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The previous posts under "Stay in, or get out?" raises questions about the
current state of ballistic recovery systems. As paraplegic, I have a personal interest in BRS because thoughts of my successfully exiting an out of control sailplane with a parachute, and then landing without the use of my legs, conjure unpleasant thoughts. Although doable for a paraplegic, the odds of a successful egress and injury free landing are certainly lower than for an able-bodied pilot. For those reasons, BRS is for me a viable and probably safer alternative. I understand that no emergency egress solution is perfect for all scenarios; they offer various means of risk management. However, I would appreciate any information or thoughts concerning the effectiveness of BRS deployment and if the current ground-impact energy absorption systems are proving effective for pilot protection. Thanks, Bryan |
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On Sep 12, 10:12 am, "Bryan" wrote:
The previous posts under "Stay in, or get out?" raises questions about the current state of ballistic recovery systems. As paraplegic, I have a personal interest in BRS because thoughts of my successfully exiting an out of control sailplane with a parachute, and then landing without the use of my legs, conjure unpleasant thoughts. Although doable for a paraplegic, the odds of a successful egress and injury free landing are certainly lower than for an able-bodied pilot. For those reasons, BRS is for me a viable and probably safer alternative. I understand that no emergency egress solution is perfect for all scenarios; they offer various means of risk management. However, I would appreciate any information or thoughts concerning the effectiveness of BRS deployment and if the current ground-impact energy absorption systems are proving effective for pilot protection. Thanks, Bryan I dont know much about BRS deployments in sailplanes. one major issue would, as you mention, would be the energy absorption. the Cirrus airplanes use the landing gear to absorb impact. of course they will decend at a much higher rate under chute than a glider. I think the Cirri have something like a 2000 fpm descent. they have had injuries to people who have come down in water where there was no energy absorbtion. i know that BRS systems have been pretty common in ultralights for a while. and used successfully. I would think that sailplanes would have similar descent rates but still not as much energy absorption as them. |
#4
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The NOAH system looks like a kludge to me that does not address
survivability for accidents that happen at low altitudes. Here is a link showing the specs and prices for typical BRS chutes: http://www.brsparachutes.com/ViewDoc...?DocumentID=84 I suspect that the concerns about impact survivability in a glider are overblown. You might want to contact BRS directly to discuss this issue. One way you could reduce the impact forces is to have the glider descend under the chute so that the tail impacts the ground first and dissipates part of the energy before the cockpit contacts the ground. Mike Schumann "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message news:cM2Gi.4278$Z33.306@trndny08... wrote: i know that BRS systems have been pretty common in ultralights for a while. and used successfully. I would think that sailplanes would have similar descent rates but still not as much energy absorption as them. That is one of the challenges for the glider rescue designer. The descent rate must be limited to what the fuselage can provide in pilot protection. Older gliders (say, before the ASW 24) had "weak" fuselages and would require a relatively large parachute, compared to modern gliders. A large parachute is heavier, takes up more space, and makes it harder to deploy slowly enough to avoid huge forces on the glider structure and pilot. Another problem is ensuring the fuselage and remaining bits descend without a lot of oscillating, so the cockpit hits the ground at the right attitude to absorb enough energy to protect the pilot. All things considered, it is much easier and cheaper to retrofit a NOAH system, even though it doesn't provide exactly the same function. The problem is much easier to solve in an ultralight, because of their slower speeds and lighter weights. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#5
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Streifender developed a BRS system for gliders, his website (sorry, in
german) is http://www.streifly.de/Preise9-00.htm Thatīs the system you can buy with some of the newer Schempp - Hirth and Schleicher gliders. Michael |
#6
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On Sep 12, 11:54 pm, "Michael Huber" wrote:
