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#1
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I am always amazed at how few Schempp-Hirth Glider owners have done this
very simple Mod to their water ballast system. The addition of this 1 way valve to the top cap of the ballast tank plug will prevent water from flowing out of the tank prior to launch. You can put a wing down without water flowing out of the vent. The vent will still function properly during the dumping process. It’s a simple project using a screw driver, scissors and a plastic freezer bag. Unscrew the top cap from the rest of the plug mechanism. Cut a disc out of the freezer bag slightly smaller in diameter than the cap. Punch a hole in the center of the freezer bag disc of sufficient size for the screw mechanism to reattach. Reassemble and you are done. http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=32 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=34 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=35 I have to give credit to Jackie Payne for this mod. |
#2
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Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing
open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your "check valve" has the potential to allow such a situation... Paul M. Cordell wrote: I am always amazed at how few Schempp-Hirth Glider owners have done this very simple Mod to their water ballast system. The addition of this 1 way valve to the top cap of the ballast tank plug will prevent water from flowing out of the tank prior to launch. You can put a wing down without water flowing out of the vent. The vent will still function properly during the dumping process. It’s a simple project using a screw driver, scissors and a plastic freezer bag. Unscrew the top cap from the rest of the plug mechanism. Cut a disc out of the freezer bag slightly smaller in diameter than the cap. Punch a hole in the center of the freezer bag disc of sufficient size for the screw mechanism to reattach. Reassemble and you are done. http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=32 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=34 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=35 I have to give credit to Jackie Payne for this mod. |
#3
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![]() "Gary Emerson" wrote in message m... Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your "check valve" has the potential to allow such a situation... I agree, A solution would be a valve that positively closes as well as opens. The mentioned flap type valve will stick and any pressure build up will put undue stress on the tank. In the case of vents being at the wing tips, a rolling type ball valve will do the job. The ball is stainless steel and it will roll into position when the wing is down, when horizontal the ball will unseat and roll back. I made at prototype valve for my last project and I was only able to fly with it once before I sold the glider. There was a minimal acceptable leak when the wing was down. When the wing was horizontal I was able to see the ball clear the seat. ( I used a clear housing to observe) Regards Udo |
#4
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On Mon, 23 May 2005 22:26:11 GMT, Gary Emerson
wrote: Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your "check valve" has the potential to allow such a situation... This is very likely to happen. I once heard a report of a pilot (iirc Helmut Grix) who had plugged his water drains before he went up in a wave. The over-pressure of the air in his waterbags broke his wing shells in the thinner air - he needed completely new wings afterwards. Bye Andreas |
#5
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One of the great things about the freezer bag mod is that there is
enough resistance to hold water in a slowly lowered wing, but not enough to stop the force of any signifigant pressure. I have found that if I lower the wing too rapidly, I get a "blow out" of the plastic diaphram. I am now in my third year using this method and it works great. I think the supposition that this 1mil sheet of plastic is going to create enough resistance to split the wing is unrealistic. I made several blow out and reset tests. Gary Emerson wrote: Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your "check valve" has the potential to allow such a situation... Paul M. Cordell wrote: I am always amazed at how few Schempp-Hirth Glider owners have done this very simple Mod to their water ballast system. The addition of this 1 way valve to the top cap of the ballast tank plug will prevent water from flowing out of the tank prior to launch. You can put a wing down without water flowing out of the vent. The vent will still function properly during the dumping process. It’s a simple project using a screw driver, scissors and a plastic freezer bag. Unscrew the top cap from the rest of the plug mechanism. Cut a disc out of the freezer bag slightly smaller in diameter than the cap. Punch a hole in the center of the freezer bag disc of sufficient size for the screw mechanism to reattach. Reassemble and you are done. http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=32 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=34 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...¤tpos=35 I have to give credit to Jackie Payne for this mod. |
#6
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There is a great difference between thermal expansion of water
splitting the wing and trapped air (at altitude) splitting the wing, this could happen regardless of the amount of water (air is the significant factor). The amount of water that could heat and cause a problem would be dependent on the wing being completely full. (I only fill mine half way) Gary Kemp Andreas Maurer wrote: On Mon, 23 May 2005 22:26:11 GMT, Gary Emerson wrote: Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your "check valve" has the potential to allow such a situation... This is very likely to happen. I once heard a report of a pilot (iirc Helmut Grix) who had plugged his water drains before he went up in a wave. The over-pressure of the air in his waterbags broke his wing shells in the thinner air - he needed completely new wings afterwards. Bye Andreas |
#7
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Tomas,
