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#21
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On Sep 5, 11:33 am, wrote:
On Sep 5, 11:55 am, Ian wrote: On 4 Sep, 20:55, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Is that aerotow or winch? I have flown at a couple of sites which worked n+1 ropes with n tugs, so the pilot at the head of the queue had a rope on an ready to be hooked to the tug as it lined up. It made for a nice quick turnaround. Ian Ian I think Bill is talking about Aerotow, thats certainly what matt and I are talking about. the method you mention would be fine with me, as long as the rope isnt connected to the towplane until im ready. I envision that your example was using a grid to launch, in which case everything is ready ahead of time it seems. at our club the glider is pulled onto the runway, pilot gets in, tug pulls out while pilot is doing his checklist, rope hooks up, wing goes up and off they go. Ideally, in a club environment, the pilot(s) is/are in the ready, in the glider, then pulled onto the runway leaving only canopy, airbrakes, and hookup. Hurried staging or leaving many tasks to be done on the runway is often how pilots depart with, straps unfastened, canopy unlatched, airbrakes unlocked, tail dolly on, O2 off, and in one case I know of, lap strap fastened around gear retract, and another, lap strap fastened around rear rudder pedal. Too often, pilots start putting on their chute when the tow plane is already on down wind. Of course, if you have the luxury of many runways, you can tie one up with staged gliders. Cindy B had a great video about this at the Region 12 Safety Seminar last spring, but I don't find it on the web anywhere. |
#22
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On Sep 5, 1:14 pm, Frank Whiteley wrote:
On Sep 5, 11:33 am, wrote: On Sep 5, 11:55 am, Ian wrote: On 4 Sep, 20:55, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Is that aerotow or winch? I have flown at a couple of sites which worked n+1 ropes with n tugs, so the pilot at the head of the queue had a rope on an ready to be hooked to the tug as it lined up. It made for a nice quick turnaround. Ian Ian I think Bill is talking about Aerotow, thats certainly what matt and I are talking about. the method you mention would be fine with me, as long as the rope isnt connected to the towplane until im ready. I envision that your example was using a grid to launch, in which case everything is ready ahead of time it seems. at our club the glider is pulled onto the runway, pilot gets in, tug pulls out while pilot is doing his checklist, rope hooks up, wing goes up and off they go. Ideally, in a club environment, the pilot(s) is/are in the ready, in the glider, then pulled onto the runway leaving only canopy, airbrakes, and hookup. Hurried staging or leaving many tasks to be done on the runway is often how pilots depart with, straps unfastened, canopy unlatched, airbrakes unlocked, tail dolly on, O2 off, and in one case I know of, lap strap fastened around gear retract, and another, lap strap fastened around rear rudder pedal. Too often, pilots start putting on their chute when the tow plane is already on down wind. Of course, if you have the luxury of many runways, you can tie one up with staged gliders. Cindy B had a great video about this at the Region 12 Safety Seminar last spring, but I don't find it on the web anywhere.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - that would be ideal frank. throw in years of relaxation on the runways, meager ground crew if any, and then you have long waits on the runway. Hurrying on anything with wings is a recipe for disaster. We certainly dont teach our students to rush through the checklist, but do it completely, and attempt to minimize time on runway. |
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On 5 Sep, 19:00, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote:
"Ian" wrote in message I think it's often true, and probably mostly true, but I don;t think it's always the case. A winch launch power failure can leave you too far down the runway to land straight ahead but too low to do much by way of fancy manoevres. Well, using absolutes is 'usually' a bad idea. Let me say that a cable break on a winch launch is likely to provide more options to land on the runway than may be the case with aero tow. In fact, I can't imagine a situation where I couldn't return to the runway unless the runway is extremely short and narrow, in which case it isn't a suitable winch site in the first place. I agree with you. In the places where I wouldn't return to the runway it's because there is somewhere better under me first. If the winch suffers a slow power failure that results in a less than expected climb angle, I'd suggest releasing early and landing ahead before the available runway is used up. Agreed again. It's just that a slow (as in gradual) power failure can be a real bummer to detect, particularly if you get the odd few seconds of full performance. "This is a bit slow ... oh that's better ... now what's he playing at ... here we go ... oh, stuff this ... bing ... whoops" Please note that I am not advocating 180 turns to a downwind landing on winch launch since it would be extremely rare that such an option is appropriate or even needed. Banned at at least two clubs I have flown at, too. Ian |
