![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#51
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
That's how this whole discussion got started.
What, RAS going around in circles (in sink!) ? Unheard of! I haven't tried the high parasitic drag maneuver in a duo yet. When demonstrated by Marty Eiler in an ASK 21, it consisted of a near VNE dive to the ground well short of the intended landing area, and then bleeding off the speed quite low. The key is that you lose so much energy near VNE with spoilers out, you can afford now to bleed off speed, even in ground effect. Most of our duo discussions have not invovlved such high speeds -- I'm curious how it might work. I know that being high, 80 knots and aiming at the spot in a duo is a bad combination, but that's not what we're taling about! As fun as the high parasitic drag maneuver is, I wonder if anyone has ever actually used it in combat. Has anyone been so flustered and out of synch to get monstrously high in an off field landing, then had the presence of mind and skill left to dive to the ground at near VNE, aiming several hundreds of yards short of the intended small paddock with fence at the far end, and had it work? The mental attitude that gets to the problem seems incompatible with the attitude needed to pull this one off. If you don't aim short enough in the dive, you just crash into the far fence at really high speed. But I'd be curious to hear a "it worked for me" story. John Cochrane |
#52
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 23, 6:29 pm, Marc Ramsey wrote:
BB wrote: [snip] That's how this whole discussion got started. Someone suggested that the best thing to do when high on final is to dive with full spoilers, pull up above ground effect and wait for the speed to bleed off. I said that won't work too well with a Duo, as with full spoilers it isn't all that draggy, will accelerate relatively quickly, and bleed off speed slowly. Others said nonsense, the Duo has wonderful spoilers. And so on, and so on... Marc Then why don't you slip it in? The Duo slips quite well. Darryl (Sorry Marc I could not resist :-) ) |
#53
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "BB" wrote in message ups.com... That's how this whole discussion got started. What, RAS going around in circles (in sink!) ? Unheard of! I haven't tried the high parasitic drag maneuver in a duo yet. When demonstrated by Marty Eiler in an ASK 21, it consisted of a near VNE dive to the ground well short of the intended landing area, and then bleeding off the speed quite low. The key is that you lose so much energy near VNE with spoilers out, you can afford now to bleed off speed, even in ground effect. Most of our duo discussions have not invovlved such high speeds -- I'm curious how it might work. I know that being high, 80 knots and aiming at the spot in a duo is a bad combination, but that's not what we're taling about! As fun as the high parasitic drag maneuver is, I wonder if anyone has ever actually used it in combat. Has anyone been so flustered and out of synch to get monstrously high in an off field landing, then had the presence of mind and skill left to dive to the ground at near VNE, aiming several hundreds of yards short of the intended small paddock with fence at the far end, and had it work? The mental attitude that gets to the problem seems incompatible with the attitude needed to pull this one off. If you don't aim short enough in the dive, you just crash into the far fence at really high speed. But I'd be curious to hear a "it worked for me" story. John Cochrane I have tried it with my big wing glider and for me the 'high parasite drag' approach doesn't work unless you shift to a airspeed stabilized approach no lower than 100 feet AGL. My reasoning is that the ground effect starts at about a wingspan above the ground so the bigger the wing the higher it starts. Just above the runway, ground effect roughly doubles the L/D, (i.e. ~7:1 with full spoilers becomes 14:1) so in ground effect is a bad place to try to scrub off energy. The key to the Duo spoilers seems to be a stabilized approach. It's a really slippery glider and it's easy to let the airspeed creep up once your eyes are on the aim point. In low wind/low turbulence conditions, nailing the airspeed right on the yellow triangle while holding the glideslope to the aim point can result in a fairly short landing. You can fly much higher airspeed in the patern and on long final as long as the airspeed is reduced to the calculated reference airspeed on short final. Bill Daniels |
#54
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
BB wrote:
As fun as the high parasitic drag maneuver is, I wonder if anyone has ever actually used it in combat. Has anyone been so flustered and out of synch to get monstrously high in an off field landing, then had the presence of mind and skill left to dive to the ground at near VNE, aiming several hundreds of yards short of the intended small paddock with fence at the far end, and had it work? The mental attitude that gets to the problem seems incompatible with the attitude needed to pull this one off. If you don't aim short enough in the dive, you just crash into the far fence at really high speed. But I'd be curious to hear a "it worked for me" story. In reality, I almost always have too little altitude rather than too much when I'm trying to sneek into a field. I did use this sort of technique with my Ventus a couple of times to get over trees and into short fields, but it had trailing edge dive brakes that would allow me to hold 60 to 65 knots in a dive, then round out, slow down, and plop it in. There is no way I could make that work in a Duo, or most other gliders... Marc |
#55
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Back to Tim's original question ---- it appears that the effectiveness of
the high parasite drag (HPD) approach varies depending on the glider. Even if we don't have the absolute speed polar of a given glider with the spoilers out, we should be able to figure out a relative measurement that gives us some idea of a "good" HPD glider vs a "not so good" HPD glider. It's been about 26 years since my last aero course, but I think I remember that the term we care about here is wetted area; however you smarter people please correct me as needed. The measure I propose would be: Wetted area clean / wetted area with full spoilers, then multiply by the wing loading. The bigger the number - the less effective the HPD maneuver in that glider. Maybe we don't even need the wing loading - I'm not certain, but it would seem reasonable to me that the HPD maneuver would be progressively less effective with higher wing loadings. Alright --- ready to be shot full of holes. Lou McDonald "LM" "Tim Taylor" wrote in message ps.com... I am working though some calculations and need the sink rate as a function of speed with the spoilers fully extended. Does anyone know of such data for a glider? How do spoilers extended affect sink rate as a function of speed? Thanks, Tim |
#56
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
High on Final, Summary
Thanks to all that have given input so far. My original intent was to do some modeling before starting the discussion, but this is RAS and it has a life of it's own. So here is the issue. You are high on final and full spoilers are to enough; what do you do? List of options so far: 1. Slip 2. "S" turns 3. Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 4. Dive until near the ground, then decelerate 5. Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 6. 360 degree turn Unfortunately I still don't have good data for what happens to the polar as speed increases with the spoilers open. Condor was a good suggestion, and I am working to see if I can get meaningful data from it. John Cochrane brought the discussion back to the real point which is what would you use in the real world? It is interesting but not that useful to discuss how you do this at your home airport with 2500 to 9000 feet of runway and know precisely the field elevation. When your aircraft and your own safety are on the line in a real off-field, what are you going to do? This is where I find teaching some of these other techniques interesting, but possibly dangerous. The rule of primacy for learning or as the Doobie Brothers album from the 70's title "What were once vices are now habits" suggests we will do in an emergency what we have practiced. Is someone really going to dive a glider to the ground and pull out to land in a short off field landing? Is there really a need to be on the ground 10 seconds faster than using some of the other techniques? Maybe only if a severe thunderstorm is approaching and you must be on the ground now. I think in general the high parasitic drag technique being taught by some schools is a hyped method that may give some less experienced pilots the idea this is a good technique to use for off-field landings. I think it is time to get back to basics and teach sound techniques that provide the best tools for pilots to use day in and day out. The dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers has some merit, but I still think should be used with caution. Why, because we train to look at landings from a specific angle for a narrow range of landing speeds. To dive at high speed leaves the aircraft with a much greater kinetic energy that must still be lost someplace. Depending on the ship type some may take much longer to dissipate this excess and make it more difficult to precisely hit a touch down point. Often the greater sink rate is held up as the reason for using this technique. It is true that sink rate goes up with speed, but the actual decent angle does not go up nearly as much. For my Ventus B at 45 knots descent rate is 122 ft/min while at 135 knots it is 894 ft/ min, but actual loss per nautical mile is 163 ft/ktm verses 397 ft/ ktm. The other thing we don't mention is the