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#31
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At 16:12 02 June 2012, Dan Marotta wrote:
All the concern about nose vs. CG release and the correcting force of the nose release indicates, to me, poorly trained or lazy pilots. If you will simply fly the aircraft and pay attention to your flight path, you'll find that it makes no difference what type of release you have (unless you're doing a ground launch). [snip] The concern in the UK about towing on CG hook when a nose hook is available came from tug pilot fatalities. The first, and most of the other, such accidents happened with CG hooks, and one or more of the other factors, which led to kiting, tug upset, and tug hitting the deck. As a result, the BGA issued a poster listing the 6 factors most closely associated with upsets, and advised having not more that two (IIRC) such factors on any one launch. More recently we started to have upsets again, so far fortunately without fatality. Unable to find the original poster, we issued another which had the following: ------------------- Tug Upsets These happen when the glider suddenly zooms above the tug, putting it into a steep dive requiring considerable height to recover. The BGA ran a successful campaign to end these fatalities to tug pilots, but several years without incident now appear to have ended. This year there have been two reported upsets and at least one other not reported. Fortunately none resulted in crashes. Six factors make upsets more likely: Lightweight, low wing-loading C of G hooks intended for winch launching Short ropes Inexperienced pilots Near aft C of G. Turbulent conditions If two of these are present the danger becomes significant. More than two should be considered unacceptable. ----------------- Chris N |
#32
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On 6/2/2012 9:12 AM, Dan Marotta wrote:
All the concern about nose vs. CG release and the correcting force of the nose release indicates, to me, poorly trained or lazy pilots. If you will simply fly the aircraft and pay attention to your flight path, you'll find that it makes no difference what type of release you have (unless you're doing a ground launch). Do some of you actually rely on the nose release to keep the nose aligned rather than flying the aircraft? I did in some conditions, such as cross winds and unassisted (no wing runner) takeoffs. When the glider is moving slowly at the beginning of the launch, there is no "flying" the glider - you are ballistic for a length of time that depends on the wind and towplane acceleration. Once aerodynamic control is available, then the differences between CG and nose hooks are reduced, but in all the gliders I've flown, it was still noticeable. How noticeable did depend on the glider type. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
#33
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At 16:12 02 June 2012, Dan Marotta wrote:
All the concern about nose vs. CG release and the correcting force of the nose release indicates, to me, poorly trained or lazy pilots. If you will simply fly the aircraft and pay attention to your flight path, you'll find that it makes no difference what type of release you have (unless you're doing a ground launch). [snip] The concern in the UK about towing on CG hook when a nose hook is available came from tug pilot fatalities. The first, and most of the other, such accidents happened with CG hooks, and one or more of the other factors, which led to kiting, tug upset, and tug hitting the deck. As a result, the BGA issued a poster listing the 6 factors most closely associated with upsets, and advised having not more that two (IIRC) such factors on any one launch. More recently we started to have upsets again, so far fortunately without fatality. Unable to find the original poster, we issued another which had the following: ------------------- Tug Upsets These happen when the glider suddenly zooms above the tug, putting it into a steep dive requiring considerable height to recover. The BGA ran a successful campaign to end these fatalities to tug pilots, but several years without incident now appear to have ended. This year there have been two reported upsets and at least one other not reported. Fortunately none resulted in crashes. Six factors make upsets more likely: Lightweight, low wing-loading C of G hooks intended for winch launching Short ropes Inexperienced pilots Near aft C of G. Turbulent conditions If two of these are present the danger becomes significant. More than two should be considered unacceptable. ----------------- Chris N |
#34
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Given all the comments in the thread so far, I guess it's about time I gave
