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On 11-8-2011 17:00, Jonathon May wrote:
There are those who think the string should be slightly off center in a thermal turn I have heard the phrasae" get the string pointing up"from an old bold pilot who was flying with me. I was taught there weren't any of those guys around ![]() |
#2
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On Tue, 08 Nov 2011 17:00:53 +0000, Jonathon May
wrote: There are those who think the string should be slightly off center in a thermal turn I have heard the phrasae" get the string pointing up"from an old bold pilot who was flying with me. Yup. 20 to 30 degrees in the glider that I'm flying. Andreas |
#3
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On Nov 7, 10:07*am, "Matt Herron Jr." wrote:
There has been much needed focus on safety in our ranks recently, and in particular the risk of spinning during the turn to final. *This is almost always caused by slow, uncoordinated flight. *Many of us go through the trouble of installing an electronic gear up warning to prevent a costly, but less dangerous gear-up landing. Wouldn't a "Slip Alarm" be at least as useful? *Setting aside how it might be implemented for the moment (and there are many possibilities), *I can imagine something that was activated when the spoilers were out, and might or might not take into account IAS. * It would simply give a distinct tone or alarm with a certain degree of yaw. *Yes, we slip on final on purpose all the time, but we better not be doing it in the turn to base or final. Thoughts? Matt How about a sticky note on the instrument panel that say's.............Hey You, don't make any slow uncoordinated turns from base to final...........OK? Brad |
#4
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An Electronic Slip Detector would be quite easy to construct using contacts
either side of the T+S 'slip-ball'. It would have to have one tone for a deflection to the left and a different tone for the right. As for the universal Slip-String, remember, it only shows if the front of the glider is slipping.... the tailplane is most likely doing something else ! Pete At 19:06 08 November 2011, Brad wrote: On Nov 7, 10:07=A0am, "Matt Herron Jr." wrote: There has been much needed focus on safety in our ranks recently, and in particular the risk of spinning during the turn to final. =A0This is almost always caused by slow, uncoordinated flight. =A0Many of us go through the trouble of installing an electronic gear up warning to prevent a costly, but less dangerous gear-up landing. Wouldn't a "Slip Alarm" be at least as useful? =A0Setting aside how it might be implemented for the moment (and there are many possibilities), =A0I can imagine something that was activated when the spoilers were out, and might or might not take into account IAS. =A0 It would simply give a distinct tone or alarm with a certain degree of yaw. =A0Yes, we slip on final on purpose all the time, but we better not be doing it in the turn to base or final. Thoughts? Matt How about a sticky note on the instrument panel that say's.............Hey You, don't make any slow uncoordinated turns from base to final...........OK? Brad |
#5
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On Nov 7, 1:07*pm, "Matt Herron Jr." wrote:
There has been much needed focus on safety in our ranks recently, and in particular the risk of spinning during the turn to final. *This is almost always caused by slow, uncoordinated flight. *Many of us go through the trouble of installing an electronic gear up warning to prevent a costly, but less dangerous gear-up landing. Wouldn't a "Slip Alarm" be at least as useful? *Setting aside how it might be implemented for the moment (and there are many possibilities), *I can imagine something that was activated when the spoilers were out, and might or might not take into account IAS. * It would simply give a distinct tone or alarm with a certain degree of yaw. *Yes, we slip on final on purpose all the time, but we better not be doing it in the turn to base or final. Thoughts? Matt I had a Yaw String alarm once. It worked great, his name was Larry. It's amazing what enough yelling from the back seat will make you stop doing. Sometime later during check ride a Designated Examiner asked me to skid the airplane in a turn at a safe altitude, and I had a difficult time doing it correctly. My favorite Yaw String Story was when an instructor announced "My Aircraft" and took over the controls briefly and then gave them back to the student without further explanation. During the post flight debriefing the student inquired as to why the aircraft was taken away from him. The instructor's reply was "Oh I just wanted to check the Yaw String, to make sure it wasn't broken". |
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On Nov 8, 5:34*pm, SF wrote:
On Nov 7, 1:07*pm, "Matt Herron Jr." wrote: There has been much needed focus on safety in our ranks recently, and in particular the risk of spinning during the turn to final. *This is almost always caused by slow, uncoordinated flight. *Many of us go through the trouble of installing an electronic gear up warning to prevent a costly, but less dangerous gear-up landing. Wouldn't a "Slip Alarm" be at least as useful? *Setting aside how it might be implemented for the moment (and there are many possibilities), *I can imagine something that was activated when the spoilers were out, and might or might not take into account IAS. * It would simply give a distinct tone or alarm with a certain degree of yaw. *Yes, we slip on final on purpose all the time, but we better not be doing it in the turn to base or final. Thoughts? Matt I had a Yaw String alarm once. *It worked great, his name was Larry. It's amazing what enough yelling from the back seat will make you stop doing. *Sometime later during check ride a Designated Examiner asked me to skid the airplane in a turn at a safe altitude, and I had a difficult time doing it correctly. *My favorite Yaw String Story was when an instructor announced "My Aircraft" and took over the controls briefly and then gave them back to the student without further explanation. *During the post flight debriefing the student inquired as to why the aircraft was taken away from him. *The instructor's reply was "Oh I just wanted to check the Yaw String, to make sure it wasn't broken".- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I do find it extremely irritating when the yaw string gets stuck while in the air. Years ago when flying my ASK-14 out of Hope BC I took off, noticed it was wrapped around the B-tube, so I landed, untangled it and took off again............I heard about that from the guys there for the rest of that trip............something to the effect of an "elitist"! Brad |
#7
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I realize that anything can happen to anyone at any time, especially while flying. Failure to maintain adequate flying speed, failure to properly coordinate a turn, flying with ones head up ones rectum all can lead to problems resulting in disaster, but aren't we carrying this to an extreme?
I am far from the most experienced glider pilot on this forum and I certainly don't have the technical, engineering or assembly background to create a device such as suggested herein but it would appear that we are trying to complicate the passage of bowel gas. I've seen my yaw string depart during flight, I've flown with a malfunctioning airspeed indicator, I've flown with the thrill or victory, the agony of defeat and the heart break of psoriasis, all without losing control. To be honest when I started flying gliders I was surprised that there was no stall warning indicator. It would appear to me that such a warning would be preferable to a yaw warning. What I love about flying a glider is that by and large it is seat of the pants flying but the seats of our pants are becoming less and less sensitive as we rely more and more on items that will inform us when our flying skills are below the line. While I am in favor of anything that will improve safety, especially when in proximity to other gliders I am wary of becoming dependent on things which replace simplicity with complexity. Besides, the glider port at which I fly has about 500 yards of yarn and plenty of tape. Thank you very much. BTW, I like Karl S's idea of adding 10 knots to your pattern speed every decade. Some of you would now be doing 120 when you turn final. Walt Walt |
#8
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In article ,
Walt Connelly wrote: BTW, I like Karl S's idea of adding 10 knots to your pattern speed every decade. Some of you would now be doing 120 when you turn final. Walt Walt I am doing 120 when I turn final...if I am flying a 2-32! |
#9
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Hey! Why don't we re-visit the AOA string on the side of the canopy?
Tick marks for pattern, best L/D, and stall? Bumper, can your Mk IV Yaw string be adapted for use as a Mk IV AOA String? And put one on each side as your heads up display for left or right patterns? In all seriousness, too close to stall is far worse than not perfectly coordinated. If you combine the two, well you might have a bad day. Really don't think a new audible warning system for a skid is a good thing. Just throwing in another 2 cents worth. -Steve Leonard |
#10
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I think the logical evolution would be a "Takeoff Warning". It would sense
tension on the tow rope and begin yelling, "Warning! You are about to takeoff! Any lack of skill or cunning, lapse in judgment, or poor attitude will place you at risk of severe injury or death!" Then any sane pilot would simply pull the release and go home safely. If there are still those dumb enough to actually attempt to fly one of these unsafe contraptions, an upgrade to the system could be programmed to pull the release automatically. C'mon people - just fly the aircraft. Competence can never be replaced by safety devices. "Steve Leonard" wrote in message ... Hey! Why don't we re-visit the AOA string on the side of the canopy? Tick marks for pattern, best L/D, and stall? Bumper, can your Mk IV Yaw string be adapted for use as a Mk IV AOA String? And put one on each side as your heads up display for left or right patterns? In all seriousness, too close to stall is far worse than not perfectly coordinated. If you combine the two, well you might have a bad day. Really don't think a new audible warning system for a skid is a good thing. Just throwing in another 2 cents worth. -Steve Leonard |
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