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#1
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Had my first glider ride Saturday, July 26. It was at Sterling, Ma. with the
Greater Boston Soaring Club. Had to wait all day. Should have gotten there earlier, but it was definitely a memorable ride. We had one of the shorter tow ropes, so we were in real close formation with a Piper Pawnee. I cut away at 3000' msl with a former P-51 pilot on the back seat. Can't remember which glider we went up in. They have several. Once we cut loose, I got the controls with the understanding that if I heard the pitch of Bob's voice going up to give him the controls because we were in a thermal. There wasn't a whole lot of thermal activity that day, but he did manage to get us up to 3600'. I took the controls back and did some turns. It's great being able to talk without wearing any headphones. He took the controls again at one point for a thermal and he started cranking around to turn back into it. I was thinking we were pretty slow for that steep a turn (it was getting down to 40 knots with a 34 knot straight and level stall speed) when I felt a distinct buffet. Next thing I know, the nose is falling through adn we're in a spin. The stick is in my belly and I hear Bob saying "What the heck is happening?" I tell him we're in a spin as I watch the Earth spinning in front of me. I told him 3 times to let go of the stick before I finally took it, centered it adn stomped the right rudder. We came out of it pretty quick and the glider accellerated real quick. Vne was 125 and we hit 100 in almost no time. I pulled the nose back up and slowed us back to our 45 knot target speed. Flew around the airport for a little while. I got us set up on a midfield crossover to downwind and Bob took us the rest of the way in. It's sort of wierd speeding up to land. We set up at 60. Great landing and when I got out, I got to drive the golf cart back to boot. Bob gave me an A+ for my recognition and timely recovery from that spin. I was kind of concerned tha the didn't recognize it sooner and thought that he might have just been trying to get a rise out of me, but I think he really didn't recognize it. He's an older gentleman, I'd guess in his 70's. When we got down he said he'd never spun out of a thermal before. He was somewhat apologetic since we lost about 800' and didn't get it all back in the pullout. I didn't say anything, but I wonder if I should have. There was lots of air between us and the ground, but what if I was a non-pilot? Don't know if anybody on the ground saw it, but one guy wanted to check my pants for stains. Told him it was not a problem. I'd get to wear them home. Great bunch of people and a great day all around. I'm hoping to get weekends off at my job so I can pursue this gliding more seriously. If you have never done it, I highly recommend it. It cost me $75 with $30 going towards my membership should I join. Ride would have been longer with some lift, too. mike regish '53 Tripacer N3428A |
#2
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Mike... I'd talk to other instructors at GBSC and see if the first
instructor was pulling your leg... good thing you had some air sense.. also, add rec.aviation.soaring to your news group list.. BT "mike regish" wrote in message news:FyUWa.49893$Ho3.6892@sccrnsc03... Had my first glider ride Saturday, July 26. It was at Sterling, Ma. with the Greater Boston Soaring Club. Had to wait all day. Should have gotten there earlier, but it was definitely a memorable ride. We had one of the shorter tow ropes, so we were in real close formation with a Piper Pawnee. I cut away at 3000' msl with a former P-51 pilot on the back seat. Can't remember which glider we went up in. They have several. Once we cut loose, I got the controls with the understanding that if I heard the pitch of Bob's voice going up to give him the controls because we were in a thermal. There wasn't a whole lot of thermal activity that day, but he did manage to get us up to 3600'. I took the controls back and did some turns. It's great being able to talk without wearing any headphones. He took the controls again at one point for a thermal and he started cranking around to turn back into it. I was thinking we were pretty slow for that steep a turn (it was getting down to 40 knots with a 34 knot straight and level stall speed) when I felt a distinct buffet. Next thing I know, the nose is falling through adn we're in a spin. The stick is in my belly and I hear Bob saying "What the heck is happening?" I tell him we're in a spin as I watch the Earth spinning in front of me. I told him 3 times to let go of the stick before I finally took it, centered it adn stomped the right rudder. We came out of it pretty quick and the glider accellerated real quick. Vne was 125 and we hit 100 in almost no time. I pulled the nose back up and slowed us back to our 45 knot target speed. Flew around the airport for a little while. I got us set up on a midfield crossover to downwind and Bob took us the rest of the way in. It's sort of wierd speeding up to land. We set up at 60. Great landing and when I got out, I got to drive the golf