what follows another airing. It was written a few years ago in the aftermath of a tow pilot fatality: Whilst I was Chief Instructor at Booker Gliding Club, we conducted two series of test on the phenomenon variously referred to as “Kiting”, “Winch Launching behind the Tow-Plane” and “Sling-Shot Accident”, one in 1978 and one in 1982; my memory of them is quite vivid. * Airplanes used were, for the first series, a Beagle Terrier (a side by side, two place, high wing, tail-dragger), fitted with an Ottfur Glider hook for towing (very similar to the Tost hook, dissimilar to the Schweizer hook) with a 160 hp Lycoming engine; for the second series of tests a PA18-180 with a Schweitzer hook was used. Gliders used were a Schleicher Ka 8b and ASK 13. Tow rope initially used was a heavy (4000 lb breaking strain) rope with a thinner rope weak link at the glider end (nominally 900 lb, but a well worn specimen could break at as little as 200 – 300 lbs – laboratory tests, not opinion), the second series of test used the same heavy duty rope with “Mity” links at each end, 1100 lbs at the Tow-Plane end and 900 lbs at the Glider end – these links use metal shear pins, one under load and a second unloaded, which takes over if the first one fails. This eliminates failure due to fatigue and means that the links always fail at close to their nominal load even after some time in service – again laboratory tested, not just subjective opinion. Rope length was around 180 feet in all cases. * I was the Glider Pilot on all tests; Tow-Plane Pilot was Verdun Luck (then my deputy Chief Instructor) for the first series of tests and Brian Spreckley (then Manager of Booker GC) for the second. The object of the tests was to try to reproduce the “Kiting” under controlled circumstances, with a view to developing a Tow-Plane release mechanism that would automatically release the glider if it got dangerously high above the Tow-Plane. All tests were conducted at about 4000 feet agl. * First test: Terrier Tow-Plane and ASK 13 on nose-hook. At about 4000 feet I took the glider progressively higher above the tow-plane, eventually reached about 100 feet above tow-plane (i.e. rope angle more than 45 degrees above horizontal). At about this point, the tow pilot, who had been using progressively more back stick, ran out of back stick and the Tow-Plane began to pitch nose down but not excessively violently. I released at that point. It took a very positive control input on my part to achieve the displacement, we both felt it was something unlikely to occur accidentally, even with an inexperienced glider pilot, and there was plenty of time for either party to release if it did occur. * Second test: Terrier Tow-Plane and ASK 13 on C of G hook. I pitched the glider about 25 – 30 degrees nose up – the weak link broke immediately! Tow pilot reported a sharp jerk, but no significant change to flight path. * Third test: Terrier Tow-Plane, K 8b on C of G hook. I pitched the glider about 25 degrees nose up. The glider continued to pitch up fairly rapidly (as at the start of a winch launch) and substantial forward movement of the stick only slightly slowed the rate of pitch. The glider achieved about 45 degrees nose up, speed increased rapidly from 55 knots to about 75 knots and the glider was pulled back towards level flight (again as at the top of a winch launch). I released at that point. The entire sequence of events occupied a VERY short period of time (subsequently measured as 2 - 3 seconds). The Tow Pilot reported a marked deceleration and start of pitching down which he attempted to contain by moving the stick back; this was followed immediately by a very rapid pitch down accompanied by significant negative “G”. The tow-plane finished up about 70 degrees nose down and took about 400 feet to recover to level flight. We both found the experience alarming, even undertaken deliberately at 4000 feet. Our conclusion was that the combination of the initial pitch down and the upward deflection of the elevator caused the horizontal stabilizer/elevator combination to stall and the abrupt removal of the down-force it provided caused the subsequent very rapid pitch-down and negative “G”. * Our first conclusion was that, in the event of this sequence occurring accidentally as a result of an inadvertent pitch up by the glider pilot, there was effectively no chance that either the glider pilot or tow-pilot would recognise the problem and pull the release in the available time. * Attempts to produce a tow-plane hook that would release automatically were unsuccessful for reasons that became apparent later. * These tests were repeated a few years later with a PA18 – 180 as the tow-plane, Brian Spreckley flying it. The third test described above was repeated and photographed from a chase plane using a 35 mm motor drive camera on automatic (this took a frame every half second – video camcorders of small size were not readily available then). The photo sequence started with the glider in a slightly low normal tow position and starting to pitch up, the second frame has the glider about 30 degrees nose up and about 20 feet higher than previously in the third frame it is about 45 degrees nose up and has gained