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#21
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Frank Whiteley wrote:
......The knots are multiple half hitches drawn up tight against the glider. Always use a Truckers hitch, IMHO: http://www.ehow.com/video_2355281_ti...itch-knot.html Tony V LS6-b |
#22
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On Feb 2, 4:54*pm, Tony V wrote:
Frank Whiteley wrote: ......The knots are multiple half hitches drawn up tight against the glider. Always use a Truckers hitch, IMHO:http://www.ehow.com/video_2355281_ti...itch-knot.html Tony V LS6-b What if we don't have a piano? Darryl |
#23
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The critical, but often neglected aspect of keeping a ship on the
ground, undamaged is to reduce the angle of attack, both while tied down and during ground handling. This dramatically reduced the load on the tiedowns, as was very well documented in the old Red Schweizer Soaring manual. As a working example, Skylark North in Tehachapi (and formerly the brutally windy CalCity) has never lost a tied down ship in 40+ years (and only 1 while being ground handled) in a very windy environment using this technique. Caracole in CalCity keeps their fleet safe using this method as well. Short of a tornado or similar extreme event, properly tied down ships should never be lost. Of course, "never" is a very long time ![]() Creating adequate tiedowns in a landout or safari situation is problematic but getting the AOA down is not that hard (flaps full negative, constrained tail dolly, inverted wash buckets, wood, or a mound of dirt for tailwheel and dig hole for main gear). I believe the best "combat" landout mode for keeping a glider on the ground in high winds is to orient the glider 90 degrees to the wind and expend all resources on keeping the upwind wing on the ground. I have seen it used to good effect in extreme wave/rotor conditions using a tractor tire, tiedown kit, rocks, and the pilot's body. |
#24
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#25
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On Feb 3, 10:22*am, GARY BOGGS wrote:
And another one bites the dust while tied down! http://bit.ly/btNFm4 This is possibly the 2-33 of the Prescott Soaring Club that was lost in the same storm as the California Blanik. I should note that we have twenty or so gliders tied down under shade hangars at the Tucson Soaring Club and we haven't had any serious damage lately. Mike |
#26
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On Feb 3, 9:22*am, GARY BOGGS wrote:
And another one bites the dust while tied down! Naw, just a nibble. Jim Phoenix could have that ship flying in a week. |
#27
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#28
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![]() The knots are multiple half hitches drawn up tight against the glider. Always use a Truckers hitch, IMHO: http://www.ehow.com/video_2355281_ti...itch-knot.html What if we don't have a piano? Then use the harpsichord! Exactly! Then, tie the other end to the wing tie down point. I've found that harpsichords rarely move in a hurricane. Tony V |
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