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#1
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I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew
they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. Respectfully, |
#2
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Ventus B wrote:
I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. I owned a 20B, and it was once of the nicest handling and benign gliders that I've owned. It would spin, but it would take some abuse, even with the CG near the aft limit. The 20C apparently has similar handling characteristics. Some (but not all) of the earlier 20 (aka 20A) ships are reputedly somewhat less forgiving. Get too slow, and they will stall and spin rather promptly, with very little warning. I've never experienced going inverted in a spin, but they will do over the top spin entries (outside wing drops, and the glider rolls inverted before settling into a normal spin), which confuses those who haven't experienced them before. In any case, the 20B (best for strong conditions) and 20C are preferred, as they have automatic elevator hookups, tilt-up instrument panels, and better cockpit ventilation. If you've flown a flapped glider (like a Ventus B), you'll have no problems with them. If you want to buy an original 20, talk to some of the past owners, if you can, to get an assessment of that particular ships quirks. Marc |
#3
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One additional observation - depending on exactly when in the
auto-rotation/pitch oscillation cycle the recovery inputs take affect, it can feel like the ship is going inverted. In other words, it feels like the nose swings down past vertical before back pressure is applied to recover once the rotation is arrested. I flew a friend's 20C several times and tested a bunch of spins from different entry modes, and this was the only slightly uncomfortable moment. In this case, the ship was equipped with winglets and the CG was only at about 50 aft CG limit. Not sure whether this is typical for this combination of ship/configuration. "Marc Ramsey" wrote in message m... Ventus B wrote: I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. I owned a 20B, and it was once of the nicest handling and benign gliders that I've owned. It would spin, but it would take some abuse, even with the CG near the aft limit. The 20C apparently has similar handling characteristics. Some (but not all) of the earlier 20 (aka 20A) ships are reputedly somewhat less forgiving. Get too slow, and they will stall and spin rather promptly, with very little warning. I've never experienced going inverted in a spin, but they will do over the top spin entries (outside wing drops, and the glider rolls inverted before settling into a normal spin), which confuses those who haven't experienced them before. In any case, the 20B (best for strong conditions) and 20C are preferred, as they have automatic elevator hookups, tilt-up instrument panels, and better cockpit ventilation. If you've flown a flapped glider (like a Ventus B), you'll have no problems with them. If you want to buy an original 20, talk to some of the past owners, if you can, to get an assessment of that particular ships quirks. Marc |
#4
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On Mon, 05 Jul 2004 01:45:52 GMT, Marc Ramsey
wrote: Ventus B wrote: I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. Some (but not all) of the earlier 20 (aka 20A) ships are reputedly somewhat less forgiving. Get too slow, and they will stall and spin rather promptly, with very little warning. I've never experienced going inverted in a spin, but they will do over the top spin entries (outside wing drops, and the glider rolls inverted before settling into a normal spin), which confuses those who haven't experienced them before. I'll second that. I have an early '20 (s/n 34) and it does indeed depart with little warning if I get too slow in a 45+ degree bank (45 kts in zero flap and a gust will do it) but both times I've got it back within a 1/4 turn and not much height loss. One departure happened when I gradually tightened the turn past 45 degrees while keeping the speed to a constant 45 kts, so I guess that's expected with hindsight. The second was in a more turbulent thermal, so may have been helped along by a gust. It does drop a wing when stalled (any flap setting) but that's pretty benign and not hard to deal with. I would not describe that as a spin from stall, though it might develop into one if left alone. Standard spin recovery is: (a) centralise controls, (b) flaps negative, (c) take normal spin recovery action. So far (c) has not been necessary as it usually self recovers when the flaps are pushed negative. I've not yet seen a departure which went past a 90 degree bank. Other habits: - trimmed hands off at 50 kts and with feet on to keep straight, mine has a 25 second phugoid with a +/- 5 kt speed excursion. I let it run for 5-6 cycles but the amount of the speed excursion seemed stable after the first couple of cycles. - trimmed hands and feet off at 50 kts is stable. If the wheel is dropped or the brakes opened a spiral dive develops - there seems to be no benign spiral. I'm very pleased with mine and glad I bought it. It thermals well, is nicely balanced to fly and has an excellent turn of speed in the cruise. The learning curve for the flapped life is steep but worth the effort - its taken me 37 hours over 36 flights (almost all off the winch) to feel as if I'm up to speed with the flaps but I felt at home in the glider almost from the start. Mind you, I did have over 150 hours in a Pegase, which I really rate, first!. FWIW I had 226 solo hours (271 total) when I made my first flight in the '20 and would not have wanted to tackle it a year earlier (134 hours solo, 174 total) though at that time I would have been happy to fly almost any 15m standard class glider. -- martin@ : Martin Gregorie gregorie : Harlow, UK demon : co : Zappa fan & glider pilot uk : |
#5
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I have 400 hours in an ASW19 and it does just just about the same,