another 30 feet or so, the tow-plane is already starting to pitch down, in the fourth frame the glider is about 100 feet higher than its original position and the climb is starting to shallow, the tow-plane is about 50 degrees nose down, the final frame shows the tow-plane about 70 degrees nose down and the glider almost back in level flight , almost directly above it (that was about the point that I pulled the release). * Sufficiently alarmed by events, Brian Spreckley had been trying to pull the release in the tow-plane earlier and found that it would not operate until my releasing at the glider end removed the tension from the rope. Subsequent tests on the ground showed that the Schweizer hook fitted to the tow-plane, whilst perfectly satisfactory under normal loads, was jammed solid by the frictional loads when subject to a pull of around 700 lbs with a slight upwards component – not something that a normal pre-flight check would reveal. * We solved that problem on our tow-planes by replacing the bolt that the hook latches onto with a small roller bearing. So far as I know, no one in the UK has tested the Schweizer hook as fitted to a glider, but I would not be surprised if it exhibited the same characteristics at high loads. * The photo sequence also showed that at no time was the glider at an angle greater than 30 degrees above the tow-plane’s centre-line. However, of course once the glider has pitched up, the wings generate considerable extra lift and that extra lift provides extra load on the rope. With a large, heavy glider it is easy to exceed weak link breaking strains and with a lightweight machine the tension can easily rise to 700 lbs or so. With that much load on the rope, quite a small upward angle provides enough of a vertical component to produce the results described. * That of course is the reason that attempts to produce a hook that released if a certain angle was exceeded were unsuccessful. The, quite small, angle between the rope and the fuselage centreline needed to trigger the “Kiting” when the glider is pitched significantly nose-up is not much greater than the amount of out of position commonly experienced in turbulent conditions. We did build an experimental hook and tried it, but, set to an angle that prevented “Kiting” it occasionally dumped an innocent glider in turbulence, and set to an angle that prevented that, it didn’t prevent the “Kiting”. What was needed was a hook that responded to the vertical component of the load, not the angle at which it was applied, and that problem we decided was beyond us (at least in a form robust and fool-proof enough to be attached to the rear end of a tow-plane). * Our conclusions for preventing “Kiting” we * Don’t aerotow gliders, especially lightweight, low wing-loading gliders, on C of G hooks intended for winch launching (I think the JAR 22 requirement for nose hooks to be fitted to new gliders for aerotowing was at least in part a result of these tests). * Don’t use short ropes. The speed at which things happen varies directly with the length of the rope. * Don’t let inexperienced pilots fly at anywhere near aft C of G. * Don’t let inexperienced pilots fly solo in turbulent conditions. * Replace or modify all Schweizer hooks fitted to tow planes. (So far as I know there are none on gliders in the UK, so that question never arose). * We did also modify our PA18’s so that instead of the release cable ending at a floor-mounted lever, it went round a pulley where that lever used to be, and then all the way up the side of the cockpit, anchored at the roof. This meant that grabbing any point on the wire and pulling it in any direction could operate the release; considerably easier than finding a floor mounted lever when being subject to about minus two “G”. We never regarded this modification as being likely to prevent a worst-case scenario, because, as stated earlier, it was the opinion of all involved, that in a real “Kiting” incident, there was no realistic hope that either pilot would respond in time. At 02:54 25 May 2012, son_of_flubber wrote: I've been told (and witnessed) that aerotow on CG hook is initially difficu= lt for someone who has trained for aerotow with a "nose hook" (aka hook-for= ward-of-CG). Suppose this CG-hook-newbie were to take winch tow training (= with CG hook). Would the winch training reduce the initial difficulty of a= CG hook aerotow? Do the difficulties/danger of aerotow with CG hook go away completely with = training and experience? What sorts of misadventures are reasonably attributed to aerotow on CG hook= ? I understand why CG hook is superior for winch tow. No need to rehash that= explanation. |
#35
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I normally fly with aft CG. I have never had a kitting experience flying on a CG hook, but I have had occasion where holding full forward stick for a few seconds was necessary to hold attitude. That has happened only when the towplane was pulling me slower than I prefer.
