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#61
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On Jul 13, 8:52*pm, Kevin Christner wrote:
On Jul 11, 5:38*pm, wrote: Can anyone tell me if they've had an actual rope break below ~200 or even ~400ft. *I have never, ever heard of one. KJC Actual rope breaks are pretty rare, but I think what you are trying ask is who has had a PTT (Premature Termination of Tow) below between 200 and 400 feet. These are much more common. Last month I terminated a tow at about 200 feet by pulling the release. The tow plane wasn't climbing and I didn't know why. I released and returned to the runway before we got too far away from the runway to do so. Not a big deal since I practice this regularly and it was a training flight anyway. Turned out the towplane was experiencing carb ice and was fine after applying the carb heat. I have hit turbulance on tow in my glider and got a slack rope condition that caused a back release at about 400 feet. The previous owner of my glider had the canopy depart the glider at about 200 feet resulting in a broken rope and a 180 turn back to the runway. Brian CFIIG/ASEL |
#62
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On 7/14/2011 5:40 AM, T8 wrote:
On Jul 13, 10:52 pm, Kevin wrote: Can anyone tell me if they've had an actual rope break below ~200 or even ~400ft. I have never, ever heard of one. I had a rope break at 150' on my seventh student solo flight. I'm glad we covered this in pre solo training. -Evan Ludeman / T8 Per Kevin's question, "I have not," and until reading of Evan's experience, nor had I ever heard of one since beginning participating in soaring in 1972. That noted, I *did* experience a rope break in 1975 (15-meter glass), so weird it stuck firmly in memory. Above 1k agl in benign air, the tug smoothly began accelerating away/up from me, as what seemed like the entire rope sank out of sight below. Being overhead the runway, I had no hesitation in pulling the release (though it had probably already back released), lowered the gear (there being no hope of remaining aloft in the flat conditions) and landed. Subsequent inspection revealed the rope had parted where it exited a small 'bell-mouth' at the rear of the fuselage, feeding into a winch...meaning at a portion of the rope neither wing runner or glider pilot would ever be likely to see. What seemed weird about it to me was the rope had withstood the (presumably far) larger tension of accelerating the glider from rest, while parting under a very light, essentially steady-state load. If it happens it must be possible. The same thought applies to relatively perplexing accidents as the recent Montana 2-32 crash. Thoughtful pilots will draw some appropriate-to-them conclusions... One of my long-standing conclusions is I *can* screw up. Anywhere in a flight. Hence I try to fly accordingly, especially where the margins are thin. Bob W. |
#63
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On Jul 14, 8:43*am, Berry wrote:
Far worse than the CFI-G in our club who was constantly warning students about loss of airspeed due to turning downwind... Many people argue that this is not real and base their argument on the fact that the glider is moving in the air so the glider does not see the wind speed difference. While that's true it ignors the very important point that a pilot will, particularly at low altitude, and particularly if not monitoring the ASI and yaw string, tend to make control inputs based on the observed movement of the glider over the ground. The effect is real. If you haven't experienced it be thankful. The two fatal accident after rope breaks in strong wing conditions may be related to this. Andy |
#64
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On Thu, 14 Jul 2011 12:52:15 +0000, Walt Connelly wrote:
There are two things important here. 1. The importance of being ready to handle the rope break by practice. No argument here. Which direction do you turn? This is an obvious question when winching and the answer is always the same: downwind if there's any crosswind, because that opens the circuit out at minimal cost. I almost asked about it earlier in the thread and then decided that was obvious - you'd turn the same way as usual because that's what the tow pilot is expecting. So, is this the correct answer and, if not, what is? If a current, experienced pilot blows it at a critical moment, what's going to happen to the guy who flies twice a year? At my club he'd be given a mandatory check flight if he hadn't flown for more than a month and rocked up expecting to fly solo. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#65
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On Jul 14, 9:57*am, Martin Gregorie
wrote: I almost asked about it earlier in the thread and then decided that was obvious - you'd turn the same way as usual because that's what the tow pilot is expecting. So, is this the correct answer and, if not, what is? With a crosswind and only the takeoff runway as a landing option the choice should usually be into the wind. A turn into a crosswind will reduce the deviation of the glider from the extended runway centre line and reduce the distance required to return to the runway centre line for landing. It therefore reduces the altitude loss for the course reversal. Imagine a 90 deg cross wind that equals the glider's airspeed. A turn into wind can be accomplished on the runway extended center line. Now consider how far the glider must go to complete the turn if made downwind. Andy |
