![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ok, time to change threads from 'Where are you from'
to 'Ugly trailer. The trailer does not load over the tongue, but from the back. The idea of the trailer is quite sound, I believe. The wing tips go in first. It has the heavy part of the fuselage towards the front and the heavy part of the wings towards the rear, rather than the roots, thus the trailer is quite well balanced. It tows extremely easily. I towed it behind my four cylinder Honda for a few years until I was forced to get a newer car. Now, I tow it behind a six cylinder Honda and it tows even more easily. To improve the design, I would have a professional craftsman: 1. Build the trailer with brakes. 2. Put a cargo door up front. 3. Have the rigging tweaked. 4. Paint it! I don't know the weight of the trailer, but it must be light. Steel tube triangulated frame covered in aluminum skin attached to a steel angle perimeter frame and plywood floor. It's not a Cobra or Komet, but it serves it's purpose of storing my glider away from the elements and transporting it whenever the needs arises. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA LS1-d 'W8' |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I think that many people underestimate the value of a well designed
trailer. I have owned both a 1-26 (Open Trailer) and an HP16 (Schreder Trailer). With some modifications to both of these trailers I was/am able assemble these aircraft almost as fast and as easily as the ASW20, LS6 and ASW27 that I typically fly with. I almost always disassemble between each flight. Here are the things I look for in a trailer. 1. you must be able to remove the fuselage from the trailer by your self. The Cradle on wheels has proven itself to work well for this. 2. Avoid trailers that Tilt. It is much more convient to have the trailer solidly attached to a vehical when rigging. A Ramp is best either with a jack to raise the aircraft out of the dolley or just designed to be the correct height to extend the gear and slide out of the Dolly. A well designed back door that tilts down with the ramp on it can work pretty well also. 3. Wing Root should be to the front of the trailer in most cases. since you will roll the fuselage out to the back of the ramp, this will mean when you pull the wing out the heavy part will be very near the fuselage wing root. This way you should just lift the wing off of the wing dolly and install it directly into the fuselage. 4. Avoid as much as possible dollies and trailer parts that physically attach the glider parts. You want be able to just set in or lift out the wings into the wing dollies. The easier it is to load and unload you glider, the more likely you will fly, the more likely you will venture away from you home airport knowing that if you land out at an easily accessable place (like another airport) you can load you glider in 15 minutes and be on your way back home. Or like me take off work early head for the airport and rig my glider while the other gliders are launching. Take a look at how the Cobra's and other expensive trailers work, they do things the way the do for a reason and it doesn't have the as fancy or expensive to work. Brian CFIIG/ASEL |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
In article ,
Ray Lovinggood wrote: Ok, time to change threads from 'Where are you from' to 'Ugly trailer. Well, let's make it "wierd" as well as ugly and I'm in. Ray, I know you have seen my trailer. It's all fiberglass, looks like it was made to haul marine mammals, or maybe someone left a PIK factory trailer in the oven too long. It does load over the tongue, and the wing tips go in first. At least my glider is a Libelle, so the wings are not too heavy. The trailer itself is heavy, but has good brakes and is very weatherproof. The worst "feature" is that the only wheels that I could find to fit it were from late '60's VW vans. I see an axle change in my future. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wally,
I've seen your 'white whale' trailer and I must say, it is quite unique. I've also seen a completely cylindrical trailer with an LS3 inside. It is amazing they could fit the odd shaped disassembled glider in a tube, but they did. I've also seen a trailer that was skinned with vinyl siding you might find on a mobile home or a house. I've seen a trailer that began life as an open trailer for an HP-11 and then was enclosed with roofing/siding metal. The HP's Vee tail did not fold, and provisions were made in the trailer for their existance. From the rear, the trailer looked somewhat like the head of Mickey Mouse. I really don't care how the trailer looks. It's all how it protects the glider from the elements, from a crash on the road, how easily it tows, and how easy it make to rig and de-rig. But of course, if it looks good, there is nothing wrong with that! Ray At 16:06 19 December 2005, Wallace Berry wrote: In article , Ray Lovinggood wrote: Ok, time to change threads from 'Where are you from' to 'Ugly trailer. Well, let's make it 'wierd' as well as ugly and I'm in. Ray, I know you have seen my trailer. It's all fiberglass, looks like it was made to haul marine mammals, or maybe someone left a PIK factory trailer in the oven too long. It does load over the tongue, and the wing tips go in first. At least my glider is a Libelle, so the wings are not too heavy. The trailer itself is heavy, but has good brakes and is very weatherproof. The worst 'feature' is that the only wheels that I could find to fit it were from late '60's VW vans. I see an axle change in my future. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Ray Lovinggood wrote: Wally, I've seen your 'white whale' trailer and I must say, it is quite unique. I've also seen a completely cylindrical trailer with an LS3 inside. It is amazing they could fit the odd shaped disassembled glider in a tube, but they did. I've also seen a trailer that was skinned with vinyl siding you might find on a mobile home or a house. I've seen a trailer that began life as an open trailer for an HP-11 and then was enclosed with roofing/siding metal. The HP's Vee tail did not fold, and provisions were made in the trailer for their existance. From the rear, the trailer looked somewhat like the head of Mickey Mouse. I really don't care how the trailer looks. It's all how it protects the glider from the elements, from a crash on the road, how easily it tows, and how easy it make to rig and de-rig. But of course, if it looks good, there is nothing wrong with that! Ray At 16:06 19 December 2005, Wallace Berry wrote: In article , Ray Lovinggood wrote: Ok, time to change threads from 'Where are you from' to 'Ugly trailer. Well, the elegant version of what you're describing is the Kuhn trailer. It's made of wood, tapers wider from front to rear. Fuselage goes in head first, wings tip first. On the road, nothing's better. An old hand once told me if you ordered Johann's plans & bought materials according to his parts list, you'd end up with nothing but a great trailer & sawdust. I'm very fortunate to have a well built one for my LS-4. Well, let's make it 'wierd' as well as ugly and I'm in. Ray, I know you have seen my trailer. It's all fiberglass, looks like it was made to haul marine mammals, or maybe someone left a PIK factory trailer in the oven too long. It does load over the tongue, and the wing tips go in first. At least my glider is a Libelle, so the wings are not too heavy. The trailer itself is heavy, but has good brakes and is very weatherproof. The worst 'feature' is that the only wheels that I could find to fit it were from late '60's VW vans. I see an axle change in my future. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Ray,
You realize I was just jealous, so I hope you didn't take my "insulting the tapeworm" comment too personally, I don't know if you remember the elegant piece of engineering and aesthetics that was my trailer for the K-6 I had a couple of years ago at Harnett county, don't you? The epitome of trailer design! Ryan Wubben Madison, WI |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() I really don't care how the trailer looks. It's all how it protects the glider from the elements, from a crash on the road, how easily it tows, and how easy it make to rig and de-rig. But of course, if it looks good, there is nothing wrong with that! Ray I agree absolutely! The latest and greatest 55:1, multispan, bewingletted, electronics festooned wonderflugel is just a big, white, plastic turd in the absence of a good trailer. If the trailer tries to drive the car, or doesn't protect the glider well, or if the glider is too difficult to rig out of the trailer, then the bird just won't get flown. My flaky looking trailer does pretty much everything well - for what is essentially a tube trailer. However, full clamshell trailers are almost always superior to tube trailers when it comes to assemby/disassembly of the ship. I can't think of a single instance where I have found a tube trailer design to be substantially superior except in ease of manufacturing. Now, the half clamshell trailers, such as the old Libelle factory trailers, Eberle, I believe, effectively combined all the worst features of the tube and clamshell trailers. Leaky, heavy to raise the clamshell, not very convenient for rigging, and with the one I had, I was constantly banging my head on the low hanging rim of the trailer. I suspect the Eberle company's other products consisted of a line of particularly vicious moustraps. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, if nothing else, that "mousetrap line" gave me a good laugh!
Thanks, bumper Cobra - full clamshell, LED rear lights, never bitten yet. "Wallace Berry" wrote in message ... I really don't care how the trailer looks. It's all how it protects the glider from the elements, from a crash on the road, how easily it tows, and how easy it make to rig and de-rig. But of course, if it looks good, there is nothing wrong with that! Ray I agree absolutely! The latest and greatest 55:1, multispan, bewingletted, electronics festooned wonderflugel is just a big, white, plastic turd in the absence of a good trailer. If the trailer tries to drive the car, or doesn't protect the glider well, or if the glider is too difficult to rig out of the trailer, then the bird just won't get flown. My flaky looking trailer does pretty much everything well - for what is essentially a tube trailer. However, full clamshell trailers are almost always superior to tube trailers when it comes to assemby/disassembly of the ship. I can't think of a single instance where I have found a tube trailer design to be substantially superior except in ease of manufacturing. Now, the half clamshell trailers, such as the old Libelle factory trailers, Eberle, I believe, effectively combined all the worst features of the tube and clamshell trailers. Leaky, heavy to raise the clamshell, not very convenient for rigging, and with the one I had, I was constantly banging my head on the low hanging rim of the trailer. I suspect the Eberle company's other products consisted of a line of particularly vicious moustraps. |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Wallace Berry wrote:
Leaky, heavy to raise the clamshell, not very convenient for rigging, and with the one I had, I was constantly banging my head on the low hanging rim of the trailer. I suspect the Eberle company's other products consisted of a line of particularly vicious moustraps. I didn't become a victim, but the fellow that bought my Std Cirrus lost a canopy when the trailer chomped down on the fuselage as it was being pulled from the trailer. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Ugly Trailer | Ray Lovinggood | Soaring | 3 | December 19th 05 03:56 PM |
Trailer hitch inadvertant disconnect | Bill Daniels | Soaring | 5 | July 16th 04 03:17 AM |
Trailer spare - who woulda thunk? | Bill Daniels | Soaring | 7 | May 20th 04 04:47 PM |
Tire Stiffness & trailer swaying - resolution | chris | Soaring | 6 | October 26th 03 03:50 PM |
Tire Stiffness & trailer swaying | chris | Soaring | 42 | October 22nd 03 03:51 AM |