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#11
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glider hours are nearly impossible to validate, especially in the US, you
can only rely on how well the records were kept and trust the owners to properly keep records. I know most European gliders I've seen have had quite elaborate record keeping as they should be.......here....not so much......the good thing is that you really can't do much to wear out a glider by flying unless you're pounding it on the ridge, racing and running redline airspeeds in rough conditions or aerobatics..often when I see comments like "record setting glider" or "proven contest record" this implies it wasn't simply driven to church on Sundays by a little old lady school teacher..Number of launches might even be more important. There is an Glider Hour Counter available from Winter (I have these here) that operates off of pitot pressure input but unless this was mandated as a required instrument we are left with relying on the accuracy and truthfulness of the owner/operator......much like "Damage History" and "Recorded Damage History" tim Please visit the Wings & Wheels website at www.wingsandwheels.com "Walt Connelly" wrote in message ... I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly __________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 6076 (20110427) __________ The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus. http://www.eset.com __________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature database 6076 (20110427) __________ The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus. http://www.eset.com |
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Walt |
#13
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On 4-27-2011 16:51, jsbrake wrote:
Kirk (who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) Okay, there's got to be a story in that! Pardon my lack of acronym- sense, but what is "IFE" ? (I'm thinking something Failure of Engine). -John (who once crashed a simulated CF-100) In flight emergency??? |
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On Apr 26, 6:13*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly.
wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. *Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. *While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. *Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? *I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly You cut the spar in half and count the rings. |
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Funny thing about hours and condition.
I recently sold my venerable/classic Std Cirrus. When I purchased her there was a bit of embarrassment when it came to hours and launches as there was no log book available for the first 12 years of her existence. So no record of flying. The owners at that point, had estimated based on hours and launches of similar aircraft, flown in the same club during the same period and made an educated estimated number of hours to start their new log book off. So she had a log showing over 2000 hours , not unusual in a 30 year old airframe. Being a first time buyer and a gullible sort - I simply checked the condition out very carefully, decided she was a very shiny and desirable object and negotiated a suitable price. A couple of years later at a regional contest one of the vintage glider pilots drew me aside and handed over the missing logbook which he had found in his study nearly 25 years too late. Apparently the sight of 66 - his first glass slipper - on the runway had jogged a memory... It turns out the initial 3 owners only ever flew her for contest and record attempts. The initial estimate of hours was completely overstated (by nearly 1000 hours!) However - it turns out there were a number of minor bashes and repairs that I had been blisfully unaware of. So - log books are useful things, but condition is what really counts - unless you are looking at metal where fatigue hours count, or wood which is a whole different game, or are close to a time limit that has high cost associated. For many gliders a 3000 hour inspection is not much different from what many do as an annual. I have flown in gliders with 15,000 hours on their log that looked and felt better than much "newer" gliders. On 2011/04/27 5:48 AM, Grider Pirate wrote: On Apr 26, 3:13 pm, Walt ConnellyWalt.Connelly. wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly In short. No. I have kept pretty accurate records since I got my glider, but it was 24 years old, with 5 previous owners when I got it. -- Bruce Greeff T59D #1771 & Std Cirrus #57 |
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On Apr 28, 12:32*pm, SF wrote:
On Apr 26, 6:13*pm, Walt Connelly Walt.Connelly. wrote: I have seen a number of glider advertised and most tell you the total time. *Unlike a powered airplane which has a tach or a Hobbs meter, gliders seldom have any built in way to determine the actually time on the air frame. *While people might try to inflate their personal flying time, I would not be surprised if many of these gliders are low balling their actual air frame time which I presume has a lifetime limit in one way or another. *Is there any reasonably foolproof/accurate way to determine the true time on an airframe? *I cant think of one. Walt -- Walt Connelly You cut the spar in half and count the rings. Unfortunately, that seems to have stopped working sometime in the mid 60's but that's been hidden by Hänle's "trick", splicing on a new series. |
#17
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On Wed, 27 Apr 2011 11:51:52 -0600, BobW