#66
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On Thu, 14 Jul 2011 10:13:53 -0700, Andy wrote:
On Jul 14, 9:57Â*am, Martin Gregorie wrote: I almost asked about it earlier in the thread and then decided that was obvious - you'd turn the same way as usual because that's what the tow pilot is expecting. So, is this the correct answer and, if not, what is? With a crosswind and only the takeoff runway as a landing option the choice should usually be into the wind. A turn into a crosswind will reduce the deviation of the glider from the extended runway centre line and reduce the distance required to return to the runway centre line for landing. It therefore reduces the altitude loss for the course reversal. Imagine a 90 deg cross wind that equals the glider's airspeed. A turn into wind can be accomplished on the runway extended center line. Now consider how far the glider must go to complete the turn if made downwind. I initially thought into wind, i.e. opposite to what I'd mentally run through in my pre-winch-launch eventualities, was the answer. Then it occurred to me that, if the cross wind was such that turning into it caused you to turn opposite to the local aero tow release convention and the tow pilot wasn't looking or was dealing with a situation at his end that had forced the tow to be abandoned, you could easily end up in conflict with the tow plane. Not a good place to be. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#67
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In article
, Andy wrote: On Jul 14, 8:43*am, Berry wrote: Far worse than the CFI-G in our club who was constantly warning students about loss of airspeed due to turning downwind... Many people argue that this is not real and base their argument on the fact that the glider is moving in the air so the glider does not see the wind speed difference. While that's true it ignors the very important point that a pilot will, particularly at low altitude, and particularly if not monitoring the ASI and yaw string, tend to make control inputs based on the observed movement of the glider over the ground. The effect is real. If you haven't experienced it be thankful. The two fatal accident after rope breaks in strong wing conditions may be related to this. Andy Slaps head: I knew I should not have mentioned the "downwind turn". |
#68
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Your illustration has little practical value. Subject to local variations I would agree with Martin that a downwind turn in crosswind conditions is often the better option as it enables you to fly a teardrop pattern to the centreline more easily. Cheers Colin |
#69
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On Jul 14, 10:13*am, Andy wrote:
On Jul 14, 9:57*am, Martin Gregorie wrote: I almost asked about it earlier in the thread and then decided that was obvious - you'd turn the same way as usual because that's what the tow pilot is expecting. So, is this the correct answer and, if not, what is? With a crosswind and only the takeoff runway as a landing option the choice should usually be into the wind. A turn into a crosswind will reduce the deviation of the glider from the extended runway centre line and reduce the distance required to return to the runway centre line for landing. *It therefore reduces the altitude loss for the course reversal. Imagine a 90 deg cross wind that equals the glider's airspeed. *A turn into wind can be accomplished on the runway extended center line. *Now consider how far the glider must go to complete the turn if made downwind. Andy We have parallel runways, gliders on one side, powered traffic on the other, with opposite side traffic patterns that separates power from glider traffic. We always brief to turn away from the other runway to avoid a possible headon with traffic you may not have heard on the radio. T |
#70
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On Jul 15, 4:43*am, Andy wrote:
While that's true it ignors the very important point that a pilot will, particularly at low altitude, and particularly if not monitoring the ASI and yaw string, *tend to make control inputs based on the observed movement of the glider over the ground. The effect is real. *If you haven't experienced it be thankful. *The two fatal accident after rope breaks in strong wing conditions may be related to this. Don't you people have ridges? I don't think anyone would be likely to get to solo here without being very aware that the direction the glider is pointing has little to do with the direction it is moving, and having experienced this a number of times in 20+ knots winds, at low level, while doing a lot of 180 degree turns, with the instructor pointing it out if the string didn't stay in the middle. |
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