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![]() "Todd Pattist" wrote in message ... ISoar wrote: I guess I should have made it clear that my need to know how to do this was for the simulated case where the airbrakes are frozen shut. I knew that - it's the reason most instructors in the U.S. give for this exercise. Those outside the U.S. may not be familiar with the Schweizer dive brakes that lie flat against the wing surface, are hinged along one edge and tilt away from the wing into the airflow when actuated. The brakes sit in a small flat pocket on the wing surface that can collect moisture, which then freezes while aloft. The large plate-to-plate surface area between the brakes and the cavity they sit in allows the frozen water to get a good grip and prevent them from opening. Todd Pattist - "WH" Ventus C (Remove DONTSPAMME from address to email reply.) On a metal glider, there is no reason that the spoilers can't be painted black so the sun will heat them enough to unstick the ice. Anybody got a story where a pilot was forced to land sans spoilers due to ice? Bill Daniels |
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