thermalling slow then getting a gust and a little bit of up stick she would roll 180 degrees to the high wing to almost an inverted position then gravity would bring the nose down and start spin entry but recover instantly the stick goes forward. The ASW20 is almost identical except having to slide the flaps negative for the speed your doing and I have flown other types that do exactly the same, eg: Ventus A/B are aggressive in the entry as well Overall the I rate ASW20 is one of the best at low speed handling and low level thermalling. Just take the glider up high and explore the limits of the behavior so you know the point to which you can take her. If it really concerns you then get winglets fitted ,best price I found was from M & H in the US $1100-$1600 (model dependent) plus fitting, that lowers the stall speed and noticably changes behavior at slow speed, improves the L/D as well ![]() gary "Ventus B" wrote in message om... I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. Respectfully, |
#6
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I have flown an early C model with aft c/g (but still in the legal range),
and spin entry was very rapid, with little warning. Back in that time, there have been 3 fatalities in one year in Germany (1985 or 1986?) with a C model. I now fly a A model with Lindner winglets, and I tried stalling/spinning in all flap configurations. It does sin, but it really needs to be convinced and can be easily stopped by the standard procedure. -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "goneill" a écrit dans le message de ... I have 400 hours in an ASW19 and it does just just about the same, thermalling slow then getting a gust and a little bit of up stick she would roll 180 degrees to the high wing to almost an inverted position then gravity would bring the nose down and start spin entry but recover instantly the stick goes forward. The ASW20 is almost identical except having to slide the flaps negative for the speed your doing and I have flown other types that do exactly the same, eg: Ventus A/B are aggressive in the entry as well Overall the I rate ASW20 is one of the best at low speed handling and low level thermalling. Just take the glider up high and explore the limits of the behavior so you know the point to which you can take her. If it really concerns you then get winglets fitted ,best price I found was from M & H in the US $1100-$1600 (model dependent) plus fitting, that lowers the stall speed and noticably changes behavior at slow speed, improves the L/D as well ![]() gary "Ventus B" wrote in message om... I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. Respectfully, |
#7
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On Tue, 6 Jul 2004 09:39:50 +0200, "Bert Willing"
wrote: I have flown an early C model with aft c/g (but still in the legal range), and spin entry was very rapid, with little warning. Back in that time, there have been 3 fatalities in one year in Germany (1985 or 1986?) with a C model. I now fly a A model with Lindner winglets, and I tried stalling/spinning in all flap configurations. It does sin, but it really needs to be convinced and can be easily stopped by the standard procedure. I'd like to add that the 20 of my club with aft C/G also had a rather violent spin entry at flap setting 4 (thermalling setting), but overall the spin behaviour of the 20 is very predictable and not critical at all. I'd deal our 27 for a 20 any time. The 24 without winglets has a very similar spin behaviour with an aft CG, btw. Bye Andreas |
#8
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Although George Thelen doesn't name the sailplane that is the subject of his
July 2004 Safety Corner column in Soaring magazine, he seems to be talking about the ASW 20A. Perhaps someone familiar with that particular accident could elaborate. Bryan "Ventus B" wrote in message om... I have been considering buying an ASW20, ASW20B, or ASW20C. I knew they were champions in their day and still have a lot of admirers. However a few folks from my club say they have some nasty spin characteristics. Specifically, that they have a tendancy to not only immediately spin when stalled, but will go inverted as they spin. Can anyone eloborate or corroborate? I normally only hear good things about the 20. Respectfully, |
#9
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When I got my first 20A, I was nervous as hell about the spin characteristics
as there had been a whole bunch of spin accidents, world wide. For the first 50 hours I tried to gently provoke her, but she wouldn't depart unless severely manhandled. After that I settled down and enjoyed the bird. Nothing will climb like a 20A and those floppy wings, smooth out the ride. After 10 years or so, I formed the opinion that some 20's would spin at the drop of a hat and others wouldn't. A friend had a *good* 20, that wouldn't spin under normal conditions. One day he adjusted the flaps, so that the flaps and ailerons were all exactly at neutral with the flap handle in zero and the stick exactly in the middle. You guessed it, after that he had a *bad* 20 that would spin at the drop of a hat. It could have something to do with the flap adjustment, but I'm not sure what, because they are flap-erons and move with the ailerons. BTW, the accident at Air Sailing was a 20A. JJ Sinclair |
#10
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![]() "JJ Sinclair" wrote in message ... When I got my first 20A, I was nervous as hell about the spin characteristics as there had been a whole bunch of spin accidents, world wide. For the first 50 hours I tried to gently provoke her, but she wouldn't depart unless severely manhandled. After that I settled down and enjoyed the bird. Nothing will climb like a 20A and those floppy wings, smooth out the ride. After 10 years or so, I formed the opinion that some 20's would spin at the drop of a hat and others wouldn't. A friend had a *good* 20, that wouldn't spin under normal conditions. One day he adjusted the flaps, so that the flaps and ailerons were all exactly at neutral with the flap handle in zero and the stick exactly in the middle. You guessed it, after that he had a *bad* 20 that would spin at the drop of a hat. It could have something to do with the flap adjustment, but I'm not sure what, because they are flap-erons and move with the ailerons. BTW, the accident at Air Sailing was a 20A. JJ Sinclair JJ, Interesting, do you remember what the factory flap setting should be? On first thought I would think the aileron would be slightly more negative to the flap setting with the flap handle in neutral. Only when in the high speed setting would both flap and aileron line up. Just a thought. Udo |
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