K21s winch drivers are briefed to give full throttle the whole way up (winch is c.300bhp). I've also heard several pilots be admonished by instructors recently for "not pulling back" after somewhat low launches. Surely pulling back increases the lift the aircraft is producing, and therefore gives more height? If the airspeed is well below placard max winch speed, I would have thought it would not result in enough force to break the link. BTW we do, without fail, use the correct weak links (and not doubled-up or anything stupid either). That said, we do break weak links with some regularity. Suggestion: Get a copy of a good glider flight simulator like Condor and practice lauches on a computer. There's a lot to learn with a good sim. I use Condor as an "animated white board" when I teach winch ground school. Heh, I have Condor but find it much harder to fly than "real life", probably as my comp is rather weedy so it's a bit jerky. Thanks for the suggestion though! Dan Bill Daniels "Dan G" wrote in message oups.com... Thanks Bill, that document is very interesting. There is one thing in particular I am unsure about however - how much up elevator I should be putting in. With the K8, I fly the launch at 50-55kts with the stick fully back for perhaps the last 30% of the launch after smoothly transitioning from full forwards on the ground run through neutral once in the full climb, until I feel the glider being pulled level, when I relax the aft pressure in anticipation of putting the nose down to reuce cable tension prior to releasing. (This later movement often results in quite an increase in speed, which I convert to height after releasing. Is this an indication I'm releasing back pressure too early, or the winch driver not backing off the throttle enough?) With a K21, which winch drivers here (which includes me) are told to give "full power all the way up" from our Oldsmobile V8. Climb speed is at lesst 65kts and I'm reluctant to pull back too hard. Why? A K21 launches on a black weak link (1,000kg). I imagine full up elevator in a K21 would produce enough lift to break that at well below max winch speed, 81kts. Is there a way to calculate how much lifting force full up elevator should produce for any given airspeed? Or should I not be putting full up in? If not, just how far should I bring the stick back, and when? Bill Daniels wrote: If you join the Yahoo group "winchdesign" and look in the files section, there are a series of truely excellent papers in the folder "Winch Dynamics and Performance" by George Moore. (soargsm) Essentially what George determened is that the major sensitivities a 1.Field length 2. Headwind 3. Cable tension as a percentage of glider flying weight. 4. Weight & drag of the cable There is very little extra height to be gained by agressive technique beyond just hitting your target airspeed and holding it there with smooth control inputs. This gives an angle of attack just slightly greater than that for best L/D. If you want help with this, put some AOA strings on the canopy sides and calibrate them for L/D max and Vmin sink. Of course, it goes without saying that you should never put yourself in danger by rotating into the climb so quickly that a recovery from a rope break is impossible. Smooth and accurate flying are what you want. So, if you want to get higher, get a longer field with more wind, replace steel with high strength Dyneema and get a winch that can accurately hold tension at 80 - 90% of the weak link. Bill Daniels "Dan G" wrote in message ups.com... I'm interested in learning how to get the maximum possible height on a winch launch, without compromising safety in any way. This question has two parts really - how should the pilot fly the launch (pretty much how should he operate the elevator during the launch), how fast should the glider fly, and how should the winch driver feed the power in? For the sake of argument, let's assume the glider is a K13. For reference, I fly from an airfield with a 3,300' long cable, and the maximum height I achieve repeatedly is 1,700'. Headwind typically goes from around 10kts at the ground to something like (I estimate) 20kts at height. |
#7
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Responses interspersed.