This leads me to think that a preventive measure that perhaps every tow pilot should consider is to be vigilent in keeping the speed up on tow and especially in the first 500 feet (the death zone). At higher speed, the glider has more elevator authority to keep his nose down and the tug has more elevator authority to keep his nose up. Lifting forces on the elevator go as the square of airspeed, so a little extra airspeed can buy a lot of elevator authority. Besides exacerbating the kiting scenario, slow towing at low altitude presents an entirely different and especially severe hazard to ballasted gliders.. That scenario has nearly killed me. Pulling the release is not an option when your glider is slow at 100 feet with the nose pointed up at 30 degrees in a full stall. Keep the airspeed up tuggies. |
#36
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A good post.
Some tow pilots strive to get into the air as quickly as possible since it's easier to keep the tug straight in the air. This is not so nice for the glider. The last time I carried a full load of water, and with my CG aft of 90%, the tug leapt into the air leaving me on the ground with full forward stick trying to get the tail up. A few more knots would have made this an easy tow. When I'm towing, usually in a Pawnee these days, I simply guard the stick during acceleration and let the tail come up by itself. Then, upon breaking ground, fly in ground effect until reaching full tow speed for the glider's weight. Haven't heard a complaint yet... "Steve Koerner" wrote in message ... I normally fly with aft CG. I have never had a kitting experience flying on a CG hook, but I have had occasion where holding full forward stick for a few seconds was necessary to hold attitude. That has happened only when the towplane was pulling me slower than I prefer. This leads me to think that a preventive measure that perhaps every tow pilot should consider is to be vigilent in keeping the speed up on tow and especially in the first 500 feet (the death zone). At higher speed, the glider has more elevator authority to keep his nose down and the tug has more elevator authority to keep his nose up. Lifting forces on the elevator go as the square of airspeed, so a little extra airspeed can buy a lot of elevator authority. Besides exacerbating the kiting scenario, slow towing at low altitude presents an entirely different and especially severe hazard to ballasted gliders. That scenario has nearly killed me. Pulling the release is not an option when your glider is slow at 100 feet with the nose pointed up at 30 degrees in a full stall. Keep the airspeed up tuggies. |
#37
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Sounds to me like you're talking about aircraft limitations. I haven't yet
seen a case where the glider could safely takeoff with a nose hook but not with a CG hook AND the tow pilot was willing to do the tow. Your operation may vary but, where I fly, we have a 15 kt crosswind component limit on the tow planes. I've towed and flown my CG hook equipped LAK-17 with winds gusting up to 28 kts though the cross wind component was under 15 kts. In these conditions, ground handling is the most difficult aspect of the operation and we sometimes stand down simply because of the risk of moving the tug. "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... On 6/2/2012 9:12 AM, Dan Marotta wrote: All the concern about nose vs. CG release and the correcting force of the nose release indicates, to me, poorly trained or lazy pilots. If you will simply fly the aircraft and pay attention to your flight path, you'll find that it makes no difference what type of release you have (unless you're doing a ground launch). Do some of you actually rely on the nose release to keep the nose aligned rather than flying the aircraft? I did in some conditions, such as cross winds and unassisted (no wing runner) takeoffs. When the glider is moving slowly at the beginning of the launch, there is no "flying" the glider - you are ballistic for a length of time that depends on the wind and towplane acceleration. Once aerodynamic control is available, then the differences between CG and nose hooks are reduced, but in all the gliders I've flown, it was still noticeable. How noticeable did depend on the glider type. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
#38
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On Jun 1, 6:09*pm, Andreas Maurer wrote:
Let me explain: I've often seen gliders roll behind the towplane for ages, balancing on the main wheel, creating lots of rolling drag and bouncing all over the place with each bump they hit. Usually lots of control deflections to balance crosswind (a tail wheel in the air doesn't really help to stabilize against a crosswind...), and often multiple touchdowns after the first lift off due to PIO. Andreas - Note that I said nothing about "pinning" the aircraft on the ground. I simply said "get the tailwheel off the ground" - there's a difference (albeit one I may not have clarified). You can get the tailwheel off the ground (so the tail surfaces are more effective and you can use the rudder to stay behind the towplane better), without increasing your ground-roll by a huge margin. I've seen plenty of people try to take off in a 2-point attitude with the stick and/or trim back and when they jump in the air they quickly get into a PIO because they have to shove the stick forward to prevent kiting (and/or fight the back-pressure of a trim spring). creating negative lift until the pilot decides it's time to lift off. Scary. Scary? Only if they prolong the takeoff to an unsafe degree. Choosing when to take off is, IMHO, better than having the aircraft jump into the air on the pilot and then the pilot is "behind" in correcting and trying to chase the controls. But again, I was not implying that people should keep the aircraft stuck to the ground - just get the tailwheel off the ground so that you have better directional control/authority. One additional benefit: If the glider lifts off close to its minimum speed, control authority of the elevator is less agressive, therefore it's far less likely to overcontrol the glider and enter a PIO. The flipside of your argument is that at minimum control speed you are also more likely to be upset and/or lose control in the event of a thermal or wind gust. Where I fly, we sometimes hit 8-knot thermals at the departure end of the runway. Hitting that with one wing at minimum airspeed would really ruin your day (and probably the tugs, as you roll and yank him with you). Plus, with less control-authority you cannot prevent "weather-vaning" as easily. IMHO, what you want is to take off in a reasonable amount of runway that yields a flying airspeed that is sufficient for good control authority. I'm a little bit puzzled why one should mess with the trim during aerotow. By setting the elevator trim to the recommended position for aerotow before launch *(trim forward) you get a slight nose-down stick pressure on all the (German built) gliders I've flown, which in my opinion is extremely effective to prevent ballooning: The glider is a lot more likely to descent behind the tow plane if you don't pay attention for a moment. Better be too low behind the tow plane than too high. ....Because the factory-recommended trim setting does NOT account for YOUR situation! It is a "book" value that doesn't account for your weight, your CG, your aircraft's history of repairs or modifications, etc. But most importantly: Because proper trim is always a good idea. I know a lot of people are hesitant about this because they think "wow, I'm so busy trying to keep position on-tow and look out and manage the tow, why would I want to distract myself with trim?" But they don't realize that part of the reason the workload is so high is BECAUSE they're fighting the glider's trim! The truth is that trimming properly lessens your workload and makes precision flying easier. You should be able to (in a well-designed aircraft) manipulate the trim without looking at it or taking your hands off the primary flight controls. And you can feel the effects of the trim change by the feedback on the stick - so if you make a couple of incremental changes you can easily feel when you've got the trim set properly (or close enough). Therefore adjusting the trim on-tow should be relatively simple, and will result in a much better experience (and with a lower work-load you can stay more alert to traffic around you and emergency-preparedness as the tow progresses). That nose-down moment IMHO is not good at all (and like all trim settings, its highly dependent upon your current CG *and* your airspeed). Why do I think a nose-down moment might not be good? Springs are used for most glider control systems. Think about the way a spring can bounce or oscillate, and think about your arm constantly fighting that force. Isn't it clear how this can lead to PIOs and over-controlling? Fighting a nose-down force may lead to PIOs just like fighting a nose-up force can. Certainly the problem of kiting or ballooning on initial takeoff is something to avoid; but I refer you to my