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Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??



 
 
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  #11  
Old June 20th 08, 03:14 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
[email protected]
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Posts: 42
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

RR....turning this event into a learning tool....why was it best to
leave the gear down? You point it out with conviction, there must be a
good reason. Also, about how far did you slide,plow,then cruise thru
the water before all ahead stop?
R
  #13  
Old June 20th 08, 06:26 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
av8
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Posts: 4
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

On Jun 20, 10:14*am, " wrote:
RR....turning this event into a learning tool....why was it best to
leave the gear down? You point it out with conviction, there must be a
good reason. Also, about how far did you slide,plow,then cruise thru
the water before all ahead stop?
R


I had seen a briefing at a US teem XC Camp at Perry. The briefing was
originally prepared for the contestants at the worlds in Sweden. The
procedure was gear down to avoid the suction that the belly will
cause. If you dangle a spoon by its handle and gently touch the
bottom of the spoon to water flowing from a faucet (this works even
better in an un-aerated faucet) you will see the effect the spoon will
jump towards the faucet.

Having the gear down I think will also slow you down using a part of
the structure that is designed for high drag loads.

Spoilers out are bad, they can’t take the load, I had neutral flaps
but the briefing described landing flaps, but not dive breaks.

The other thing the briefing noted was don’t worry it will float. And
indeed it did. I don’t think it would stay up all day, but for quite
a while. It was a rapid deceleration but not “impact” like. As to
whether I went under, I don’t know as I got a face full of water as I
hit (I forgot to close the vent) but when I opened my eyes I was high
and moist…

I believe we are putting up the briefing on the web and when it gets
there we will post a link.

As well as it went, don’t try this at home…

Commodore
  #14  
Old June 20th 08, 08:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
jcarlyle
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Posts: 522
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

Hi, (Commodore) Rick,

Glad it all turned out OK for you and John. It must have been scary
for both of you on flare!

Just out of curiosity, what make and model is your radio?

-John

On Jun 19, 11:07 pm, av8 wrote:
The radio was not
working after the landing but all other electronics were. After a
night at 30,000 ft in a barograph calibration vacuum chamber it was
working fine the next morning. I flew the ship by 5:00 the next
day.

  #15  
Old June 21st 08, 08:11 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_3_]
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Posts: 28
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 10:26:31 -0700, av8 wrote:

Having the gear down I think will also slow you down using a part of
the structure that is designed for high drag loads.

A NZ briefing note I saw a year or two ago mentioned that it is good to
have the wheel brake on because that improves the tyre's aquaplaning
capability. This lets the glider reach a lower speed before the wheel
finally sinks into the water.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. |
org | Zappa fan & glider pilot


  #16  
Old June 22nd 08, 01:10 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
rlovinggood
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Posts: 268
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

On Jun 21, 3:11 pm, Martin Gregorie
wrote:
On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 10:26:31 -0700, av8 wrote:
Having the gear down I think will also slow you down using a part of
the structure that is designed for high drag loads.


A NZ briefing note I saw a year or two ago mentioned that it is good to
have the wheel brake on because that improves the tyre's aquaplaning
capability. This lets the glider reach a lower speed before the wheel
finally sinks into the water.

--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. |
org | Zappa fan & glider pilot


Martin,

How does that work with the rule on closing spoilers before touching
down, if the wheel brake is attached to the spoilers?

Ray Lovinggood
Carrboro, North Carolina, USA
  #17  
Old June 22nd 08, 12:50 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
av8
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Posts: 4
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

On Jun 21, 8:10*pm, rlovinggood wrote:
On Jun 21, 3:11 pm, Martin Gregorie

wrote:
On Fri, 20 Jun 2008 10:26:31 -0700, av8 wrote:
Having the gear down I think will also slow you down using a part of
the structure that is designed for high drag loads.


A NZ briefing note I saw a year or two ago mentioned that it is good to
have the wheel brake on because that improves the tyre's aquaplaning
capability. This lets the glider reach a lower speed before the wheel
finally sinks into the water.


--
martin@ * | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. |
org * * * | Zappa fan & glider pilot


Martin,

How does that work with the rule on closing spoilers before touching
down, if the wheel brake is attached to the spoilers?

Ray Lovinggood
Carrboro, North Carolina, USA


Just my two bits, I would close the spoilers over the wheel brake. I
don't think the rolling tire would make much difference, leaving the
spoilers out will damage the spoilers for sure, and perhaps damage the
wings from the drag loads...

To answer John’s question, the radio was a Becker, I don't know
exactly which model, but the less fancy one. It was never submerged
but I could see when it was in the glider, some water had wept out of
the lower mounting holes. It was the lowest instrument in the
panel.