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On 5 Sep, 18:50, Martin Gregorie wrote:
Bill Daniels wrote: This is in contrast to winch launch where the runway is always available. I think this needs a little qualification. Where the winch is on the end of the airfield I'm sure this is true, but when the winch is out in the boonies it may not be the case. I believe there are several clubs in Germany (and one, Jury Hill, in NZ) with essentially just a landing area and the launch line at one side of it. It seems to me that at these sites either a very low break or one high enough to allow a fairly full circuit to be flown should present no problems. The east-west run at Falgunzeon is like that. It is landable, sort of, between the launch point and winch, but the retrieve is a tractor job and may take hours. I think I have only seen it used once ... crosswinds are much nicer! Ian |
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#26
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On Sep 5, 12:46 pm, wrote:
On Sep 5, 1:14 pm, Frank Whiteley wrote: On Sep 5, 11:33 am, wrote: On Sep 5, 11:55 am, Ian wrote: On 4 Sep, 20:55, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote: The is related to the other thread on winch launch. I am a firm believer in not accepting an aerotow rope or a winch cable until the pilot is completely ready to fly. I teach my students the same. As a learning routine, I will brief the line person to interrupt the student pilot while he is doing the pre-flight checklist and agressively insist the pilot accept the rope RIGHT NOW. If the student asserts his Pilot in Command authority and tells the line person to back off until asked for the rope, the student passes the test. Is that aerotow or winch? I have flown at a couple of sites which worked n+1 ropes with n tugs, so the pilot at the head of the queue had a rope on an ready to be hooked to the tug as it lined up. It made for a nice quick turnaround. Ian Ian I think Bill is talking about Aerotow, thats certainly what matt and I are talking about. the method you mention would be fine with me, as long as the rope isnt connected to the towplane until im ready. I envision that your example was using a grid to launch, in which case everything is ready ahead of time it seems. at our club the glider is pulled onto the runway, pilot gets in, tug pulls out while pilot is doing his checklist, rope hooks up, wing goes up and off they go. Ideally, in a club environment, the pilot(s) is/are in the ready, in the glider, then pulled onto the runway leaving only canopy, airbrakes, and hookup. Hurried staging or leaving many tasks to be done on the runway is often how pilots depart with, straps unfastened, canopy unlatched, airbrakes unlocked, tail dolly on, O2 off, and in one case I know of, lap strap fastened around gear retract, and another, lap strap fastened around rear rudder pedal. Too often, pilots start putting on their chute when the tow plane is already on down wind. Of course, if you have the luxury of many runways, you can tie one up with staged gliders. Cindy B had a great video about this at the Region 12 Safety Seminar last spring, but I don't find it on the web anywhere.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - that would be ideal frank. throw in years of relaxation on the runways, meager ground crew if any, and then you have long waits on the runway. Hurrying on anything with wings is a recipe for disaster. We certainly dont teach our students to rush through the checklist, but do it completely, and attempt to minimize time on runway. That's how it was once, plenty of folks around making a day out it, helping out. Without that mutual support, why grow a club? |
#27
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On Sep 5, 6:50 pm, Martin Gregorie wrote:
Bill Daniels wrote: This is in contrast to winch launch where the runway is always available. I think this needs a little qualification. Where the winch is on the end of the airfield I'm sure this is true, but when the winch is out in the boonies it may not be the case. I believe there are several clubs in Germany (and one, Jury Hill, in NZ) with essentially just a landing area and the launch line at one side of it. It seems to me that at these sites either a very low break or one high enough to allow a fairly full circuit to be flown should present no problems. However, what about the middle region between 50 and 500 feet? On our field (and yours at a guess) you can land ahead, do a 360 and land ahead or fly an abbreviated circuit. Those options may well be absent with an remotely placed winch. I'd question whether it's safe to operate from such a site. Certainly, I'd never launch from one. Such sites sound very much the rarity though - at any normal glider site, a safe landing is perfectly possible from a winch launch failure at any height. Dan |
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