![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? I cant think of one.
Walt |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You could look at the rubber pad on the pedals. Wait....that's for
Buicks. Look, Walt....gliders are like good looking women. You walk up and if you mumble "Damn"....you're most of the way home. If the owner will let you touch it, your intuition will guide you the rest of the way. No one really gives a sinking ship on the number of hours as you can't hide wear and tear easily. Of course, if you're talking about Tin Cans....it's 'Buyer Beware". A detail inspection is in order. A bigger concern over hours would be damage history not entered into the log books. A very small concern at that though. Or the type of flying...ridge vs. thermals. Glider home port...inland vs. marine air. Outside vs. inside. The reference of a seller would be most telling. R |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 26, 3:13*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. *Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. *While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. *Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? *I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly All the time I have logged in my ASW-28 is supported by electronic flight logs with a 2 second sample interval. I log my flight time and the glider usage to the nearest minuted based on those flight logs. Glider flight history is typically recorded as number of launches or starts, and total flight time. If you were in the market to buy mine I could provide complete and accurate records including all the electronic flight logs. Do you have $80K looking for a good home? Andy |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 26, 3:13*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. *Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. *While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. *Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? *I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly In short. No. I have kept pretty accurate records since I got my glider, but it was 24 years old, with 5 previous owners when I got it. |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 26, 3:13*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. *Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. *While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. *Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? *I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly Does sleeping in it and dreaming about a 2200 km flight count? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 26, 5:13*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. *Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. *While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. *Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? *I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly Gliders are no different than F-4s, it's all up to the length of the pilot's pencil... Kirk (who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Kirk
(who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) Okay, there's got to be a story in that! Pardon my lack of acronym- sense, but what is "IFE" ? (I'm thinking something Failure of Engine). -John (who once crashed a simulated CF-100) |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 27, 10:51*am, jsbrake wrote:
Kirk (who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) Okay, there's got to be a story in that! *Pardon my lack of acronym- sense, but what is "IFE" ? *(I'm thinking something Failure of Engine). -John (who once crashed a simulated CF-100) In Flight Emergency |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 4/26/2011 4:13 PM, Walt Connelly wrote:
I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? I cant think of one. Walt A couple of thoughts... - My understanding of 'German glass' (the glider world 'certification pioneers') is that early (Glasflugel & Schleicher & probably others) pre-carbon-ed airframes were LBA-overseen-tested to 18,000 hours, then (originally) certified to 1/6 of that, or the 'magic' 3,000 hours you'll sooner or later encounter in the glider world. As airframes/types reached 3,000 hours, additional certification depended upon them passing detailed inspections with the results forwarded/blessed by the LBA in 3,000 hour increments. I believe some airframes have now been certified up to 12,000 hours (Twin Grobs? LS-4's?). It'd be great if knowledgeable Europeans will see fit to chime in here... - 'Pure glass' gliders are necessarily 'overstrong' (i.e. designed to stiffness, rather than strength criteria [the latter being typical of aluminum and wood gliders and airplanes]), in order to demonstrate 'usefully high' flutter-free useable airspeeds. - I'm unaware of any evidence of fatigue-related aging issues in any first-generation glass ships' composites. (The metal bits are a different story, of course...) Based on the above, my conclusion is potential owners of 1st-generation glass gliders have little to fret about in ship-life terms, at least of the plastic bits, regardless of whether one is purchasing from an apparent 'squirrel' or from Diogenes' sought-after human. Regards, Bob W. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I had one of those once; urinated on my 'chute. Spoilered in from
14,500msl to save it. At 17:41 27 April 2011, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Apr 27, 10:51=A0am, jsbrake wrote: Kirk (who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) Okay, there's got to be a story in that! =A0Pardon my lack of acronym- sense, but what is "IFE" ? =A0(I'm thinking something Failure of Engine). -John (who once crashed a simulated CF-100) In Flight Emergency |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
In your country how many hours in a glider can count towards therequirements for a power license? | Markus Graeber | Soaring | 5 | December 18th 08 04:06 AM |
PPL(H) Hours 8.4 to 12.1 | Simon Robbins | Rotorcraft | 3 | October 3rd 05 03:16 PM |
3 Down in last 24 hours | thepearl | Rotorcraft | 0 | September 25th 05 04:29 PM |
PPL(H) Hours 5.9 to 8.4 | Simon Robbins | Rotorcraft | 2 | September 23rd 05 05:30 PM |
Glider hours count towards ATP? | Michael | Soaring | 1 | November 9th 03 02:24 AM |