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#1
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I am a bit disappointed to see this thread going the
way the Yahoo Winch design group did. I still watch there and am interested in what comes of it. It started off (Or so I thought) with the notion of designing a simple but reliable winch that a small group of people could afford to build so a small club could fly. It rapidly evolved into a multi drum, hundreds of horsepower machine that would make the small club capable of doing 120+ launches of fully loaded ASH-25s and Duo Discuses a day. Does a small club really need that much power and more than one on a drum winch? Let me say, you DO NOT have to use a big engined pickup. We have towed with a sick V-8 in a donated old Pontiac Grand Prix, a 6 cylinder Chrysler minivan, a Full size Chevy Van with a 350, and a Suburban with, I believe, a 454. And you know what? The altitude gained was virtually the same for each tow vehicle! A FAR bigger variable was Pilot Technique. And right behind that, believe it or not, is CG positioin on the towed glider (in our case, a 2-33 using the nose hook. Why the nose hook, you ask? With our 2-33, the CG hook would hit the ground with the nose skid on the ground and the right wing down.) I do agree with the comment about not using a chute for straight auto towing using rope. It will just take the end farther from the runway! I have been able to buy 2000 feet of 3/8th hollow braid Poly for $200 (plus sales tax). If well taken care of on our very abraisive paved runway, we can expect to get at most 100 tows from this. We drive only about 15 to 20 MPH on the return trip, and try to lay the rope in a grass strip along the runway when we bring it back. If you can attach an arm to the side of the towing vehicle to drag the rope back i the grass along the side of the runway, it will last even longer. One of our members built up a complete system he installs in the receiver hitch on his vehicle. It has a 3.5 HP Brigss and Straton motor, the rope reel, hand operated level wind, throttle and brake for the reel, and a tow release. Not sure why everyone thinks you need to use a Tost release for this. The Schweizer releases we are using work just fine. Whole thing is installed on swivels, so it always pulls straight on the tow release. Oh, and since this releas is not on an airplane, you can make your own that acts like one of the others. But, you can probably pick up a used Schweizer release for less than it will cost you to make one of your own. There aren't many airplanes pulling banners anymore, so they might be happy to get $100 for that thing on their tail. He is able to reel in the rope in just over one minute, then drive quickly back to the launch end and then star slowly paying ot the rope for the nex launch. But, even this is probably more than you are wanting right away. You don't need a high dollar towplane, you don't need a high dollar winch, and you don't need a high dollar tow vehicle in order to get in the air. If you are not trying to launch an ASH-25 at a 10,000 foot density altitude, you don't need to size your launching equipment to do that! What are you looking at launching down there in Laredo? Just like the comments about flaps. Well intentioned auto towing advice, even from people that know what they are talking about, sometimes gets slanted to their needs, not yours. Feel free to contact me directly if you would like a bit more information about the auto towing we have done here in Kansas. Steve Leonard Sometimes auto tow driver and pilot 1200 plus hours in flaped ships and have never ONCE had the thing try to float the entire length of the airport on me so I don't know why the heck you would ever want to RETRACT the flaps and REDUCE the drag that is there to slow you down. |
#2
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![]() "Steve Leonard" wrote in message ... I am a bit disappointed to see this thread going the way the Yahoo Winch design group did. I still watch there and am interested in what comes of it. It started off (Or so I thought) with the notion of designing a simple but reliable winch that a small group of people could afford to build so a small club could fly. It rapidly evolved into a multi drum, hundreds of horsepower machine that would make the small club capable of doing 120+ launches of fully loaded ASH-25s and Duo Discuses a day. Does a small club really need that much power and more than one on a drum winch? Let me say, you DO NOT have to use a big engined pickup. Alright Steve. I have found more power a detriment. I used to tow my Mini-Nimbus with my Ford Taurus Wagon. 140 HP on a good day. I could use anyone off the street for a driver. I just told them to floor it until I was off tow. Worked great. With my lighter PW-5 and powerful 200 HP Ford Escape I have to worry about overspeeding so it is more complicated, with instructions to the driver to "hold speed." It is hard for me to imagine a problem with lifting the rear of the tow vehicle of the ground. Maybe with an ASH-25 or something, but do those guys do auto tows? I really think those big Ford pickups are overkill. Larry Pardue 2I |
#3