average pilot going to handle the decision making process better at higher speeds and less time? At stable speeds it takes about 11 seconds to lose 300 feet at 135 knots with the spoilers out verses 22 seconds at 45 knots. Do we need that extra time to make proper judgment and fine adjustments to hit a target for a tight off-field landing? Ok, lets try a hypothetical (well maybe not, been there done that ;-) off-field landing. The situation: You are 70 miles from home over unfamiliar territory (read not sure of exact elevation of the terrain below, your altimeter is useless now). You have gone for a Cu over a dry lake bed and it doesn't work. You have selected a landing site in the lake bed that is about 350 feet long and 100 feet wide that looks safe to land. There are tree stumps and other object in other parts of the lakebed. There are no obstructions on the ends of the site so you can do a normal approach. The winds are 15 to 20mph out of the south so you are landing from the north to south. As you drop lower you make a rectangular pattern over the site checking for any missed obstacles. The downwind is fast with the tailwind, as you turn base you estimate you are 400 feet. Your adrenaline is pumping as you prepare for a fairly technical landing. You want to keep it close so that you don't end up short back into the wind and you turn base a little too soon. You are on short final about 350 feet, but about 100 feet over full spoilers decent. What do you do? Slip? "S" turns? Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? Dive until near the ground, and then decelerate? Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? 360 degree turn? In the real world nearly 15 years ago this was in a 1970 "A" model Standard Cirrus. If you think the Duo will float try the Standard Cirrus. What should we be teaching students? You are somewhere between 11 and 30 seconds from being on the ground and that 100 extra feet will take you past the whole safe landing area and into the tree stumps. Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? Maybe, but can you dive, lose the altitude, decelerate and get it on the ground for a tail wheel first, full stall landing? I would give this a 6 out of 10. This also shortens the time available to make adjustments and requires rapid and precise decisions. Dive until near the ground, and then decelerate? My guess is your chances are slim that you can pull this off and get the ship stopped. Especially, if you were flying my Std. Cirrus. My rating is a 1 out of 10. 360 degree turn? I never like to turn my back on a field. Low and with the winds a good result is not likely. My rating is a 0 out of 10. Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? This technique is useful for very high approaches, but must be broken off before 300 feet agl because you must have height to accelerate and be able to recover from any inadvertent stalls. From about 1000 feet to 500 feet this technique has the advantage of giving a higher decent rate and giving the pilot more time to evaluate the situation, but the pilot must be ready to respond to any sign of stall. My rating is a 0 out of 10 here. "S" turns? This might be useful. You are low, but may have time to extend the your descent. Any turn at this point will require nearly at least 180 degrees of turning (45 away, 90 back and 45 back to final.) and up to 360 degrees with three changes in direction and roll. The advantage is your speed stays constant and you can see the touchdown point the whole time. A disadvantages is you are no longer lined up on the target so your perception changes as you roll and move to the side. My rating is a 7 out of 10 here. Slip? The forward slip can be very effective at bringing "most" ships down. Check you flight manual of your aircraft and practice at altitude. The old joke about you could always tell who the Std. Cirrus and Libelle pilots were because they were slipping on final is true. But we got very good at it. It would nearly double the sink rate and when kicked out you were nearly at the correct speed. The Std. Cirrus if flown even 5 knots too fast would float a long way before settling. The nice thing about a slip is your speed and angles all stay the same without speeding up the process. You can use your trained judgment to say the angle looks about right here and kick out of the slip and proceed with a normal landing. My rating is a 10 out of 10 here. Summary Each situation is different, but I think we should focus on teaching techniques that are robust and give that average pilot the best opportunity to have a good outcome in an off-field landing. I know of very few off-field landings that start at 1000 feet at the end of down wind. If I have found that much lift on downwind I have cycled the gear and am climbing out, not landing. Any technique that requires bleeding speed in ground effect should not be taught as anything other than a curiosity and never considered for off-filed landings. |
