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#11
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Shawn Curry wrote:
Good to hear he's OK. I've only been able to play the audio of this clip and it didn't sound good. Actually, it sounds very good: "Für den Piloten endete dieser Crash mit ein paar Schnittwunden." Stefan |
#12
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Stefan wrote:
Shawn Curry wrote: Good to hear he's OK. I've only been able to play the audio of this clip and it didn't sound good. Actually, it sounds very good: "Für den Piloten endete dieser Crash mit ein paar Schnittwunden." Stefan OooKaaay. Sorry not much help. Bit of French maybe but German? Nope. The concerned sounding voice of a woman (?) and lots of crunching sounds is all I could decipher. That and the word "crash" Shawn |
#13
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Shawn Curry wrote:
Actually, it sounds very good: "Für den Piloten endete dieser Crash mit ein paar Schnittwunden." OooKaaay. Sorry not much help. Bit of French maybe but German? Nope. The concerned sounding voice of a woman (?) and lots of crunching sounds is all I could decipher. That and the word "crash" Ok. The woman basically says. "Oh ****! Let's go there!" The commentator says that it was a sunday routine flight, then the cable broke, and then the abovementioned sentence which basically means: "The pilot suffered a couple of cuts." Stefan |
#14
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K.P. Termaat skrev den Wed, 04 Feb 2004 10:07:21 GMT:
This happened trying to land back at the field after a cable break. Very sad indeed. www.fsv-unterjesingen.de/DnLoads/Seilriss.avi What does the commentator say about 18 meter (high?) something? Or is that a reference to the span? Or am I mishearing completely? Should have spent less time communication with the cute girls outside the window during German class... ![]() Cheers, Fred |
#15
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Fredrik Thörnell wrote:
What does the commentator say about 18 meter (high?) something? Or is He is saying that the cable broke at 80 meters height. (200 odd feet) CV |
#16
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![]() "CV" wrote in message ... Fredrik Thörnell wrote: What does the commentator say about 18 meter (high?) something? Or is He is saying that the cable broke at 80 meters height. (200 odd feet) CV Perhaps someone familiar with the incident could explain why the pilot tried to turn back from a height of 80 meters. I would expect that, with a wire break at 80 meters, the pilot would have 75% or more of the airfield straight ahead for a safe landing. In fact, a 180 degree turn from an 80 meter wire break would leave no place to land at most winch sites. Bill Daniels |
#17
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Bill Daniels wrote:
Perhaps someone familiar with the incident could explain why the pilot tried to turn back from a height of 80 meters. I would expect that, with a wire break at 80 meters, the pilot would have 75% or more of the airfield straight ahead for a safe landing Stress? Overtax? Panic? Blackout? It's happened before. Stefan |
#18
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Stefan wrote in message ...
Bill Daniels wrote: Perhaps someone familiar with the incident could explain why the pilot tried to turn back from a height of 80 meters. I would expect that, with a wire break at 80 meters, the pilot would have 75% or more of the airfield straight ahead for a safe landing Stress? Overtax? Panic? Blackout? It's happened before. Stefan The commentator says: "Sunday afternoon in Magdenburg. It was a routine start with winch, but at 80m the cable breaks. For the pilot this crash ends with a couple of cutting wounds" The glider is a 2-seater DG500. Probabbly with only the pilot on board. The commentator's voice is very professional. A story by the media for the general public?. Not very good for our sport. If standard rules (e.g. landing straight ahead after this low cable break) had been performed nothing seriously would have happened. And why did the cable break anyway (weak cable, heavy glider, to steep a take off, to much force on the cable by the winchman and what have you). Karel, NL |
#19
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![]() I haven't followed this thread, so I don't know if anyone has already mentioned this, but It is clear from the video that the pilot was performaing a downwind turn in a fairly strong wind (windsock almost straight). Why he decided to turn downwind at this height is anyone's guess. You may also note that at the point of spin entry the airbrakes are opened fully, I suspect that the pilot had cracked the brakes open (again god knows why), resulting in the wing stalling. The fact that he opened the brakes fully upon spinning seems to suggest his brain was switched to 'landing lever mode' if it was switched on at all. Another reminder that eventualities should be considered before every winch launch. This guy was very lucky to only suffer minor injuries. J. I don't mean to sound 'holier than thou'. We've all run out of ideas at some time or another and gotten away with it by sheer luck. Its interesting to see the chain of events that led to this guy not getting away with it tho. |
#20
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![]() If standard rules (e.g. landing straight ahead after this low cable break) had been performed nothing seriously would have happened. What are the standards altitudes for such incident? Here are the list I learnt: 50 straight landing, 50&100 one 180 degree turn, 180 two turns or small circle. Of course in strong wind I would increase these values. /Janos |
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