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#21
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On Tue, 22 Jan 2013 17:40:11 -0800, kirk.stant wrote:
90 degree bank is a lot steeper than most pilots imagine. Unless you are current in acro anything over 60 degrees will feel like 90. And unless its a transient condition caused by turbulence any intentional 90 degree bank for more than a few seconds would result in an impressive sink rate regardless of the strength of the thermal. But it makes for a good hangar story: "There I was at 300 ft over the nuke cooling tower, banked to 90 degrees and barely climbing..." It stands to reason that you can't climb in a 90 degree bank because there's no vertical lift vector unless, of course, you so much top rudder fed in that you're climbing on lift generated by the fin and fuselage sides. However, a couple of times I've certainly been using around 70 degrees bank and still going up like the clappers: - once on a Pegase 90 when I was climbing in the chimney plume from the Stewartby Brick works just west of Bedford. That was odd: there was nothing (not even sink) outside the plume and in it you could center nicely by maximising the smell of furnace oil fumes. It was very narrow: I had the stick almost fully back to turn tightly enough and needed to extreme bank to turn that tight, bit I got 6-7 kts out of it - a similarly tight thermal with no apparent reason for it being too tight, over our airfield. This time solo in the club's Puchacz and again cranked over at least at least 70 degrees and with the stick well back to turn as tight as possible. Any wider turn left me out in the surrounding turbulence and sink. Again I got a strong climb to cloud base directly under a nice street. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
#22
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On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 4:35:45 PM UTC-7, Martin Gregorie wrote:
It stands to reason that you can't climb in a 90 degree bank because there's no vertical lift vector unless, of course, you so much top rudder fed in that you're climbing on lift generated by the fin and fuselage sides. However, a couple of times I've certainly been using around 70 degrees bank and still going up like the clappers: Precisely. 70 degrees is about 3 Gs, would give you a turn diameter of a little less than 200 ft (!) at 55 knots. But I doubt many pilots actually practice constant 70 degree banked turns, it's not as easy as it looks. Hard enough to get a lot of pilots to bank over 30 degrees - grrrr! It sure is fun to rack it up when you find the right thermal - the harder you pull, the faster you go up! Do it with someone you know across the thermal and it gets really interesting... Kirk 66 |
#23
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kirk.stant wrote:
Precisely. 70 degrees is about 3 Gs, would give you a turn diameter of a little less than 200 ft (!) at 55 knots. But I doubt many pilots actually practice constant 70 degree banked turns, it's not as easy as it looks. Hard enough to get a lot of pilots to bank over 30 degrees - grrrr! It sure is fun to rack it up when you find the right thermal - the harder you pull, the faster you go up! Do it with someone you know across the thermal and it gets really interesting... When I was pre-solo, on a very unprepossessing March day in the UK (solid stratus at 3400ft), my very experienced instructor "found"[1] something. Given the conditions, it can't have been a thermal. We were flying at 70kt in a K13 and noticing the G force, but we were rising at =10kt until we abandoned the climb at cloudbase. There was a glider opposite us sharing the thermal, so we kept an eye on each other's position by looking at the top of our heads. Glorious, and a good anecdote for indicating why flying in gliders is almost entirely unlike flying in spamcans. [1] I hesitate to say "blundered into" ![]() |
#24
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In article ,
"kirk.stant" wrote: Precisely. 70 degrees is about 3 Gs, would give you a turn diameter of a little less than 200 ft (!) at 55 knots. But I doubt many pilots actually practice constant 70 degree banked turns, it's not as easy as it looks. Hard enough to get a lot of pilots to bank over 30 degrees - grrrr! It sure is fun to rack it up when you find the right thermal - the harder you pull, the faster you go up! Do it with someone you know across the thermal and it gets really interesting... Kirk 66 Have had pretty much that experience a few times. Banked very steeply, pulling hard, watching the guy across the thermal nearly through the top of my canopy. After a bit, it seems like the gliders are stationary and the world becomes a blurred, whirling cylinder. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- |
#25