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Steve Leonard wrote:
I am a bit disappointed to see this thread going the way the Yahoo Winch design group did. I still watch there and am interested in what comes of it. It started off (Or so I thought) with the notion of designing a simple but reliable winch that a small group of people could afford to build so a small club could fly. It rapidly evolved into a multi drum, hundreds of horsepower machine that would make the small club capable of doing 120+ launches of fully loaded ASH-25s and Duo Discuses a day. Does a small club really need that much power and more than one on a drum winch? It sounds like you are reading too much into the documents in the Winch Design Group file section. In reality, the practical design discussions have all been about two drum winches, mounted on (and obtaining power from) commonly available large pickups or small trucks with 250 to 300 HP turbo diesels. Discussion has slowed for the past few months, as it is soaring season in the northern hemisphere. From a mechanical perspective, the main things that are preventing a couple of groups from "cutting metal" this fall, are the lack of a source for inexpensive and reliable split-shaft power takeoff units, and a simple workable design for drum clutches. If you or anyone else has any ideas, we'd love to hear them... Marc |
#4
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and have never ONCE
had the thing try to float the entire length of the airport on me ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ ~~~~~ Well, I have. and that was with an approach speed of 50knots on a low wind day - full flap in a PIK 20B (90 degrees), and it floated and floated and floated and wouldn't come down. The previouse owner's technique was to just drive it on, dump the flaps and use the wheel brake - I thought that was very inelegant. Coming in slower (e.g. 45 knots - which the previous recommended) is deadly if the flare is started too early, which it was once (no damage done, but my neck [which is damaged anyway] suffered a bit) - won't do that again! Rgds, Derrick Steed |
#5
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Well, there's cheap and effective and there's just plain cheap. The
difference is critical. US winch launching has suffered a great deal from the "lets just do it as cheaply as we can" attitude. The result is a lot of rusting "200HP weed eaters" welded together from junk car parts that understandably scared the hell out of people and gave winch launch a very bad name. I've spent a lot of time looking at the best winches in the world and examining the cost justification for each feature. I came to appreciate that winch design is a complex art with profound consequences if you get it wrong. Nobody is building new single drums winches. Two is the minimum. My conclusion is that the up front costs, even though they are high, can be easily justified if the utilization is high enough. If the utilization is low, you can't justify anything. It's also easy to see that doing it right the first time is far cheaper in the long run. Much of the cost of multiple drum winches is in the high-tech cable. A club can build a multiple drum winch but delay purchase of the cable for all the drums until the demand is evident. Multiple drums and high HP results in fast, high launches. There are two benefits to multiple drums. One is higher utilization and the other is fast queue's. If you are 6th in line for a launch while the Cu's are popping, the winch cycle time can't be fast enough. High HP is both a safety feature and a performance feature. Getting the glider to a safe climb airspeed quickly reduces the exposure to two types of accidents - ground loop and stall on the wire. It's much easier to stall a glider on the wire or let a wing drop with an underpowered winch. Of course, the glider acceleration must not be so high that the pilot can't control pitch up. Higher launches allow more time to search for a thermal. Even a small increase in release height is a big payoff. If the release height is barely at pattern entry altitude there is little time to find a thermal. Adding a few hundred feet to the release height means that a much higher percentage of launches will contact soarable lift. Given reasonable runway length, launches above 2000 feet AGL are easy. Much higher launches are possible with still longer runways. Auto tow is a very cheap way to go if the room is available. The problem is that a long rope takes up most of the runway leaving little room for acceleration and braking of the tow vehicle. For a typical runway, a winch will get you higher. A winch with multiple drums will launch far faster than auto tow. Bill Daniels The whole idea of winch launch is to reduce launch costs "Steve Leonard" wrote in message ... I am a bit disappointed to see this thread going the way the Yahoo Winch design group did. I still watch there and am interested in what comes of it. It started off (Or so I thought) with the notion of designing a simple but reliable winch that a small group of people could afford to build so a small club could fly. It rapidly evolved into a multi drum, hundreds of horsepower machine that would make the small club capable of doing 120+ launches of fully loaded ASH-25s and Duo Discuses a day. Does a small club really need that much power and more than one on a drum winch? Let me say, you DO NOT have to use a big engined pickup. We have towed with a sick V-8 in a donated old Pontiac Grand Prix, a 6 cylinder Chrysler minivan, a Full size Chevy Van with a 350, and a Suburban with, I believe, a 454. And you know what? The altitude gained was virtually the same for each tow vehicle! A FAR bigger variable was Pilot Technique. And right behind that, believe it or not, is CG positioin on the towed glider (in our case, a 2-33 using the nose hook. Why the nose hook, you ask? With our 2-33, the CG hook would hit the ground with the nose skid on the ground and the right wing down.) I do agree with the comment about not using a chute for straight auto towing using rope. It will just take the end farther from the runway! I have been able to buy 2000 feet of 3/8th hollow braid Poly for $200 (plus sales tax). If well taken care of on our very abraisive paved runway, we can expect to get at most 100 tows from this. We drive only about 15 to 20 MPH on the return trip, and try to lay the rope in a grass strip along the runway when we bring it back. If you can attach an arm to the side of the towing vehicle to drag the rope back i the grass along the side of the runway, it will last even longer. One of our members built up a complete system he installs in the receiver hitch on his vehicle. It has a 3.5 HP Brigss and Straton motor, the rope reel, hand operated level wind, throttle and brake for the reel, and a tow release. Not sure why everyone thinks you need to use a Tost release for this. The Schweizer releases we are using work just fine. Whole thing is installed on swivels, so it always pulls straight on the tow release. Oh, and since this releas is not on an airplane, you can make your own that acts like one of the others. But, you can probably pick up a used Schweizer release for less than it will cost you to make one of your own. There aren't many airplanes pulling banners anymore, so they might be happy to get $100 for that thing on their tail. He is able to reel in the rope in just over one minute, then drive quickly back to the launch end and then star slowly paying ot the rope for the nex launch. But, even this is probably more than you are wanting right away. You don't need a high dollar towplane, you don't need a high dollar winch, and you don't need a high dollar tow vehicle in order to get in the air. If you are not trying to launch an ASH-25 at a 10,000 foot density altitude, you don't need to size your launching equipment to do that! What are you looking at launching down there in Laredo? Just like the comments about flaps. Well intentioned auto towing advice, even from people that know what they are talking about, sometimes gets slanted to their needs, not yours. Feel free to contact me directly if you would like a bit more information about the auto towing we have done here in Kansas. Steve Leonard Sometimes auto tow driver and pilot 1200 plus hours in flaped ships and have never ONCE had the thing try to float the entire length of the airport on me so I don't know why the heck you would ever want to RETRACT the flaps and REDUCE the drag that is there to slow you down. |
#6
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How long of a runway do you need for an effective / safe winch and/or auto
tow launch environment? Mike Schumann "Bill Daniels" wrote in message ... Well, there's cheap and effective and there's just plain cheap. The difference is critical. US winch launching has suffered a great deal from the "lets just do it as cheaply as we can" attitude. The result is a lot of rusting "200HP weed eaters" welded together from junk car parts that understandably scared the hell out of people and gave winch launch a very bad name. I've spent a lot of time looking at the best winches in the world and examining the cost justification for each feature. I came to appreciate that winch design is a complex art with profound consequences if you get it wrong. Nobody is building new single drums winches. Two is the minimum. My conclusion is that the up front costs, even though they are high, can be easily justified if the utilization is high enough. If the utilization is low, you can't justify anything. It's also easy to see that doing it right the first time is far cheaper in the long run. Much of the cost of multiple drum winches is in the high-tech cable. A club can build a multiple drum winch but delay purchase of the cable for all the drums until the demand is evident. Multiple drums and high HP results in fast, high launches. There are two benefits to multiple drums. One is higher utilization and the other is fast queue's. If you are 6th in line for a launch while the Cu's are popping, the winch cycle time can't be fast enough. High HP is both a safety feature and a performance feature. Getting the glider to a safe climb airspeed quickly reduces the exposure to two types of accidents - ground loop and stall on the wire. It's much easier to stall a glider on the wire or let a wing drop with an underpowered winch. Of course, the glider acceleration must not be so high that the pilot can't control