Streifender developed a BRS system for gliders, his website (sorry, in german) ishttp://www.streifly.de/Preise9-00.htm Thatīs the system you can buy with some of the newer Schempp - Hirth and Schleicher gliders. Michael I am suprised no one has mentioned the Sparrowhawk Glider. Everyone of the 20 or so sparrowhawks except one has a BRS parachute. The decision was to go with a large parachute to REDUCE opening shock. The one is use in rated for a 900 lb. aircraft. The Sparrowhawk fully loaded with the heaviest possible pilot would not even be 500 lbs. I suspect it will come down quite slowly. Greg Cole fired off the ballistic parachute while it was attached to the Sparrowhawk. It was a ground test. He has it on video and it deployed perfectly with no problems. The cost is somewhere around $3000.00. George Young, Sparrowhawk owner # 6 |
#7
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On Sep 13, 1:54 am, "Michael Huber" wrote:
Streifender developed a BRS system for gliders, his website (sorry, in german) ishttp://www.streifly.de/Preise9-00.htm Thatīs the system you can buy with some of the newer Schempp - Hirth and Schleicher gliders. Oh, good! I see from it's location that I have a choice of keeping my self-launching engine or putting in a recovery parachute. |
#8
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Mike Schumann wrote:
The NOAH system looks like a kludge to me that does not address survivability for accidents that happen at low altitudes. It's a good design, intended to address exiting the glider quickly. This is a very important at low altitudes. We all agree a glider rescue system that *actually works* would be better in that situation. Here is a link showing the specs and prices for typical BRS chutes: http://www.brsparachutes.com/ViewDoc...?DocumentID=84 I suspect that the concerns about impact survivability in a glider are overblown. Technical Soaring, and probably other publications, has had articles on the design and operation issues for glider rescue systems. You might find your suspiscions are modified after you have read these articles. If it were easy, all the manufacturers would offer one in all their gliders. You might want to contact BRS directly to discuss this issue. I have talked to a designer working on glider rescue systems. BRS is not not as eager as you might think to have their products incorporated into our gliders. One way you could reduce the impact forces is to have the glider descend under the chute so that the tail impacts the ground first and dissipates part of the energy before the cockpit contacts the ground. This requires the parachute to descend without oscillating while holding the fuselage in the tail down position, basically flying backward; further, the tail must be designed to absorb energy during impact, which is not a normal design parameter. How can we know the installation will do this without flight testing? Without careful design of the tail structure, it seems likely to me that when the tail hits first, the fuselage will slam down at the cockpit end, increasing the forces on it and the pilot. And what protects the pilot if the tail is missing after the collision? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#9
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You should contact the Red Wing Soaring Club in Osceola WI. One of their
members installed a Ballistic Recovery Chute in his personal glider a couple of years ago. I vaguely recall that it cost him around $3,000. Mike Schumann "Bryan" wrote in message ... The previous posts under "Stay in, or get out?" raises questions about the current state of ballistic recovery systems. As paraplegic, I have a personal interest in BRS because thoughts of my successfully exiting an out of control sailplane with a parachute, and then landing without the use of my legs, conjure unpleasant thoughts. Although doable for a paraplegic, the odds of a successful egress and injury free landing are certainly lower than for an able-bodied pilot. For those reasons, BRS is for me a viable and probably safer alternative. I understand that no emergency egress solution is perfect for all scenarios; they offer various means of risk management. However, I would appreciate any information or thoughts concerning the effectiveness of BRS deployment and if the current ground-impact energy absorption systems are proving effective for pilot protection. Thanks, Bryan -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#10
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![]() "Mike Schumann" wrote in message .. . You should contact the Red Wing Soaring Club in Osceola WI. One of their members installed a Ballistic Recovery Chute in his personal glider a couple of years ago. I vaguely recall that it cost him around $3,000. Mike Schumann HP-16 N8DC (http://tinyurl.com/2frz7p) has a Ballistic Recovery System (http://tinyurl.com/yvfunq). Wayne HP-14 "6F" http://www.soaridaho.com/ |
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