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#41
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I heard that the C-182 had cylinder problems; possibly delaying the descent after release was being done to avoid shock cooling.
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#42
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On Thursday, February 13, 2020 at 8:15:06 AM UTC-8, jfitch wrote:
On Wednesday, February 12, 2020 at 8:41:55 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: Point taken, but a soft release is never a good thing from the tow pilot's perspective.Â* When flying my glider I seldom released softly but I always announced, "5J's off, thanks!" On 2/11/2020 9:46 PM, 2G wrote: On Tuesday, February 11, 2020 at 10:53:29 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: When I was towing, I would visually confirm that the glider was off and then roll steeply and dive.Â* If I hadn't felt the glider get off, I would fly straight and level for a bit to assure clearance before beginning a more moderate descent.Â* I also maintained awareness of any gliders that had not climbed away. I would blame both of the pilots in this accident but would assign most of the blame to the tow pilot.Â* Making what amounts to a level turn just after release is asking for trouble. On 2/11/2020 8:51 AM, Waveguru wrote: This seems to happen every few years, where the tow plane makes a left turn and the glider make a right and they come around and collide. I changed the way we do it here so that the glider only makes a slight right turn, and then keeps his eye on the tow plane, so that at least one of the pair of planes can more easily maintain separation. When both planes make a 360° turn, neither of them can see the other. This kind of accident is the result. Boggs -- Dan, 5J You can't hardly blame the glider pilot: they were flying straight ahead and were struck from behind. The tow pilot is clearly the one at fault. Tom -- Dan, 5J There's been mention of people trained to announce the release on the radio. Should not this be in the SOPs of the operation? It is wherever I fly - glider is ALWAYS to announce release, tow plane acknowledges. If you aren't going to communicate with the aircraft 200 ft away, why have a radio at all? Just to note, not all operations have radios in the tow planes. |
#43
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On Thursday, February 13, 2020 at 5:43:47 PM UTC-8, Jonathan St. Cloud wrote:
On Thursday, February 13, 2020 at 8:15:06 AM UTC-8, jfitch wrote: On Wednesday, February 12, 2020 at 8:41:55 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: Point taken, but a soft release is never a good thing from the tow pilot's perspective.Â* When flying my glider I seldom released softly but I always announced, "5J's off, thanks!" On 2/11/2020 9:46 PM, 2G wrote: On Tuesday, February 11, 2020 at 10:53:29 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: When I was towing, I would visually confirm that the glider was off and then roll steeply and dive.Â* If I hadn't felt the glider get off, I would fly straight and level for a bit to assure clearance before beginning a more moderate descent.Â* I also maintained awareness of any gliders that had not climbed away. I would blame both of the pilots in this accident but would assign most of the blame to the tow pilot.Â* Making what amounts to a level turn just after release is asking for trouble. On 2/11/2020 8:51 AM, Waveguru wrote: This seems to happen every few years, where the tow plane makes a left turn and the glider make a right and they come around and collide. I changed the way we do it here so that the glider only makes a slight right turn, and then keeps his eye on the tow plane, so that at least one of the pair of planes can more easily maintain separation. When both planes make a 360° turn, neither of them can see the other. This kind of accident is the result. Boggs -- Dan, 5J You can't hardly blame the glider pilot: they were flying straight ahead and were struck from behind. The tow pilot is clearly the one at fault. |
#44
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Here we go again with "shock cooling" as an excuse.
On 2/13/2020 6:42 PM, George Haeh wrote: I heard that the C-182 had cylinder problems; possibly delaying the descent after release was being done to avoid shock cooling. -- Dan, 5J |
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