pitch up. Higher launches allow more time to search for a thermal. Even a small increase in release height is a big payoff. If the release height is barely at pattern entry altitude there is little time to find a thermal. Adding a few hundred feet to the release height means that a much higher percentage of launches will contact soarable lift. Given reasonable runway length, launches above 2000 feet AGL are easy. Much higher launches are possible with still longer runways. Auto tow is a very cheap way to go if the room is available. The problem is that a long rope takes up most of the runway leaving little room for acceleration and braking of the tow vehicle. For a typical runway, a winch will get you higher. A winch with multiple drums will launch far faster than auto tow. Bill Daniels The whole idea of winch launch is to reduce launch costs "Steve Leonard" wrote in message ... I am a bit disappointed to see this thread going the way the Yahoo Winch design group did. I still watch there and am interested in what comes of it. It started off (Or so I thought) with the notion of designing a simple but reliable winch that a small group of people could afford to build so a small club could fly. It rapidly evolved into a multi drum, hundreds of horsepower machine that would make the small club capable of doing 120+ launches of fully loaded ASH-25s and Duo Discuses a day. Does a small club really need that much power and more than one on a drum winch? Let me say, you DO NOT have to use a big engined pickup. We have towed with a sick V-8 in a donated old Pontiac Grand Prix, a 6 cylinder Chrysler minivan, a Full size Chevy Van with a 350, and a Suburban with, I believe, a 454. And you know what? The altitude gained was virtually the same for each tow vehicle! A FAR bigger variable was Pilot Technique. And right behind that, believe it or not, is CG positioin on the towed glider (in our case, a 2-33 using the nose hook. Why the nose hook, you ask? With our 2-33, the CG hook would hit the ground with the nose skid on the ground and the right wing down.) I do agree with the comment about not using a chute for straight auto towing using rope. It will just take the end farther from the runway! I have been able to buy 2000 feet of 3/8th hollow braid Poly for $200 (plus sales tax). If well taken care of on our very abraisive paved runway, we can expect to get at most 100 tows from this. We drive only about 15 to 20 MPH on the return trip, and try to lay the rope in a grass strip along the runway when we bring it back. If you can attach an arm to the side of the towing vehicle to drag the rope back i the grass along the side of the runway, it will last even longer. One of our members built up a complete system he installs in the receiver hitch on his vehicle. It has a 3.5 HP Brigss and Straton motor, the rope reel, hand operated level wind, throttle and brake for the reel, and a tow release. Not sure why everyone thinks you need to use a Tost release for this. The Schweizer releases we are using work just fine. Whole thing is installed on swivels, so it always pulls straight on the tow release. Oh, and since this releas is not on an airplane, you can make your own that acts like one of the others. But, you can probably pick up a used Schweizer release for less than it will cost you to make one of your own. There aren't many airplanes pulling banners anymore, so they might be happy to get $100 for that thing on their tail. He is able to reel in the rope in just over one minute, then drive quickly back to the launch end and then star slowly paying ot the rope for the nex launch. But, even this is probably more than you are wanting right away. You don't need a high dollar towplane, you don't need a high dollar winch, and you don't need a high dollar tow vehicle in order to get in the air. If you are not trying to launch an ASH-25 at a 10,000 foot density altitude, you don't need to size your launching equipment to do that! What are you looking at launching down there in Laredo? Just like the comments about flaps. Well intentioned auto towing advice, even from people that know what they are talking about, sometimes gets slanted to their needs, not yours. Feel free to contact me directly if you would like a bit more information about the auto towing we have done here in Kansas. Steve Leonard Sometimes auto tow driver and pilot 1200 plus hours in flaped ships and have never ONCE had the thing try to float the entire length of the airport on me so I don't know why the heck you would ever want to RETRACT the flaps and REDUCE the drag that is there to slow you down. |
#7
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Mike Schumann wrote:
How long of a runway do you need for an effective / safe winch and/or auto tow launch environment? I can only talk for winch launch. Safety is not a problem. The problem is that you must have enough height above the winch to reach a thermal. How much this is depends on your site. E.g. at our field, we usually reach about 300-350 metres AGL. This is usually not enough for us, with few exceptions. 100 metres more would do it. So we are stuck to aerotow. Stefan |
#8
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How long is your runway?
