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#61
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On Sep 23, 10:16*am, wrote:
On Sep 23, 8:12*am, jeremy wrote: Stefan wrote: An airline pilot who happens to also be a pretty good sailplane pilot told me that it would have been much easier and equally efficient to just do S turns to adjust the glide path. This would also have avoided possible problems driving the air driven generator. The pilot who who did a glider landing with anairbus on the Azores in 2001 used that technique. Probably the easiest alternative to trying to haul the thing around the sky with degraded controls. JJ * * * *S-turns are OK if you have the room. If you're in too close they're useless. I can image the distance needed to S-turn an airliner... * * *Dan Friend of mine, Jack Selby, was chief pilot for the old Capital Airways out of Smyrna Ga. Watched Jack fishtail a stretch DC8 side to side on final once scrubbing off altitude. Beautiful landing; great pilot too! |
#62
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![]() "Dudley Henriques" wrote Friend of mine, Jack Selby, was chief pilot for the old Capital Airways out of Smyrna Ga. Watched Jack fishtail a stretch DC8 side to side on final once scrubbing off altitude. Beautiful landing; great pilot too! ******* I bet the passengers all the way in back loved him for that! |
#63
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On Sep 23, 11:12*am, "Tim" wrote:
"Dudley Henriques" wrote Friend of mine, Jack Selby, was chief pilot for the old Capital Airways out of Smyrna Ga. Watched Jack fishtail a stretch DC8 side to side on final once scrubbing off altitude. Beautiful landing; great pilot too! ******* I bet the passengers all the way in back loved him for that! No passengers involved; training flight ; landing was at the end of a line check. |
#64
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On Mon, 22 Sep 2008 06:59:34 -0700 (PDT), Gene Seibel wrote:
Slips were in common use for bringing an aircraft down in the days before flaps, and were taught for that purpose when learned to fly in the 70's. They work very well. Is that no longer being taught? A power-out slip to landing? I had to beg for it. |
#65
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Gezellig wrote in news:6jsl4oF4u1b1U1
@mid.individual.net: On Mon, 22 Sep 2008 06:59:34 -0700 (PDT), Gene Seibel wrote: Slips were in common use for bringing an aircraft down in the days before flaps, and were taught for that purpose when learned to fly in the 70's. They work very well. Is that no longer being taught? A power-out slip to landing? I had to beg for it. Your instructor was jewish? Bertie |
#66
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![]() "Stefan" wrote in message ... BTW, some glider pilots use short slips to take up slack from the tow rope, should there happen to occur some in turbulence. Most prefer the use of airbrakes, though. I never use the spoilers/airbrakes to take up slack, (though really slippery sailplanes will sometimes start a tow while holding just a tad of spoiler). That much control authority is simply not necessary. A glider tow is a very delicate dance, it takes timing and (usually) tiny control inputs. Usually a little climb will do the job to take up the slack. If you screwed up and got a really bad slack rope, you push rudder a bit to yaw, which increases drag a bit but perhaps more importantly puts your tow hook off center from the CG. Then, when the inevitable 'snatch" happens, some of the excess energy goes into pulling the nose around rather than suddenly accelerating the glider and causing the rope to go slack yet again. Vaughn |
#67
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John Godwin wrote:
Gig 601Xl Builder wrote in m: Once we were back on the ground and with his boss close by I left him reading about them in the FAA Airplane Flying Handbook they had in the office. That's incredible. When I took my CFI Ride, I had to demonstrate a maximum effort forward slip on final. Kicked out when I was over the fence and hit the numbers. Seems as if your instructor didn't know the difference between a slip and a skid. Since this was over 20 years ago I often wonder if this guy is sitting in the left seat of a 747 somewhere. It kind of scares me. |
#68
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On Sep 24, 5:12*am, "Vaughn Simon"
wrote: * *I never use the spoilers/airbrakes to take up slack, (though really slippery sailplanes will sometimes start a tow while holding just a tad of spoiler). That much control authority is simply not necessary. *A glider tow is a very delicate dance, it takes timing and (usually) tiny control inputs. *Usually a little climb will do the job to take up the slack. *If you screwed up and got a really bad slack rope, you push rudder a bit to yaw, which increases drag a bit but perhaps more importantly puts your tow hook off center from the CG. *Then, when the inevitable 'snatch" happens, some of the excess energy goes into pulling the nose around rather than suddenly accelerating the glider and causing the rope to go slack yet again. The bit where you see the towplane 'yoing' into the atmosphere and you know that you're going to hit that same lift in a second or two with the towplane now almost above you :-) Makes life interesting |
#69
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Vaughn Simon wrote:
you push rudder a bit to yaw, which increases drag a bit but perhaps more importantly puts your tow hook off center from the CG. unless ya have a CG hook like me. Which doesn't mean the slip doesn't help even with a CG hook. I use either method, except the climb method. I don't like having that much more potential energy to have to relinquish on the rope. We all have our little dances on tow. -- Message posted via http://www.aviationkb.com |
#70
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Vaughn Simon schrieb:
If you screwed up and got a really bad slack rope, I'm not sure I'd call a slack rope while towing through a rotor a screw up. As always, it all depends. |
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