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#91
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On Jul 21, 6:16*pm, BobW wrote:
(Groan.) Well...sincere praise to the pilot for his honesty 'after the fact.' How utterly terrible the 'opportunity' to display it, and may no other glider pilot ever have to make such a choice in the future. I'll be honest, the only time I ever experienced a "real" rudder wag signal, I also released immediately. You're under tow and barely climbing, there is obviously something quite wrong, you're anticipating the tow plane to signal for a release any moment, your hand is already on the release, you're looking around to assess landing options, then you get a signal (any signal will do by that point) and reflexively pull the release. In my case, though, the tow pilot made a big slow circle back over the runway before making the signal. As soon as I pulled the release, the problem was obvious, I closed the spoilers and landed normally. I asked the tow pilot afterwards why he waited, he said that all the pilots at that operation had been briefed to delay, if possible, until the glider was in a position to make a normal pattern. Despite demonstrating the rudder wag during training, asking people about the signals during every flight reviews, etc., in practice at that site, well over half the pilots who were given rudder wags for open spoilers released immediately. I'm aware of two other fatal accidents following a rudder wag. Perhaps, we are all too dense to be flying. Perhaps some, like myself, who were flying long before the rudder wag signal was "standardized", are confused by the fact that it was once commonly used as a signal to indicate that this would be a good point to release. Or, perhaps it is just a bad idea... Marc |
#92
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On Jul 21, 2:34*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: Looking at all 2011 accidents reported thus far, a good portion involved pilots with little apparent time in model or particular glider. *I'm just sayin'. Frank Whiteley Frank Whiteley The rest of the storyhttp://www.thebaynet.com/news/index.cfm/fa/viewstory/story_ID/23254 Well, after having read the "rest of the story" it is obvious that this was a major misinterpretation of the tow pilots rudder waggle by BOTH pilots. *The "copilot" shouts "release, release, release," and the "pilot" fails to properly interpret the rudder wag and releases. * We all make mistakes, unfortunately some of our mistakes can be fatal. *We must all continually update our knowledge of emergency signals and procedures to help reduce these kinds of accidents. *JMHO. Walt -- Walt Connelly[/i][/color] How many more pilots need to die until the rudder waggle will be replaced with something more sensible, like a radio call?? No radio, no tow! and if it is absolutely necessary to waggle the rudder, it should be delayed until the glider is high enough to land safely! Obviously the NTSB is not going to do anything about it, it is up to us, SSA, SSF or whoever the force may be to do something about it! Sigh! Ramy |
#93
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Walt |
#94
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I'm aware of two other fatal accidents following a rudder wag.
Perhaps, we are all too dense to be flying. Perhaps some, like myself, who were flying long before the rudder wag signal was "standardized", are confused by the fact that it was once commonly used as a signal to indicate that this would be a good point to release. Or, perhaps it is just a bad idea... Marc[/quote] Marc, I was unaware of the rudder wag ever being a signal that this would be a good point to release. How wide spread was this? Was this a local thing? It would seem that such an understanding would be a difficult thing to change considering the law of primacy. Walt |
#95
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Just a couple of weeks ago, I was towing a commercial glider checkride and,
per the DPE's request rocked the wings repeatedly at 2,800 AGL. The applicant said, "Why's he rocking his wings?", and hung on to the tow. The ride was a bust. BTW, on the walk out to the launch line, the DPE briefed the applicant on the signal and what it means. I've had two engine failures with gliders on tow (blown front engine seal and failed oil pump) and both times the glider released when I rocked the wings. Had they not, I'd have dumped them without concern of the terrain below. "Greg Arnold" wrote in message ... On 7/21/2011 12:26 PM, Frank Whiteley wrote: http://www.nbcwashington.com/news/lo...tal-Glider-Cra... Describes a low level tow release. From the reports and videos, the crash site can be located on GE to 38°18'49.94"N 76°32'8.78"W That's about 2075 feet from the end of the runway and about 285 feet left of the runway center line. One report mentioned the glider turned left before striking the tree. There's a line of trees bordering the airport in the GE images. Summer foliage along Hwy235 is definitely heavier than the GE images, which are over four years old, dated 3/29/2007. Looking at all 2011 accidents reported thus far, a good portion involved pilots with little apparent time in model or particular glider. I'm just sayin'. Frank Whiteley Frank Whiteley The rest of the story http://www.thebaynet.com/news/index....story_ID/23254 How many pilots have died because they thought a rudder waggle meant they must release? |
#96
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One hour or a thousand in type - it doesn't make a bit of difference to the
pilot's required knowledge of signals!. That's just making excuses for poorly trained pilots (and CFIGs)... "Walt Connelly" wrote in message ... Looking at all 2011 accidents reported thus far, a good portion involved pilots with little apparent time in model or particular glider. *I'm just sayin'. Frank Whiteley Frank Whiteley The rest of the story http://www.thebaynet.com/news/index....story_ID/23254 Well, after having read the "rest of the story" it is obvious that this was a major misinterpretation of the tow pilots rudder waggle by BOTH pilots. The "copilot" shouts "release, release, release," and the "pilot" fails to properly interpret the rudder wag and releases. We all make mistakes, unfortunately some of our mistakes can be fatal. We must all continually update our knowledge of emergency signals and procedures to help reduce these kinds of accidents. JMHO. Walt -- Walt Connelly [/i][/color] |