Mike Schumann "Stefan" wrote in message ... Mike Schumann wrote: How long of a runway do you need for an effective / safe winch and/or auto tow launch environment? I can only talk for winch launch. Safety is not a problem. The problem is that you must have enough height above the winch to reach a thermal. How much this is depends on your site. E.g. at our field, we usually reach about 300-350 metres AGL. This is usually not enough for us, with few exceptions. 100 metres more would do it. So we are stuck to aerotow. Stefan |
#9
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We used to autotow (straight, and later reverse pulley) from either of
two good surface hard runways at North Weald, Essex, UK. One was 1 ¼ miles long and we only used less that 1 mile of it for the tow car/cable run (we landed in the undershoot). The other was ¾ mile and we use almost its whole length. Launch heights were typically about 7-800 feet in light winds on the shorter run, and 900-1000 feet on the longer run, for K13's, two-up. With increasing amounts of wind, up to say 15 knots, we got 1200+ on the short run and 1400 + on the longer run. Highest I ever got was about 2000; others got higher, in really strong winds. Going back to launch vehicles, I would say that straight tow with old bangers is a cheap and viable way, if you have the runway hard surface and length, for small numbers of launches, and accepting reliability issues and not the fastest turnaround. With two cables, two launch cars, and also two cable retrieve cars, you can speed up the launch rate quite a lot. The technology is fairly simple, relatively easily learned, and its all cheap. The cable could be the most expensive part of it. The driving takes a bit of learning to get the technique right, but it's not too difficult. To save reinventing, it would be best to get some hints and tips from those who have done it. My earlier post about the high cost, super spec. truck, was a direct response to somebody asking for what seemed like that information. It is a high cost, high reliability, high turnaround solution. Combining it with reverse pulley also requires appreciable investment in the pulley system itself too - but a few thousand, compared with lots of thousands for a new truck. If you don't want the 9,000 launches per year, professional-style operation that we had that for, and don't want a top quality system, fine - that's your choice. Those who didn't want to read about it, tough. Both reverse pulley systems, and winches, are really specialist design projects. Amateurs who take them on rarely, if ever, get them right first time - I have never seen one such. Both Cotswold Club and Essex Club took several iterations to arrive at their respective designs of reverse pulley, and ended up with substantial professional workshop builds. I have never seen a good first-time-build winch, either. All the good professional ones I have seen built in the UK came from ex-amateurs who learnt from several home-grown prototypes and mistakes before progressing to good, reliable, and high-capital-cost solutions (Supercat and Skylaunch). I don't know the history of Tost, but there has been a long tradition of winching in Germany, and the best Tost winches are also very good. Several Tost-technology winches have been built in the UK from greater or lesser proportions of Tost kits. The more local invention to save capital cost, the greater is the risk of the new short cuts being worse than the well-developed technology, to put it mildly. When my own club had to cease truck launches at North Weald, and could not afford new winches for our new grass site at Ridgewell, we bought four ex-air cadet winches and fitted the best two of them with replacement high-power engines and automatic transmissions - the first one by our own amateurs, the other by a professional engineer who had built a Tost winch previously for his own gliding club. Our ex-ATC chassis including winch drums and pay-on gear cost about 800 Sterling each. The conversions cost (very approximately) about 1-2,000 sterling for the first, using a used ex-tow-truck powertrain; and about 16,000 sterling for the second including a brand new cab and re-engineered Chevy (I think) engine/trans combination and LPG conversion. ( They are not perfect, but the bits that are poorest are the original ATC winch parts and are very difficult to see how to re-engineer. They work tolerably well, so we live with them. The main problem, when it happens, is cables snarling up inside the drum/axle mechanism. But that can happen even on the high cost professional winches - I saw one such incident at another club last week, and at a different one again today.) Chris N. __________________________________________________ _________ To help you stay safe and secure online, we've developed the all new Yahoo! Security Centre. http://uk.security.yahoo.com |
#10
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![]() "Mike Schumann" wrote in message nk.net... How long of a runway do you need for an effective / safe winch and/or auto tow launch environment? Mike Schumann With the old manually controlled winches and steel wire, 30 - 40% of the runway is achievable as release height. However, there is something of a revolution in winch technology going on right now. The new high power, computer controlled winches using ultra light 'plastic' UHMWPE 4.5mm cord can get up to 50% of the runway length in zero wind conditions. Launching into a headwind increases the release height quite a bit more. So a 5000 foot runway might get you 2500 feet AGL. That's usually enough to contact soarable lift if there is any to be had. Bill Daniels |
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