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#11
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![]() "joe" wrote in message oups.com... I am wondering what is involved with trailering and setting up an average (popular model) glider. As we lawyers reply to most questions... "It depends". It depends on the trailer fixtures and how easy, or difficult, they make it to move your glider parts around. It depends on whether your glider has automatic control connections. If not, it further depends on what type of connections the glider has. Can one reasonable expect to park the car, unload the trailer, and have glider ready to fly in under 90minutes? Again, it depends on the glider. I used to own a 2002 Glasflugel that I could assemble, tape, preflight and be ready to stage in 45 minutes. It took an hour if I didn't have a helper. Does it usually take two people? Yes. unless you have some type of one-man rigging aid. Some gliders, particualrly those with heavy wing panels or difficult control connections will require a third person to assemble. Do gliders ever have wings separate in flight due to weak attachment points? I don't know of any instances of gliders breaking at the assembly point. Maybe someone who's been in this a lot longer than I have can answer that. |
#12
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At the scene of a control failure accident, I noted an unusual breakage
pattern in the canopy. The glider had crashed during a controled landing into trees, shearing off one wing and coming to rest on the bank of a creek. The spars remained attached, but one pin was missing. I followed the general direction of the missing pin through the canopy and about 5 paces out into the creek where I found it on a rocky bottom. It had apparently ejected on impact with enough force to break off a piece of the canopy and still continue some 5 to 10 feet from the fuselage. Fortunately, it did not hit the pilot. I didn't think to inspect the safety (a sprung hook), to see if it was damaged (in place on impact) or undamaged. wrote in message oups.com... As I recall, there was just such an accident back in the early '70s at Minden, NV during the U.S. Nationals. During a high-speed starting run, both wing pins worked their way out and the wings departed the glider, turning the fuselage into a missle...from which the pilot bailed out successfully. I could have my facts wrong (which might explain why no one else has mentioned this) but I believe the cause was determined (suspected?) to be the main wing pins not being safetied. One notable thing was that not only was the pilot obviously at risk when this happened but also numerous crews/spectators. At least one of the major pieces hit the airport very close to the crowded takeoff line. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" "John Giddy" wrote in message .. . I started to write that I was dubious about the wing pins working their way out since they would be locked in place by shear loads. Then I thought about it more. For those gliders where the removable pins merely hold the wings against sliding out of the fuselage and the spar end spigot pins take the actual bending loads, there is no shear load on the removable pins. They could indeed work their way out. My Nimbus uses a single 50mm diameter pin that does take shear loads so it's hard to see it working out. However, I'll safety it anyway. Bill Daniels Bill, I hope that your grammar is confusing. I read your last sentence to indicate that you do not currently safety the main pin, but will do so in future. I hope I am wrong !!! You are right. I've always safetied the main pin on the logic that since there's a bracket the designer must have thought it necessary. Not something that calls for experimentation. Bill Daniels |
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