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#11
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On Nov 8, 6:42*pm, Mike Ash wrote:
http://pix.mikeash.com/v/H3/ I'm deliberately leaving the link in :-) My favourite sailplane up until the glass machines was the Ka6 but these latest sailplanes are more seamless art than engineering. |
#12
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On Nov 8, 12:27*am, Mike Ash wrote:
In article , *Jim Logajan wrote: Mike Ash wrote: In article , *george wrote: What, might I ask, are you flying? I'm part owner of an ASW-20. It's an incredibly wonderful machine. You should point him to your web site Mike! I.e.: http://www.mikeash.com/?page=my_glider.html Heh, duh.... I completely forgot I even had that page. Thanks for the reminder. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon I had one flight in a glider, decades ago. Not that I overcontrolled or anything, but the instructor had bruises on his thighs from the stick banging from side to side. Control pressures with a yoke vs a stick were an adventure and keeping the piece of yarn pointing straight back . . . well, it did that when passing from left to right to left. . . The Mooney's controls are responsive, it's like thinking the change in attitude and the airplane does it. That glider however was a mind reader -- and it was hardly a high performance machine. For now, it'll be point to point SEL, hoping for solid IMC, where I use 9 gallons of lift an hour. I did get lots of the other kind of lift once, flew into an embedded thunderstorm in CO: got to 22,000 feet with a pegged rate of climb. Center assured me I had clearance for unrestricted climb when I told them what happened, and later, unrestricted descent when the downdraft took over. When it was all over the controller told me to resume normal nav, and thanked me for not crashing because "there's so much paperwork to fill out at this end. . .". |
#13
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In article
, a wrote: I had one flight in a glider, decades ago. Not that I overcontrolled or anything, but the instructor had bruises on his thighs from the stick banging from side to side. Control pressures with a yoke vs a stick were an adventure and keeping the piece of yarn pointing straight back . . . well, it did that when passing from left to right to left. . . The Mooney's controls are responsive, it's like thinking the change in attitude and the airplane does it. That glider however was a mind reader -- and it was hardly a high performance machine. Sounds like a pretty typical experience for a transition pilot. While they might both qualify as "aircraft", the handling is really different and takes some getting used to. I'm sure I would be plenty ham-fisted, albeit differently, if you plopped me into your plane. I'm not sure that performance and control sensitivity are too closely related in gliders. Certainly the big open-class monsters (with 70+ft wingspans) have fairly poor roll response, not sure about the rest. The 1-26 I flew for a while (best glide ratio of about 22:1, Vne around 110MPH) was light as a feather on the stick. For now, it'll be point to point SEL, hoping for solid IMC, where I use 9 gallons of lift an hour. Interesting to think in terms of "per hour". If I stick around the low end of my speed range, I need 9,000ft per hour. More if I want to go faster. I did get lots of the other kind of lift once, flew into an embedded thunderstorm in CO: got to 22,000 feet with a pegged rate of climb. Center assured me I had clearance for unrestricted climb when I told them what happened, and later, unrestricted descent when the downdraft took over. When it was all over the controller told me to resume normal nav, and thanked me for not crashing because "there's so much paperwork to fill out at this end. . .". Sounds a little too exciting for my tastes. I think it was an article I read in _Soaring_ a couple of months back, wherein they described how the crazy people back in the 40s would actually go seek out and soar in thunderstorms *on purpose*. -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
#14
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In article
, george wrote: On Nov 8, 6:42*pm, Mike Ash wrote: http://pix.mikeash.com/v/H3/ I'm deliberately leaving the link in :-) My favourite sailplane up until the glass machines was the Ka6 but these latest sailplanes are more seamless art than engineering. They all have their charms, even (or perhaps especially) the older ones. My delight in the ASW-20 is only superficially related to how pretty it is, although that certainly doesn't hurt! -- Mike Ash Radio Free Earth Broadcasting from our climate-controlled studios deep inside the Moon |
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