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#11
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On Jun 18, 11:01*am, Ian wrote:
The trick is to "take them out again". Yup, that's always worked for me as well. |
#12
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On Jun 18, 10:42*am, Andy wrote:
On Jun 18, 5:45*am, Jim White wrote: Look at the pipe cutter in the picture. No one in their right mind uses the hull of their glider to place tools that they are using or have used. Sure way to have a 'loose article' accident. Judging by the picture the tube would appear to have been sensibly fitted forward of the stick, between the pilots knees. I don't know about you but I find it hard to fly my glider when sitting in front of the stick let alone land it. Jim I'm not 100% familiar with the V2 innards, but it seems to me that the photo was taken looking forward and that the relief tube was fitted aft of the stick. I also can't tell whether it was an aftermarket job or done at the factory. *It looks like one of those "pipe-within-a- pipe" deals that allows you to extend a rigid relief tube down into the airstream far enough that your pee doesn't get all over the tail boom, though the inner pipe wouldn't be depicted in this picture if that's the design. *If that was the intent, making the outer tube flexible could make it hard to make the inner tube slide and peeing directly into the outer tube that ends flush with the outside fuselage shell might lead to having pee stream down the underside of the glider. *It's hard to tell from the picture, but that's what it looked like. *In any case installing a spear pointed up into the cockpit seems like a good way to put your eye out, though the geometry of that coming to pass would mean you'd have a whole lot of other things really badly mangled already. Maybe I'm not in my right mind, but the area under my seat pan is flat, smooth an concave, so I generally put most of my tools, screws, etc there then inspect that I take them all out before putting the pan back in. Putting parts and tools on the ground is begging to lose them or kick them around - but I don't generally have a nice shop to work in so dirt and wind and such are bigger concerns for me, On my glider you'd have to crack the seat pan to get it back in place on top of something as big as a pipe cutter. Tim, maybe you can explain the photo a tad more. *And please confirm for everyone that you have located the pipe cutter so we can stop worrying. *:-) 9B Thanks Andy, Yes the picture is taken from the back looking forward. I wasn't too worried about putting my eye out, but if the seat pan collapsed there would be major damage to many other body parts. I decided I would not want to compound the damage from an accident with a spear between my legs. All tools were accounted for and the entire fuselage was vacuumed out before reassembly. The vinyl tubing I added is rigid enough to act as a guide of the relief tube to run through without any issues. If it proved to be too flexible in the long run it will be easy to add some PVC tubing with a flexible vinyl or rubber junction so it will bend in the event of an accident. TT |
#13
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At 16:30 18 June 2009, Jim White wrote:
Remember Apollo 13? Or the AF Concorde that had tools left in the fuel tank? Better not to leave them there at all. This is sort of a cliche, but it actually happened with one of our club's 1-26s. They had been making some kind of repairs on a wing that required riveting new sheet metal on. When the wing was picked up to move it back to the glider, there was a God-awful thump from inside. The glider went through the rest of its life with yet another patch just ahead of the aileron where they had to make an access hole to get the bucking bar out. Jim Beckman |
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