But as a testament of using a vacuum chamber to dry stuff out, I had
my cell phone in my pocket when I swam to shore (you don’t think about
everything). I had written if off, as it had been fully submerged.
After the radio came back to life, I figured what the hell, and asked
Dave to try it on my cell. It was Palm Treo 700p cell phone, that had
a touch screen, and as we dropped the vacuum, you could see the screen
bulge, but in that I had such little hope in its recovery, we just put
it on a hard vacuum and left it over night. Amazingly it recovered.
Now by the same token, another cell phone I had did not, but that one
cost me, literally, $10 so no real loss…

Just as a side note, Dave’s "vacuum jar" did not look like the typical
glass bell jar. I asked him what it was, he said it was a "vacuum
desiccator". I think this was its first use as it's intended
purpose...

And as the last "drying" story, the only electronics that were damaged
(don't know if it will recover yet) was the one thing that was
supposed to be water proof. I thought I had found all the water, but
there is a spot under my battery that holds my elt. I found about 1/2
in of water there yesterday. Taking the elt out, you could hear it
slosh around. The battery side was dry, but the circuit board side
was "floating"... it was an ACK EO-1. it may have had some cracking
in the case from replacing the batteries and over tightening the
screws, but it is just kind of a funny irony...

RR
Commodore, Bota Blanco Yacht Club
  #18  
Old June 22nd 08, 10:40 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_3_]
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Posts: 28
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

On Sat, 21 Jun 2008 17:10:09 -0700, rlovinggood wrote:

How does that work with the rule on closing spoilers before touching
down, if the wheel brake is attached to the spoilers?

Remarkably tunelessly would be my guess.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. |
org | Zappa fan & glider pilot


  #19  
Old June 22nd 08, 11:03 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Martin Gregorie[_3_]
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Posts: 28
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

On Sun, 22 Jun 2008 04:50:14 -0700, av8 wrote:

Just my two bits, I would close the spoilers over the wheel brake. I
don't think the rolling tire would make much difference, leaving the
spoilers out will damage the spoilers for sure, and perhaps damage the
wings from the drag loads...

You've done it: I haven't (yet), so you know a lot more than I do about
ditching in a glider. I'm not trying to second guess you. I thought
the note contained useful info, so passed it on in case it helps somebody.

The note I saw didn't mention coupled wheel and airbrakes, but doing it on
such a glider doesn't sound too clever if the wing gets submerged before
the glider stops. Mine is non-coupled and I would put the wheel brake on
though, as its a balsa Libelle, dropping it into water means good night
glider no matter what brakes are on at the time. As it has upper and lower
surface brakes I'd certainly want them put away or the stop could be very
sudden.

However, I'm pretty certain that the speed difference between the water
and tyre surface matters quite a lot. Both bouncing bombs that I'm aware
of (Barnes Wallace's dam wrecker and Hi-ball, which was a
smaller anti-shipping design) went to a lot of trouble to spin the bombs
'backwards' to get the greatest possible water:casing speed
differential. I'm certain they wouldn't have bothered if it wasn't
important.


--
martin@ | Martin Gregorie
gregorie. |
org | Zappa fan & glider pilot


  #20  
Old June 23rd 08, 03:20 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
jcarlyle
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Posts: 522
Default Region 1 Sugarbush Updates??

Thanks, Rick, for the detailed description of the drying procedure and
the ditching tips. I'm glad you came through the whole experience OK!
Hopefully I'll never go through it myself, but if I do I'll be much
better prepared because you taking the time to document it all. Thanks
again.

-John

On Jun 22, 7:50 am, av8 wrote:
To answer John’s question, the radio was a Becker, I don't know
exactly which model, but the less fancy one. It was never submerged
but I could see when it was in the glider, some water had wept out of
the lower mounting holes. It was the lowest instrument in the
panel.

But as a testament of using a vacuum chamber to dry stuff out, I had
my cell phone in my pocket when I swam to shore (you don’t think about
everything). I had written if off, as it had been fully submerged.
After the radio came back to life, I figured what the hell, and asked
Dave to try it on my cell. It was Palm Treo 700p cell phone, that had
a touch screen, and as we dropped the vacuum, you could see the screen
bulge, but in that I had such little hope in its recovery, we just put
it on a hard vacuum and left it over night. Amazingly it recovered.
Now by the same token, another cell phone I had did not, but that one
cost me, literally, $10 so no real loss…

Just as a side note, Dave’s "vacuum jar" did not look like the typical
glass bell jar. I asked him what it was, he said it was a "vacuum
desiccator". I think this was its first use as it's intended
purpose...

And as the last "drying" story, the only electronics that were damaged
(don't know if it will recover yet) was the one thing that was
supposed to be water proof. I thought I had found all the water, but
there is a spot under my battery that holds my elt. I found about 1/2
in of water there yesterday. Taking the elt out, you could hear it
slosh around. The battery side was dry, but the circuit board side
was "floating"... it was an ACK EO-1. it may have had some cracking
in the case from replacing the batteries and over tightening the
screws, but it is just kind of a funny irony...

RR
Commodore, Bota Blanco Yacht Club


 




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