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#101
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On Sunday, November 20, 2016 at 2:24:53 AM UTC+3, 2G wrote:
On Saturday, November 19, 2016 at 9:52:04 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: My Stemme has built-in AoA indication but it's on the EFIS and I'm looking outside during the pattern. All you really need is to be able to recognize sloppy controls, reduced noise, and uncommanded movement of the nose. This has been discussed to death (no pun intended). There's no instrument that can protect you as well as training and practice and, if you need to rely on an instrument, maybe you should be keeping tropical fish instead of flying. On 11/18/2016 11:29 PM, 2G wrote: On Friday, November 18, 2016 at 8:06:21 AM UTC-8, Dan Marotta wrote: To reply to the subject question in a word: NO. You can stall and spin from any attitude or airspeed. All you have to do is plan and execute it correctly or simply f*ck up the turn. On 11/18/2016 6:25 AM, wrote: An AOPA article states that the AOPA Safety Institute and University of North Dakota are studying the "circular vs rectangular" pattern as a result of the NTSB "Most Wanted Safety Improvements. It'll be interesting to see what the study produces. -- Dan, 5J It's REALLY hard to spin while flying coordinated - if you know of a way I would truly like to know. It is also tough to stall while flying coordinated because it takes a very high angle of attack and you would really have to work it keeping the glider coordinated as you approach stall. The FAA is emphasizing an angle of attack indicator to prevent spins; I think what is needed is an audible flight coordination indicator. In our gliders we have a heads-up flight coordination indicator which is even better - it's called a yaw string (but you have to look at it and react to it). Tom -- Dan, 5J I rely on my instruments EVERY time I fly, especially in the landing phase; don't you? Training and practice are a good thing, but they CAN'T substitute for good instruments, only teach us to use them properly. One can compensate for the loss of an instrument, like airspeed, but one would not deliberately not pay attention to a working ASI in the landing phase. The airspeed is the only instrument I pay attention to, and only really to see if it unexpectedly changes. Otherwise it's all by angles and feel. Audio vario is nice to have, but you know via your bottom and the changing view.. Precisely controlling the actual airspeed value is only really useful landing into a much smaller than usual field. I normally touch down at low energy within 20 ft of where I mean to. I, too, have an AOA; it is the artificial horizon in my Air Avionics (aka Butterfly) vario. Since when is an artificial horizon an AOA indicator? What's it telling you when you pull too hard nose 45+ degrees down on a loop exit or spin recovery? |
#102
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I have a Dynon D-10a EFIS http://www.dynonavionics.com/efis-d10a.php
on the panel of my Stemme. It displays, among other things which are configurable, Attitude (pitch and roll), Heading (3 digits, scrolling tape, and trend indicator), Airspeed (3 digits, plus scrolling tape, plus trend indicator), Altitude (3 digits, scrolling tape, and trend indicator), Slip Ball (digital and it actually works, unlike a physical ball in a tube), OAT, G-loading, Battery voltage, and AoA. The AoA indication is a separate graphic which is fed by the pitot tube and an extra static port located on the under side of the nose cone. Follow the link above to see a picture. The AoA indication is just to the right of the Airspeed (right side of the case). Hold altitude constant for a while and watch the AoA increase from green to yellow to red and feel the onset of airframe buffet. I've been instrument rated for 43 years and this is the best instrument I've ever used given everything needed is presented on one instrument face. Would I buy one for a pure glider? No, but it came with the Stemme and it's proven its worth On 11/19/2016 9:05 PM, SoaringXCellence wrote: Tom, Is the Artificial Horizon really an AoA Indicator? If you hold a true nose-on-the-horizon in a glider, it will slow down and begin a descent, which means the AoA is increasing, but the nose still shows a 0 degree reference to the horizon. I've been teaching and flying instruments for 22 years and even in a power plane the Artificial Horizon almost never shows the Angle of attack. Mike -- Dan, 5J |
#103
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Bruce Hoult wrote on 11/19/2016 12:50 AM:
Define "coordinated". No problem to spin with the string perfectly centered. It's true in any glider with enough elevator, but the Blanik is excellent for demonstrating it. Shallow turn, very graaaadually slow it down, maintaining constant bank angle with aileron and keeping the string in the middle with the rudder. Pretty soon you've got a whole heap of out of turn aileron and into turn rudder. But the string is in the middle and the nose isn't even very high. And then BAM full-on incipient spin. Bruce describes how I practice incipient spins in my ASH 26 E (also the way I practiced them in my ASW 20 C). One moment I'm doing a smooth, coordinated turn; an instant later, the inboard wing is rotating down - no warning. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Dec 2014a" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://soaringsafety.org/prevention/...anes-2014A.pdf |
#104
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On 11/22/2016 8:20 PM, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Bruce Hoult wrote on 11/19/2016 12:50 AM: Define "coordinated". No problem to spin with the string perfectly centered. It's true in any glider with enough elevator, but the Blanik is excellent for demonstrating it. Shallow turn, very graaaadually slow it down, maintaining constant bank angle with aileron and keeping the string in the middle with the rudder. Pretty soon you've got a whole heap of out of turn aileron and into turn rudder. But the string is in the middle and the nose isn't even very high. And then BAM full-on incipient spin. Bruce describes how I practice incipient spins in my ASH 26 E (also the way I practiced them in my ASW 20 C). One moment I'm doing a smooth, coordinated turn; an instant later, the inboard wing is rotating down - no warning. Blame this somewhat-thread-drifting post on winter finally trying to put in an appearance in this part of the northern hemisphere... I'm guessing what Eric's "no warning" comment means is "in the absence of a distinct separation-induced burble," or something similar (I've not flown either an ASW 20 or ASH 26). I'm gonna "winter-quibble" with the concept "no warning." My club used to have a 2-32 (eventually sold) about which the same thing was routinely said, and in fact the ship did routinely and enthusiastically drop the same wing before beginning a rapid rotation if not "immediately and properly countered." If it really did catch someone out, going through at least 90-degrees of an incipient spin, and WAY nose down before recovery - was in your immediate future. Many club pilots of roughly equivalent time as I then had might accurately have been described as "unduly frightened" of the ship. But "no warning?" Surely you jest (and my name isn't Shirley). True, before the wing "let go" there was (almost always) an absence of aerodynamic burble felt through the stick or one's butt or merely "drummed" through the metal fuselage, but by the time the wing did let go, "all the other usual suspects" had put in their appearances: low wind noise; nose noticeably high; controls (especially stick) getting sloppy; etc. Subsequent to checking out in the ship, I found it "intellectual fun" to mess around with it in slow flight "trying to find the burble." Abrupt departure from controlled flight - yes, indeed! "No warning?" - not by a long shot. Bob - a big fan of coordination AND "sufficient airspeed" - W. |
#105
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Bob,
you've stated that you haven't flown an ASW20C, but still you comment on its flying characteristics, citing a 2-32 as reference?! What a nonsense. I have flown an ASW20C (15 m, no winglets, CoG towards the rear limit), and there is no warning _what so ever_. Bert Le mercredi 23 novembre 2016 06:06:50 UTC+1, Bob Whelan a écritÂ*: On 11/22/2016 8:20 PM, Eric Greenwell wrote: Bruce Hoult wrote on 11/19/2016 12:50 AM: Define "coordinated". No problem to spin with the string perfectly centered. It's true in any glider with enough elevator, but the Blanik is excellent for demonstrating it. Shallow turn, very graaaadually slow it down, maintaining constant bank angle with aileron and keeping the string in the middle with the rudder. Pretty soon you've got a whole heap of out of turn aileron and into turn rudder. But the string is in the middle and the nose isn't even very high. And then BAM full-on incipient spin. Bruce describes how I practice incipient spins in my ASH 26 E (also the way I practiced them in my ASW 20 C). One moment I'm doing a smooth, coordinated turn; an instant later, the inboard wing is rotating down - no warning. Blame this somewhat-thread-drifting post on winter finally trying to put in an appearance in this part of the northern hemisphere... I'm guessing what Eric's "no warning" comment means is "in the absence of a distinct separation-induced burble," or something similar (I've not flown either an ASW 20 or ASH 26). I'm gonna "winter-quibble" with the concept "no warning." My club used to have a 2-32 (eventually sold) about which the same thing was routinely said, and in fact the ship did routinely and enthusiastically drop the same wing before beginning a rapid rotation if not "immediately and properly countered." If it really did catch someone out, going through at least 90-degrees of an incipient spin, and WAY nose down before recovery - was in your immediate future. Many club pilots of roughly equivalent time as I then had might accurately have been described as "unduly frightened" of the ship. But "no warning?" Surely you jest (and my name isn't Shirley). True, before the wing "let go" there was (almost always) an absence of aerodynamic burble felt through the stick or one's butt or merely "drummed" through the metal fuselage, but by the time the wing did let go, "all the other usual suspects" had put in their appearances: low wind noise; nose noticeably high; controls (especially stick) getting sloppy; etc. Subsequent to checking out in the ship, I found it "intellectual fun" to mess around with it in slow flight "trying to find the burble." Abrupt departure from controlled flight - yes, indeed! "No warning?" - not by a long shot. Bob - a big fan of coordination AND "sufficient airspeed" - W. |
#106
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On 11/23/2016 12:50 AM, Tango Whisky wrote:
Bob, you've stated that you haven't flown an ASW20C, but still you comment on its flying characteristics, citing a 2-32 as reference?! What a nonsense. I have flown an ASW20C (15 m, no winglets, CoG towards the rear limit), and there is no warning _what so ever_. Bert Snip... Blame this somewhat-thread-drifting post on winter finally trying to put in an appearance in this part of the northern hemisphere... I'm guessing what Eric's "no warning" comment means is "in the absence of a distinct separation-induced burble," or something similar (I've not flown either an ASW 20 or ASH 26). I'm gonna "winter-quibble" with the concept "no warning." My club used to have a 2-32 (eventually sold) about which the same thing was routinely said, and in fact the ship did routinely and enthusiastically drop the same wing before beginning a rapid rotation if not "immediately and properly countered." If it really did catch someone out, going through at least 90-degrees of an incipient spin, and WAY nose down before recovery - was in your immediate future. Many club pilots of roughly equivalent time as I then had might accurately have been described as "unduly frightened" of the ship. But "no warning?" Surely you jest (and my name isn't Shirley). True, before the wing "let go" there was (almost always) an absence of aerodynamic burble felt through the stick or one's butt or merely "drummed" through the metal fuselage, but by the time the wing did let go, "all the other usual suspects" had put in their appearances: low wind noise; nose noticeably high; controls (especially stick) getting sloppy; etc. Subsequent to checking out in the ship, I found it "intellectual fun" to mess around with it in slow flight "trying to find the burble." Abrupt departure from controlled flight - yes, indeed! "No warning?" - not by a long shot. Bob - a big fan of coordination AND "sufficient airspeed" - W. Bert - I'm also a big fan of "If it happens, it must be possible,"...which is why I included the "experience-based" info leading into "the rest of my post." And as I'm sure you grasped, I was less commenting/suggesting anything about an ASW 20C's specific flying characteristics than I was about "the general nature" of low-speed, essentially-one-g, stalls as a PIC concept. FWIW, every "general aviation-like" plane (glider/single-engine-piston) in which I've been able to "play around with those types of stalls" have always presented other cues that Joe Pilot might be on the edge of playing with fire. As always, when discussing things of any nuance whatsoever, YMMV. ![]() Bob W. |
#107
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On 11/23/2016 12:50 AM, Tango Whisky wrote:
Bob, you've stated that you haven't flown an ASW20C, but still you comment on its flying characteristics, citing a 2-32 as reference?! What a nonsense. I have flown an ASW20C (15 m, no winglets, CoG towards the rear limit), and there is no warning _what so ever_. Bert Snip (of all but the offending post, immediately below)... Blame this somewhat-thread-drifting post on winter finally trying to put in an appearance in this part of the northern hemisphere... I'm guessing what Eric's "no warning" comment means is "in the absence of a distinct separation-induced burble," or something similar (I've not flown either an ASW 20 or ASH 26). I'm gonna "winter-quibble" with the concept "no warning." My club used to have a 2-32 (eventually sold) about which the same thing was routinely said, and in fact the ship did routinely and enthusiastically drop the same wing before beginning a rapid rotation if not "immediately and properly countered." If it really did catch someone out, going through at least 90-degrees of an incipient spin, and WAY nose down before recovery - was in your immediate future. Many club pilots of roughly equivalent time as I then had might accurately have been described as "unduly frightened" of the ship. But "no warning?" Surely you jest (and my name isn't Shirley). True, before the wing "let go" there was (almost always) an absence of aerodynamic burble felt through the stick or one's butt or merely "drummed" through the metal fuselage, but by the time the wing did let go, "all the other usual suspects" had put in their appearances: low wind noise; nose noticeably high; controls (especially stick) getting sloppy; etc. Subsequent to checking out in the ship, I found it "intellectual fun" to mess around with it in slow flight "trying to find the burble." Abrupt departure from controlled flight - yes, indeed! "No warning?" - not by a long shot. Bob - a big fan of coordination AND "sufficient airspeed" - W. Bert - I'm also a big fan of, "If it happens, it must be possible." As you likely grasped, I sought not to comment upon the ASW 20C's specific low-speed, essentially-1g, departure from controlled flight characteristics, as on the *concept* of departing from controlled flight "in the general vicinity of" those flight conditions...which is why I included the experience-based provisos leading into the guts of my post. FWIW, I've yet to encounter a glider or single-engine general aviation airplane that has not provided *some* other clue(s) Joe PIC is in the vicinity of the sandbox near an unintended departure from controlled flight. (N.B. I'm also not power certified, my experience in powered planes being limited to riding along in lots of different types, with lots of different pilots, doing "the usual range of stuff" from stall practice to "straight-n-level" hard IFR. Nor do I have any supersonic aircraft time. ![]() As always when discussing any aeronautical topic having even the slightest hint of nuance, YMMV. Bob W. P.S. Apologies if some form of this post appears twice; the first attempt seemed to have disappeared into the bit bucket without trace, despite an hour of searching... |
#108
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Bob, I've flown about 40 different types of gliders, and did voluntary spins with about half of them, wingspans ranging from 10 m to 26 m.
And the ASW20C was stunning in this respect - pulling from cruise into thermal a bit sharply, and the sky turns green although the glider just felt perfectly normal. In Germany in the mid-eighties, this behaviour did kill a couple of ASW20C pilots. Moving the CoG forward changes the behaviour to "normal". The only other glider I came across having this behaviour was a Fox - but then, this one is designed to do exactly that. So, there ARE gliders out there that bite without barking first. |
#109
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I did grasp that, but you might play around a bit more and learn things which will make general statements like yours look, well, not quite intelligent.
No reason for me to continue this discussion. |
#110
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On 11/23/2016 11:11 AM, Tango Whisky wrote:
I did grasp that, but you might play around a bit more and learn things which will make general statements like yours look, well, not quite intelligent. Well-intended advice noted, thanks. For the record (and no sarcasm intended), I stopped worrying about that aspect of "general statements" upon encountering the contention, "All generalizations are false, including this one." Everyone encountering a generality is free to individually decide if there is - or isn't - some kernel of "reality-based wisdom" in it. No reason for me to continue this discussion. Bob W. |
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