"Dan G" wrote in message oups.com... We set the trim well forwards to give approach speed in the event of a launch failure (I am not going to stop doing that, but hypothetically where would you put the trim for best launch height?), and for K21s winch drivers are briefed to give full throttle the whole way up (winch is c.300bhp). Same as always. Set the trim for zero stick force. It has no effect whatever on release height. I've also heard several pilots be admonished by instructors recently for "not pulling back" after somewhat low launches. Surely pulling back increases the lift the aircraft is producing, and therefore gives more height? If the airspeed is well below placard max winch speed, I would have thought it would not result in enough force to break the link. I sounds like your winch may reach redline RPM just as the glider rotates into the climb. If the pilot doesn't rotate quickly enough, the winch driver will have to throttle down to save the engine. Pilots trained on aero tow will often resist pitching up into the climb and need to be admonished that this is not an aero tow and they need to climb. As they climb the engine RPM will diminish. I'm not saying pull hard, just pitch up smoothly to control airspeed. The very best height is achieved by flying the glider at just over the best L/D angle of attack. Pulling up harder and flying at a greater AOA will actually reduce height achieved. To repeat, fly the selected airspeed. You may improve things slightly by using an AOA indicator. Strings work fine. BTW we do, without fail, use the correct weak links (and not doubled-up or anything stupid either). That said, we do break weak links with some regularity. Whew! Thanks for that. Suggestion: Get a copy of a good glider flight simulator like Condor and practice lauches on a computer. There's a lot to learn with a good sim. I use Condor as an "animated white board" when I teach winch ground school. Heh, I have Condor but find it much harder to fly than "real life", probably as my comp is rather weedy so it's a bit jerky. Thanks for the suggestion though! It is harder than real life - but it's good training. Bill Daniels |
#8
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Dan G wrote:
We set the trim well forwards to give approach speed in the event of a launch failure (I am not going to stop doing that, but hypothetically where would you put the trim for best launch height?), Agreed - set the trim to suit the day. and for K21s winch drivers are briefed to give full throttle the whole way up (winch is c.300bhp). That sounds excessive to me. The only glider that gets full power all the way is an ASH-25. We launch K.21s on a 240 hp diesel winch (Deutz air cooled V8) and never reach full power in normal circumstances. If an ASK-21 or G.103 is being launched the driver goes smoothly "through the stop" on "all out" and smoothly back to the stop when he sees the glider rotate into full climb. "Through the stop" means just that - not "on the end of throttle travel". After that it depends on conditions. In calm that setting can be kept most of the way up, but if there's a wind gradient the driver will be backing off as the glider gets into progressively stronger wind. The "stop" I mentioned is a spring loaded bar somewhere around (at a guess) 75% power. We use 3500 ft of cable and expect 1200 - 1500 ft from an ASK-21 flown two-up in normal conditions - 6 to 12 kts headwind. I'd endorse Bill's comment about hands-off trim. Our CFI regularly demonstrates this in an ASK-21. He claps slowly from just after lift-off to the top of the launch to show the student that he is flying hands off. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#9
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![]() Dan G wrote: With a K21, which winch drivers here (which includes me) are told to give "full power all the way up" from our Oldsmobile V8. Then with all due respect, I think your club needs to think about its training policy for winch drivers. "Give full power all the way up" is a recipe for disaster - it should be "Give enough power all the way up, and don't assume that means full throttle". A good winch driver knows how much welly to give it by the bow in the cable, the speed of the drums and the appearance of the glider. Whacking in full throttle without a care is as bad as giving full back stick from the start of the launch. If your club is training winch drivers to think about throttle position without considering effects and training pilots to think about stick position without considering effects, it may have to do some fundamental thinking about flying and training. In both cases the principle should be "Know what effect you want and use the right amount of control to achieve it, monitoring the situation and varying inputs as required." I would be very cautious about an organisation which taught crude open-loop control in two separate safety-critical areas. Please don't take this personally, because it's not so intended. Ian |
#10
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Ian,
winch launching my Calif over 8 years on a 280 hp winch was exactly "full power until release", and that was the only way to go. So, in some cases this type of instructions actually does work. Bert "Ian" wrote in message ps.com... Dan G wrote: With a K21, which winch drivers here (which includes me) are told to give "full power all the way up" from our Oldsmobile V8. Then with all due respect, I think your club needs to think about its training policy for winch drivers. "Give full power all the way up" is a recipe for disaster - it should be "Give enough power all the way up, and don't assume that means full throttle". A good winch driver knows how much welly to give it by the bow in the cable, the speed of the drums and the appearance of the glider. Whacking in full throttle without a care is as bad as giving full back stick from the start of the launch. If your club is training winch drivers to think about throttle position without considering effects and training pilots to think about stick position without considering effects, it may have to do some fundamental thinking about flying and training. In both cases the principle should be "Know what effect you want and use the right amount of control to achieve it, monitoring the situation and varying inputs as required." I would be very cautious about an organisation which taught crude open-loop control in two separate safety-critical areas. Please don't take this personally, because it's not so intended. Ian |
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