wrote: - My understanding of 'German glass' (the glider world 'certification pioneers') is that early (Glasflugel & Schleicher & probably others) pre-carbon-ed airframes were LBA-overseen-tested to 18,000 hours, then (originally) certified to 1/6 of that, or the 'magic' 3,000 hours you'll sooner or later encounter in the glider world. When glass glider were invented, things were a little more simple than what you described. ![]() The wings of glass gliders were (and still are) tested to destruction in bending tests, but no large-scale load cycle tests were carried out. The only real long-term test article is that Janus C (carbon) wing that is stored outside Stuttgart university and tested every couple of years. As airframes/types reached 3,000 hours, additional certification depended upon them passing detailed inspections with the results forwarded/blessed by the LBA in 3,000 hour increments. I believe some airframes have now been certified up to 12,000 hours (Twin Grobs? LS-4's?). It'd be great if knowledgeable Europeans will see fit to chime in here... Basically no need to do that - you explained the procedures perfectly correctly. The only "glass" glider I'm aware of that has an airframe hour limit is the Pegase (but not based upon technical issues). As you describe correctly, most German gliders need a thorough inspection every 3.000 hrs (newer Schempp Hirth gliders 6.000 hrs) which sometimes includes the replacement of certain parts (usually the only mandatory replacements are rudder cables and release cables). I've heard of an ASK-21 that recently passed its 24.000 hrs check. - 'Pure glass' gliders are necessarily 'overstrong' (i.e. designed to stiffness, rather than strength criteria [the latter being typical of aluminum and wood gliders and airplanes]), in order to demonstrate 'usefully high' flutter-free useable airspeeds. .... and in contrary to aluminium the materials of a composite glider are not fatigue critical - an aluminium structure needs to be overengineered to extend its fatigue life, but glass, carbon or kevlar fibre don't need this. Based on the above, my conclusion is potential owners of 1st-generation glass gliders have little to fret about in ship-life terms, at least of the plastic bits, regardless of whether one is purchasing from an apparent 'squirrel' or from Diogenes' sought-after human. 100% agree. Cheers Andreas |
#18
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On Apr 27, 11:51*am, jsbrake wrote:
Kirk (who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) Okay, there's got to be a story in that! *Pardon my lack of acronym- sense, but what is "IFE" ? *(I'm thinking something Failure of Engine). -John (who once crashed a simulated CF-100) Short War Story: Clark AB, Philippines, mid 80s. Squadron was in the middle of a sortie surge - flying a lot of 4-ship 1.5 hour sorties back to back, simulating wartime conditions. My pilot and I got to our jet and it wasn't ready for some reason. So the rest of the flight took off on their scheduled time while we waited for maintenance to fix our jet, hoping to get airborne in time to get a short sortie in before the mandatory "land-by" time (needed to get the jets ready for the next scheduled takeoff time...). Bottom line, jet finally gets fixed, about 30 minutes before it had to be back in the chocks for the next crew. We told this to the squadron, suggesting that it would be difficult to get started, systems checked, taxi to the active (a long way on Clark AB), fly, land, taxi in, etc and still get a useful sortie out of it. But we were told GO!, so we did. Flew exactly 12 minutes, mostly in min AB with the speed brakes out and dumping gas to get the fuel down to a reasonable landing weight, did basically a big looping pattern flight, and taxied back to our spot on the ramp on time for the jet to be prepared for the next sortie. The crew chief, not expecting us back for an hour or so, thought we had aborted prior to taking off - until he saw that the drag chute had been deployed - The look on his face was priceless! So, we logged a .3 (12 minutes takeoff to landing plus 5 minutes taxi time - AF standard), and got royally chewed out by the Ops Officer for flying a really dumb sortie. Our excuse of "But we asked and you told us to fly!" didn't hack it. It was worth it, though! Kirk 66 |
#19
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On Apr 29, 10:48*am, "kirk.stant" wrote:
On Apr 27, 11:51*am, jsbrake wrote: Kirk (who once logged a .3 flight in a F-4 that wasn't an IFE - and it included the 5 minutes of taxi time!) Okay, there's got to be a story in that! *Pardon my lack of acronym- sense, but what is "IFE" ? *(I'm thinking something Failure of Engine). -John (who once crashed a simulated CF-100) Short War Story: Clark AB, Philippines, mid 80s. *Squadron was in the middle of a sortie surge - *flying a lot of 4-ship 1.5 hour sorties back to back, simulating wartime conditions. My pilot and I got to our jet and it wasn't ready for some reason. *So the rest of the flight took off on their scheduled time while we waited for maintenance to fix our jet, hoping to get airborne in time to get a short sortie in before the mandatory "land-by" time (needed to get the jets ready for the next scheduled takeoff time...). *Bottom line, jet finally gets fixed, about 30 minutes before it had to be back in the chocks for the next crew. *We told this to the squadron, suggesting that it would be difficult to get started, systems checked, taxi to the active (a long way on Clark AB), fly, land, taxi in, etc and still get a useful sortie out of it. *But we were told GO!, so we did. *Flew exactly 12 minutes, mostly in min AB with the speed brakes out and dumping gas to get the fuel down to a reasonable landing weight, did basically a big looping pattern flight, and taxied back to our spot on the ramp on time for the jet to be prepared for the next sortie. *The crew chief, not expecting us back for an hour or so, thought we had aborted prior to taking off - until he saw that the drag chute had been deployed - The look on his face was priceless! So, we logged a .3 (12 minutes takeoff to landing plus 5 minutes taxi time - AF standard), and got royally chewed out by the Ops Officer for flying a really dumb sortie. *Our excuse of "But we asked and you told us to fly!" didn't hack it. It was worth it, though! Kirk 66 Have a shot of the Blue Kool-Aid and say "The Air Force Made me do it!" |
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