cart back to boot. Bob gave me an A+ for my recognition and timely recovery from that spin. I was kind of concerned tha the didn't recognize it sooner and thought that he might have just been trying to get a rise out of me, but I think he really didn't recognize it. He's an older gentleman, I'd guess in his 70's. When we got down he said he'd never spun out of a thermal before. He was somewhat apologetic since we lost about 800' and didn't get it all back in the pullout. I didn't say anything, but I wonder if I should have. There was lots of air between us and the ground, but what if I was a non-pilot? Don't know if anybody on the ground saw it, but one guy wanted to check my pants for stains. Told him it was not a problem. I'd get to wear them home. Great bunch of people and a great day all around. I'm hoping to get weekends off at my job so I can pursue this gliding more seriously. If you have never done it, I highly recommend it. It cost me $75 with $30 going towards my membership should I join. Ride would have been longer with some lift, too. mike regish '53 Tripacer N3428A |
#3
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On Sat, 02 Aug 2003 19:46:45 GMT, mike regish wrote:
Had my first glider ride Saturday, July 26. It was at Sterling, Ma. with the snip; spin Spinning is an occupational hazard in soaring. Fly a glider long enough, especially an aerobatic capable glider like the Blanik L-13 or L-23, and it's only a matter of time before you at least inadvertently stall or go into the incipient stage of spin (especially if you're low time). When conditions are weak (especially) and thermals are tight you need to have a small turn radius to climb in the lift. To do this you are usually nibbling at the edge of the stall, or at least, not far away. As you go through the different parcels of air, it's quite common to have 5 knots suddenly go away. Going this slow and turning, in many gliders, you have some element of cross control to keep it coordinated. If you try and lift a wing with aileron... Spin training is very much on the agenda in glider training. I've (deliberately) spun the Blanik at both the Soaring Club of Houston and here at Andreas many times. In training, the instructor will often have you enter stalls from a thermalling turn so you can recognise the incipient spin that may happen. Personally, I've never inadvertently spun a glider, but I've had several unintentional stalls when trying to core tight thermals. It's just a matter of life and you have to learn very well to recognise a stall and immediately recover - not only to avoid losing the height you've been desperately struggling to gain on a weak day, but to avoid a possible spin (especially on a weak day as you're probably not very high to start with). -- Dylan Smith, Castletown, Isle of Man Flying: http://www.dylansmith.net Frontier Elite Universe: http://www.alioth.net "Maintain thine airspeed, lest the ground come up and smite thee" |
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"mike regish" wrote:
Had my first glider ride Saturday, July 26. .... and so forth What was this in? Early in training (5th lesson I believe) we did some spin training in a 2-33. My instructor bet me that I couldn't get it to spin, and he won the bet... and that was with him telling me what to do. I'd like to try it now though. I'm approaching my first solo. |
#5
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"mike regish" wrote
He took the controls again at one point for a thermal and he started cranking around to turn back into it. I was thinking we were pretty slow for that steep a turn (it was getting down to 40 knots with a 34 knot straight and level stall speed) when I felt a distinct buffet. Next thing I know, the nose is falling through adn we're in a spin. The stick is in my belly and I hear Bob saying "What the heck is happening?" I tell him we're in a spin as I watch the Earth spinning in front of me. I told him 3 times to let go of the stick before I finally took it, centered it adn stomped the right rudder. We came out of it pretty quick and the glider accellerated real quick. Vne was 125 and we hit 100 in almost no time. I pulled the nose back up and slowed us back to our 45 knot target speed. Frankly, I'm concerned about this. Not about the stall, or even the spin entry - that's an occupational hazard of soaring. Read Dylan's post. The problem is with the way the recovery was handled. Feeling the buffet when working narrow, turbulent lift is pretty normal - but at that point, recovery begins. If you had time to see that you were in a spin, and then time to tell Bob multiple times, that makes me really worried about his ability to recover. It worries me more that you had to recover for him. Your point is well taken - what if that had been a non-pilot in the front seat. "What the heck is happening?" is not something you really want to hear from the PIC. It might just have been a bad day, but it's cause for concern. Bob gave me an A+ for my recognition and timely recovery from that spin. Yeah, I would too. On the other hand, I'm not sure what grade to give Bob... Michael |
#6
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