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On Wednesday, January 23, 2013 10:30:58 AM UTC-6, Bart wrote:
On Jan 22, 9:55*am, Tony wrote: Just dont try to land there with the gapa Which part of "approximately a mile away" is confusing you? ;-) The mighty Geezer might be capable of such an epic cross-country flight (except the landing, of course). I am just a sidekick. Bart good point, that is a long ways away |
#26
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On Thursday, January 24, 2013 11:18:26 AM UTC-8, WB wrote:
In article , "kirk.stant" wrote: Precisely. 70 degrees is about 3 Gs, would give you a turn diameter of a little less than 200 ft (!) at 55 knots. But I doubt many pilots actually practice constant 70 degree banked turns, it's not as easy as it looks. Hard enough to get a lot of pilots to bank over 30 degrees - grrrr! It sure is fun to rack it up when you find the right thermal - the harder you pull, the faster you go up! Do it with someone you know across the thermal and it gets really interesting... Kirk 66 Have had pretty much that experience a few times. Banked very steeply, pulling hard, watching the guy across the thermal nearly through the top of my canopy. After a bit, it seems like the gliders are stationary and the world becomes a blurred, whirling cylinder. --- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: --- Since this thread drifted into discussion about bank angels, I'll add my 2 cents - next time you feel you are banking steeply, look at the screws in your panel and compare to the horizon. It will tell you if you are banking more or less than 45 degrees. Ramy |
#27
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If there is a fire at a nuclear facility, can the fire service legally
fly a surveillance draone (or helicopter) over the zone below 2000ft?? Who can authorise this? John F At 11:15 21 January 2013, Peter Higgs wrote: At 05:38 21 January 2013, GC wrote: On 21/01/2013 11:46, Bill Palmer wrote: The reality is that the nuclear containment domes are virtually impenetrable by aircraft. I recall seeing a video study wherein they ran an F-4 (or something similar) into a section of one and the airplane was vaporized while the cement structure was unscathed. The public doesn't quite understand the fragile nature of an airframe, and that ramming a nuclear facility with one is about a worrisome as pelting it with eggs. Can't blame people really. Everybody knows now how fragile skyscrapers can be when rammed by a 767 and, to most people, large tower buildings look to be at least as solid as a nuclear dome. That's the reality to be dealt with. GC I think two facts remain... Even a 66% efficient power station produces 33% waste heat. So if it is a 100 MW station, there is a nice 33 MW Thermal continuously rising on the lee side. In the UK (world leaders in democracy?) ALL Nuclear Facilities have a 2 mile and 2000ft Restricted Safety Zone around them. You can't have your cake and eat it.... Please decide. phiggs |
#28
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Hi, that would probably come under the same 'law of common sense' that
allows Police vehicles to exceed the national speed limit, and Ambulances to go through red traffic lights. Just wondering... Does any country still use 'Fire Bells' on their fire-engines. A friend of mine had a pair of 4 foot long air horns on his Fiat Uno... Sounded really good, even half a mile away. At 14:55 27 January 2013, John Firth wrote: If there is a fire at a nuclear facility, can the fire service legally fly a surveillance draone (or helicopter) over the zone below 2000ft?? Who can authorise this? John F At 11:15 21 January 2013, Peter Higgs wrote: At 05:38 21 January 2013, GC wrote: On 21/01/2013 11:46, Bill Palmer wrote: The reality is that the nuclear containment domes are virtually impenetrable by aircraft. I recall seeing a video study wherein they ran an F-4 (or something similar) into a section of one and the airplane was vaporized while the cement structure was unscathed. The public doesn't quite understand the fragile nature of an airframe, and that ramming a nuclear facility with one is about a worrisome as pelting it with eggs. Can't blame people really. Everybody knows now how fragile skyscrapers can be when rammed by a 767 and, to most people, large tower buildings look to be at least as solid as a nuclear dome. That's the reality to be dealt with. GC I think two facts remain... Even a 66% efficient power station produces 33% waste heat. So if it is a 100 MW station, there is a nice 33 MW Thermal continuously rising on the lee side. In the UK (world leaders in democracy?) ALL Nuclear Facilities have a 2 mile and 2000ft Restricted Safety Zone around them. You can't have your cake and eat it.... Please decide. phiggs |
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