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#21
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On Tuesday, June 24, 2014 10:48:14 AM UTC-4, Evan Ludeman wrote:
On Saturday, June 21, 2014 8:59:22 PM UTC-4, son_of_flubber wrote: On Friday, June 20, 2014 11:58:21 PM UTC-4, POPS wrote: It's super simple ... you land on your roof .... geez But how do one land inverted without breaking wings, nose, or tail AND walk away? I'm more interested in well-dissected historical cases where this has happened, than in this particular undocumented accident. This is a serious question then? It's not possible to "land" (i.e. in a controlled fashion) a glider inverted. Wing incidence, camber and dihedral are all against you. If you were to try this, the glider would touch down on the tail with the nose pitched rather high and the fuselage would drop hard on the cockpit, still with significant forward speed. It's a call-911 event. And there probably won't be any need to hurry. When someone crawls out of a wreck that stops inverted, it's because the glider flopped on its back at the end of some sort of tumble and it happened to do so in a relatively gentle fashion. It's not a high percentage play.. T8 agreed! |
#22
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We had an accident at Siskiyou County a few years back that looked a lot like the posted photo. Wind was blowing a good 40 knots direct crosswind to the N-S runway, so the pilot wisely decided to land into the wind on a taxiway. GPS trace showed touched down at 40 ground speed which would have been about 80 IAS!
Probably flying something like 70 for potential wind-shear, he turned final and felt the ground wasn't going by as fast as it usually did, so he sped up! Anyway, he caught a wing tip shortly after touch down and did a full blown flying ground-loop. Boom broke during the first 90 degrees, but it wasn't over. Left wing was stopped, but the right wing was accelerating. This resulted in a rolling-turning maneuver that left the ship upside down with a relatively undamaged wing on top of the inverted fuselage. Pilot is still with us with nothing more than a broken foot! JJ |
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On Wednesday, July 2, 2014 8:25:31 PM UTC-4, JJ Sinclair wrote:
he caught a wing tip shortly after touch down and did a full blown flying ground-loop. Boom broke during the first 90 degrees, but it wasn't over. Left wing was stopped, but the right wing was accelerating. This resulted in a rolling-turning maneuver that left the ship upside down with a relatively undamaged wing on top of the inverted fuselage. Now I understand one way that a ground loop can come to rest with the fuselage inverted. The tail breaks off before the flip and maybe that explains why the tail in the photo is right side up and relatively undamaged. |
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Excellent point about not looking fast enough.
We always joke about "helicopter landings" in high winds, but the subconscious mind wants to see the ground moving past at a familiar rate. We also used to laugh at how "flatlanders" would come in too slowly at high altitude airports and drop it in because the ground seemed to be moving by too quickly. A few weeks ago I was landing in 32 kt winds in Salida, CO and the urge to push the nose down was very strong due to my low ground speed. Fortunately, I got a glimpse of the airspeed indicator... Dan Marotta On 7/2/2014 6:25 PM, JJ Sinclair wrote: We had an accident at Siskiyou County a few years back that looked a lot like the posted photo. Wind was blowing a good 40 knots direct crosswind to the N-S runway, so the pilot wisely decided to land into the wind on a taxiway. GPS trace showed touched down at 40 ground speed which would have been about 80 IAS! Probably flying something like 70 for potential wind-shear, he turned final and felt the ground wasn't going by as fast as it usually did, so he sped up! Anyway, he caught a wing tip shortly after touch down and did a full blown flying ground-loop. Boom broke during the first 90 degrees, but it wasn't over. Left wing was stopped, but the right wing was accelerating. This resulted in a rolling-turning maneuver that left the ship upside down with a relatively undamaged wing on top of the inverted fuselage. Pilot is still with us with nothing more than a broken foot! JJ |
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I have spoken to a member of the club concerned.
The elevator was not correctly connected ,it was a winch launch and the pilot pulled the release as soon as he he realised .no confirmation on how it ended up inverted . Privately owned ask19 The club have formal double control checks but the pilot some how managed to ovoid them . The lesson is clear GET SOME ONE TO DO POSSITIVE CHECKS Jon At 14:26 03 July 2014, Dan Marotta wrote: Excellent point about not looking fast enough. We always joke about "helicopter landings" in high winds, but the subconscious mind wants to see the ground moving past at a familiar rate. We also used to laugh at how "flatlanders" would come in too slowly at high altitude airports and drop it in because the ground seemed to be moving by too quickly. A few weeks ago I was landing in 32 kt winds in Salida, CO and the urge to push the nose down was very strong due to my low ground speed. Fortunately, I got a glimpse of the airspeed indicator... Dan Marotta On 7/2/2014 6:25 PM, JJ Sinclair wrote: We had an accident at Siskiyou County a few years back that looked a lot like the posted photo. Wind was blowing a good 40 knots direct crosswind to the N-S runway, so the pilot wisely decided to land into the wind on a taxiway. GPS trace showed touched down at 40 ground speed which would have been about 80 IAS! Probably flying something like 70 for potential wind-shear, he turned final and felt the ground wasn't going by as fast as it usually did, so he sped up! Anyway, he caught a wing tip shortly after touch down and did a full blown flying ground-loop. Boom broke during the first 90 degrees, but it wasn't over. Left wing was stopped, but the right wing was accelerating. This resulted in a rolling-turning maneuver that left the ship upside down with a relatively undamaged wing on top of the inverted fuselage. Pilot is still with us with nothing more than a broken foot! JJ |
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On Friday, July 4, 2014 3:10:33 PM UTC-4, Jonathon May wrote:
I have spoken to a member of the club concerned. The elevator was not correctly connected ,it was a winch launch and the pilot pulled the release as soon as he he realised .no confirmation on how it ended up inverted . Privately owned ask19 The club have formal double control checks but the pilot some how managed to ovoid them . The lesson is clear GET SOME ONE TO DO POSSITIVE CHECKS Jon Thanks for the update and clarification, Jon! Uli At 14:26 03 July 2014, Dan Marotta wrote: Excellent point about not looking fast enough. We always joke about "helicopter landings" in high winds, but the subconscious mind wants to see the ground moving past at a familiar rate. We also used to laugh at how "flatlanders" would come in too slowly at high altitude airports and drop it in because the ground seemed to be moving by too quickly. A few weeks ago I was landing in 32 kt winds in Salida, CO and the urge to push the nose down was very strong due to my low ground speed. Fortunately, I got a glimpse of the airspeed indicator... Dan Marotta On 7/2/2014 6:25 PM, JJ Sinclair wrote: We had an accident at Siskiyou County a few years back that looked a lot like the posted photo. Wind was blowing a good 40 knots direct crosswind to the N-S runway, so the pilot wisely decided to land into the wind on a taxiway. GPS trace showed touched down at 40 ground speed which would have been about 80 IAS! Probably flying something like 70 for potential wind-shear, he turned final and felt the ground wasn't going by as fast as it usually did, so he sped up! Anyway, he caught a wing tip shortly after touch down and did a full blown flying ground-loop. Boom broke during the first 90 degrees, but it wasn't over. Left wing was stopped, but the right wing was accelerating. This resulted in a rolling-turning maneuver that left the ship upside down with a relatively undamaged wing on top of the inverted fuselage. Pilot is still with us with nothing more than a broken foot! JJ |
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