What you have written so far seems to takes no account of the structural risk to the wing of a sealed partially air-filled tank inside the wing when flying in the lower external pressures at altitiude. It only takes a small differential positive pressure within the wing per unit area to have a very large effect over the whole area of a tank and thus on the length of the spar to skin bond. It is this, not thermal expansion, that is the risk. Your assertion the freezer bag plastic will 'blow out' is a totally untested suggestion with regard to flying at altitude and, unless there is another vent in the tank, or firm experimental evidence that it will reliably give way well below the critical differential pressure, your modification is very unwise. John Galloway At 14:30 24 May 2005, Tomas wrote: One of the great things about the freezer bag mod is that there is enough resistance to hold water in a slowly lowered wing, but not enough to stop the force of any signifigant pressure. I have found that if I lower the wing too rapidly, I get a 'blow out' of the plastic diaphram. I am now in my third year using this method and it works great. I think the supposition that this 1mil sheet of plastic is going to create enough resistance to split the wing is unrealistic. I made several blow out and reset tests. Gary Emerson wrote: Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your 'check valve' has the potential to allow such a situation... Paul M. Cordell wrote: I am always amazed at how few Schempp-Hirth Glider owners have done this very simple Mod to their water ballast system. The addition of this 1 way valve to the top cap of the ballast tank plug will prevent water from flowing out of the tank prior to launch. You can put a wing down without water flowing out of the vent. The vent will still function properly during the dumping process. It�s a simple project using a screw driver, scissors and a plastic freezer bag. Unscrew the top cap from the rest of the plug mechanism. Cut a disc out of the freezer bag slightly smaller in diameter than the cap. Punch a hole in the center of the freezer bag disc of sufficient size for the screw mechanism to reattach. Reassemble and you are done. http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...bumid=5¤ tpos=32 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...bumid=5¤ tpos=34 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...bumid=5¤ tpos=35 I have to give credit to Jackie Payne for this mod. |
#8
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On Tue, 24 May 2005 14:09:09 GMT, Tomas wrote:
One of the great things about the freezer bag mod is that there is enough resistance to hold water in a slowly lowered wing, but not enough to stop the force of any signifigant pressure. I have found that if I lower the wing too rapidly, I get a "blow out" of the plastic diaphram. I am now in my third year using this method and it works great. I think the supposition that this 1mil sheet of plastic is going to create enough resistance to split the wing is unrealistic. I made several blow out and reset tests. I'm not sure if these tests are reliable. Helmut only covered the ventilation hole of his glider with tape - and the tape was strong enough to keep the overpressure. As John already pointed out, you need only a small differential positive pressure to blow up your wing. I'd strongly suggest to email Shempp Hirth about this topic - you should get a reliable answer quickly. Bye Andreas |
#9
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My Nimbus 3 had vents in the filler plugs AND tip vents
that I believe ran inside the wing all the way to the root rib area. If one vent were blocked the other vent would still provide adequate venting of the wing. This can be tested by blowing into the filler hole. No resistance = tip vent is open. JJ At 23:00 24 May 2005, John Galloway wrote: Tomas, What you have written so far seems to takes no account of the structural risk to the wing of a sealed partially air-filled tank inside the wing when flying in the lower external pressures at altitiude. It only takes a small differential positive pressure within the wing per unit area to have a very large effect over the whole area of a tank and thus on the length of the spar to skin bond. It is this, not thermal expansion, that is the risk. Your assertion the freezer bag plastic will 'blow out' is a totally untested suggestion with regard to flying at altitude and, unless there is another vent in the tank, or firm experimental evidence that it will reliably give way well below the critical differential pressure, your modification is very unwise. John Galloway At 14:30 24 May 2005, Tomas wrote: One of the great things about the freezer bag mod is that there is enough resistance to hold water in a slowly lowered wing, but not enough to stop the force of any signifigant pressure. I have found that if I lower the wing too rapidly, I get a 'blow out' of the plastic diaphram. I am now in my third year using this method and it works great. I think the supposition that this 1mil sheet of plastic is going to create enough resistance to split the wing is unrealistic. I made several blow out and reset tests. Gary Emerson wrote: Hopefully thermal expansion will not become an issue....splitting a wing open because it warmed up in the sun could ruin your day.... Your 'check valve' has the potential to allow such a situation... Paul M. Cordell wrote: I am always amazed at how few Schempp-Hirth Glider owners have done this very simple Mod to their water ballast system. The addition of this 1 way valve to the top cap of the ballast tank plug will prevent water from flowing out of the tank prior to launch. You can put a wing down without water flowing out of the vent. The vent will still function properly during the dumping process. It�s a simple project using a screw driver, scissors and a plastic freezer bag. Unscrew the top cap from the rest of the plug mechanism. Cut a disc out of the freezer bag slightly smaller in diameter than the cap. Punch a hole in the center of the freezer bag disc of sufficient size for the screw mechanism to reattach. Reassemble and you are done. http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...asp?albumid=5¤ tpos=32 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...asp?albumid=5¤ tpos=34 http://www.gliderforum.com/photos/sh...asp?albumid=5¤ tpos=35 I have to give credit to Jackie Payne for this mod. |
#10
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I've heard it in the air.
Gary T o d d P a t t i s t wrote: Andreas Maurer wrote: As John already pointed out, you need only a small differential positive pressure to blow up your wing. According to the manual, my Ventus wing will withstand an overpressure of about 3 feet of water or roughly a tenth of an atmosphere. That's about a pound and a half per square inch. My vent hole is roughly 0.2 inches in diameter, or only 0.03 square inches in area. Thus, the plastic should burst when .045 pounds or about 3/4 of an ounce of pressure is applied to the area of the small vent hole. Otherwise, I'd be outside the manual limit on overpressure. I doubt the ZipLoc plastic is that weak. OTOH, it's not clear how good of a seal you get with air attempting to escape. Perhaps a small hole in the plastic would assure minimal leakage of water when the "one-way" valve is sealed and still allow rapid dumping. I heard a wing crack during water filling (from a hose) without adequate pressure relief. It's a pretty sickening sound. As much as I like the nifty design here, I'd really hate to hear it on something I owned while I was in the air. I'd strongly suggest to email Shempp Hirth about this topic - you should get a reliable answer quickly. It would be nice to get a solid answer, but I doubt they're going to say "Sure go ahead." without some reasonable testing, and that costs money. You're more likely to be referred to the manual that already has overpressure guidelines related to filling the ballast tanks. |
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