#97
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In this case the pair were still climbing, though slowly, but what if they
couldn't climb out of ground effect? There's no substitute for knowledge, skill, and preparation. Please don't try to legislate safety with more rules. "Ramy" wrote in message ... On Jul 21, 2:34 pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly. wrote: Looking at all 2011 accidents reported thus far, a good portion involved pilots with little apparent time in model or particular glider. *I'm just sayin'. Frank Whiteley Frank Whiteley The rest of the storyhttp://www.thebaynet.com/news/index.cfm/fa/viewstory/story_ID/23254 Well, after having read the "rest of the story" it is obvious that this was a major misinterpretation of the tow pilots rudder waggle by BOTH pilots. The "copilot" shouts "release, release, release," and the "pilot" fails to properly interpret the rudder wag and releases. We all make mistakes, unfortunately some of our mistakes can be fatal. We must all continually update our knowledge of emergency signals and procedures to help reduce these kinds of accidents. JMHO. Walt -- Walt Connelly[/i][/color] How many more pilots need to die until the rudder waggle will be replaced with something more sensible, like a radio call?? No radio, no tow! and if it is absolutely necessary to waggle the rudder, it should be delayed until the glider is high enough to land safely! Obviously the NTSB is not going to do anything about it, it is up to us, SSA, SSF or whoever the force may be to do something about it! Sigh! Ramy |
#98
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On Jul 11, 5:38*pm, wrote:
On July 7, 2011 at Nowy Targ in southern Poland, glider Puchacz crashed during training flight 2/3 mile from the airport. The instructor (~64-67) and the student pilot (~18-19) are dead. *It was a tow rope brake practice flight with down wind turn for down wind landing from about 130-150 m of altitude (400 feet). What can we learn from this? Are these training flights mendatory under FAA rules? Can pilot request opt-out from "rope brake" during Biennial Flight Review to avoid getting killed? I remember once during BFR the instructor pulled the release on me in the Blanik at about 200 feet, I had to do 180 turn and land down wind from very low altitude. I think it was dangerous and unnecessary even for an experienced pilot as me. Andre http://wiadomosci.onet.pl/regionalne...Szybowiec_rozb... Can't anyone in this group spell? It's "break" not "brake". |
#99
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On Jul 22, 6:44*am, "Dan Marotta" wrote:
One hour or a thousand in type - it doesn't make a bit of difference to the pilot's required knowledge of signals!. *That's just making excuses for poorly trained pilots (and CFIGs)... "Walt Connelly" wrote in message ... Looking at all 2011 accidents reported thus far, a good portion involved pilots with little apparent time in model or particular glider. *I'm just sayin'. Frank Whiteley Frank Whiteley The rest of the story http://www.thebaynet.com/news/index....story_ID/23254 Well, after having read the "rest of the story" it is obvious that this was a major misinterpretation of the tow pilots rudder waggle by BOTH pilots. *The "copilot" shouts "release, release, release," and the "pilot" fails to properly interpret the rudder wag and releases. We all make mistakes, unfortunately some of our mistakes can be fatal. *We must all continually update our knowledge of emergency signals and procedures to help reduce these kinds of accidents. *JMHO. Walt -- Walt Connelly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -[/i][/color] Folks, the problem is not just lack of knowledge or practice, it is the human nature of confusion and tunnel vision under stress! Imagine you are on tow and barely climbing (since your spoilers are out), your first thought is that something is wrong with the tow plane, and once you see the tow pilot waggle the rudder (which may also cause the wings to rock a little), I bet over 90% of pilots will release, even if they just practiced this manuver a week ago. There are many examples confirming this, luckily not all of them resulted in accidents. Bottom line: Use radios! If this doesn't work, do not waggle rudders until at safe altitude, unless the tow plane can not climb at all. Ramy |
#100
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![]() "Ramy" wrote in message ... On Jul 22, 6:44 am, "Dan Marotta" wrote: One hour or a thousand in type - it doesn't make a bit of difference to the pilot's required knowledge of signals!. That's just making excuses for poorly trained pilots (and CFIGs)... "Walt Connelly" wrote in message ... Looking at all 2011 accidents reported thus far, a good portion involved pilots with little apparent time in model or particular glider. *I'm just sayin'. Frank Whiteley Frank Whiteley The rest of the story http://www.thebaynet.com/news/index....story_ID/23254 Well, after having read the "rest of the story" it is obvious that this was a major misinterpretation of the tow pilots rudder waggle by BOTH pilots. The "copilot" shouts "release, release, release," and the "pilot" fails to properly interpret the rudder wag and releases. We all make mistakes, unfortunately some of our mistakes can be fatal. We must all continually update our knowledge of emergency signals and procedures to help reduce these kinds of accidents. JMHO. Walt -- Walt Connelly- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -[/i][/color] Folks, the problem is not just lack of knowledge or practice, it is the human nature of confusion and tunnel vision under stress! Imagine you are on tow and barely climbing (since your spoilers are out), your first thought is that something is wrong with the tow plane, and once you see the tow pilot waggle the rudder (which may also cause the wings to rock a little), I bet over 90% of pilots will release, even if they just practiced this manuver a week ago. There are many examples confirming this, luckily not all of them resulted in accidents. Bottom line: Use radios! If this doesn't work, do not waggle rudders until at safe altitude, unless the tow plane can not climb at all. Ramy Wow! Don't you know that your spoilers are out? I must have only flown the best gliders (or the worst) because it's always apparent to me that the spoilers are open - noise, turbulence, handle out of detent, pitch attitude... |
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