earlier comments in this message. Bottom-line: The better you trim the aircraft in ALL phases of flight, the better you'll fly. I may have only been doing this for a few years; but the ONLY people I've had who fight me on this point are people who've never used their trim all that much. Just last weekend I mentored several budding XC pilots and almost all of them had a horrible time making a consistent thermalling turn. Once I showed them how to re-trim the aircraft once they'd established their bank- angle and thermalling speed, all suddenly did MUCH better and remarked on how much easier it was to thermal. (Of course, then I had to remind them to watch their airspeed and re- trim the aircraft as they rolled out of the turn... One step at a time, I suppose! *chuckle*) DG-300 cannot be trimmed nose-down at all (as you have probably noticed in your 300, it needs a significant stick push which isn't the best idea if you want to keep your position behind the towplane). Not true. I can hold the trim-release lever and apply a small amount of forward force to the "trim indicator" (which is strong enough on my ship to handle this load), while keeping the stick pushed to its proper position to maintain attitude, and trim forward just fine. Obviously this is not applicable to all aircraft; but I am pointing out that the blanket statement is not, in fact, true. BTW, you can also hold the trim release, briefly push the stick forward while releasing the trim-lever, and then relax the stick aft some. The nose will dip but if you practice this (NOT ON TOW) you can get quite quick with the maneuver and the glider will only rise or fall in relation to the tug by some 5 feet throughout the maneuver. I do _not_ recommend this; but again just pointing out that its possible. :-) Make one mistake, and you have a neutrally or even nose-up trimmed glider - one further mistake and you might create brown pants in that tow plane in front of you that is just disappearing under the nose of your glider. Not sure I follow you... If you can keep pulling back on the stick to offset your nose-down trim, why can't you keep pushing forward to offset a nose-up trim? Either one is bad, and both can cause problems if you leave tow position and don't correct for it. The glider ballooning seems really bad and scary, but a seriously-low glider can also cause the towplane to pitch up and stall or spin; its not like one situation is "bad" and the other is "good". Both are bad! Neutral trim on-tow and careful attention to tow-position should yield the best tow. Clear case of bad training. One needs to learn to actively fly the glider during an aerotow, otherwise problems are pre-programmed. Very true. But its not just training. Or rather, a lot of pilots get complacent and don't think of themselves as needing "training" as they age and gain experience. Bad habits form. Laziness happens. People with nose-hooks can get used to always being pulled into position by the tug; and subtly their rudder-use decreases over time. Then one day they take a flight in a CG-hook aircraft and things get rough. :-P Take care, --Noel P.S. If I were to summarize my typical aerotow (with my DG's CG-hook) & my trim adjustments, here's how it goes: 1] I trim almost full-forward as part of my pre-takeoff check. 2] As the glider begins to roll, I keep wings level and try to track behind the towplane. 3] As soon as the tail comes off the ground I give the trim-level a quick squeeze & release (handy to do in the DG). This resets my trim for a fairly flat attitude, giving me good rudder authority to track behind the towplane. (At my main airfield we have to stage off to the side of the runway and begin the takeoff roll at an angle - rudder control is important as we gently curve onto the runway and lift off flying down the centerline) 4] As my airspeed climbs up about 5-10 knots above stall (around 40-45 knots in my DG), I apply a small amount of back-pressure to lift off and fly in ground-effect as we continue to accelerate. I sometimes give another quick squeeze-and-release on the trim, if I find that I'm having to apply force on the stick to keep the plane flying or to keep it from rising above the tug. 5] Then when the tug and I reach about 100 - 150 feet I re-trim one more time as our airspeed approaches "normal" for the rest of the aero- tow. 6] I may fiddle with the trim once more as we fly upwind and/or crosswind; as the tug may retract flaps or otherwise change its speed & attitude. [Of Course, Your Mileage May Vary...] |
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