#57
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 23, 3:12 pm, Nyal Williams
A fully locked rudder slip won't allow much opposite aileron before it starts to turn off course. Was that comment related to a specific type or was it a general comment on characteristics of all gliders? Specific to the ASW-19B (that I owned and with the CG I flew it at) - I could sustain a stable slip with full airbrakes, gear down, with the rudder on the stop and the stick hard in the opposite corner. I practiced this at the start of every season and it saved a couple of very tight off airport landings for me. Andy |
#58
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 21, 12:23 am, Tim Taylor wrote:
I am working though some calculations and need the sink rate as a function of speed with the spoilers fully extended. Does anyone know of such data for a glider? How do spoilers extended affect sink rate as a function of speed? I have one data point for the ASW 19B. Gear down, full airbrake, IAS 90kts, sink 3,300fpm. Flight data 4/20/91 EW barograph. Andy |
#59
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 24, 5:36 am, Tim Taylor wrote:
High on Final, Summary Thanks to all that have given input so far. My original intent was to do some modeling before starting the discussion, but this is RAS and it has a life of it's own. So here is the issue. You are high on final and full spoilers are to enough; what do you do? List of options so far: 1. Slip 2. "S" turns 3. Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 4. Dive until near the ground, then decelerate 5. Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 6. 360 degree turn Unfortunately I still don't have good data for what happens to the polar as speed increases with the spoilers open. Condor was a good suggestion, and I am working to see if I can get meaningful data from it. John Cochrane brought the discussion back to the real point which is what would you use in the real world? It is interesting but not that useful to discuss how you do this at your home airport with 2500 to 9000 feet of runway and know precisely the field elevation. When your aircraft and your own safety are on the line in a real off-field, what are you going to do? This is where I find teaching some of these other techniques interesting, but possibly dangerous. The rule of primacy for learning or as the Doobie Brothers album from the 70's title "What were once vices are now habits" suggests we will do in an emergency what we have practiced. Is someone really going to dive a glider to the ground and pull out to land in a short off field landing? Is there really a need to be on the ground 10 seconds faster than using some of the other techniques? Maybe only if a severe thunderstorm is approaching and you must be on the ground now. I think in general the high parasitic drag technique being taught by some schools is a hyped method that may give some less experienced pilots the idea this is a good technique to use for off-field landings. I think it is time to get back to basics and teach sound techniques that provide the best tools for pilots to use day in and day out. The dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers has some merit, but I still think should be used with caution. Why, because we train to look at landings from a specific angle for a narrow range of landing speeds. To dive at high speed leaves the aircraft with a much greater kinetic energy that must still be lost someplace. Depending on the ship type some may take much longer to dissipate this excess and make it more difficult to precisely hit a touch down point. Often the greater sink rate is held up as the reason for using this technique. It is true that sink rate goes up with speed, but the actual decent angle does not go up nearly as much. For my Ventus B at 45 knots descent rate is 122 ft/min while at 135 knots it is 894 ft/ min, but actual loss per nautical mile is 163 ft/ktm verses 397 ft/ ktm. The other thing we don't mention is the average pilot going to handle the decision making process better at higher speeds and less time? At stable speeds it takes about 11 seconds to lose 300 feet at 135 knots with the spoilers out verses 22 seconds at 45 knots. Do we need that extra time to make proper judgment and fine adjustments to hit a target for a tight off-field landing? Ok, lets try a hypothetical (well maybe not, been there done that ;-) off-field landing. The situation: You are 70 miles from home over unfamiliar territory (read not sure of exact elevation of the terrain below, your altimeter is useless now). You have gone for a Cu over a dry lake bed and it doesn't work. You have selected a landing site in the lake bed that is about 350 feet long and 100 feet wide that looks safe to land. There are tree stumps and other object in other parts of the lakebed. There are no obstructions on the ends of the site so you can do a normal approach. The winds are 15 to 20mph out of the south so you are landing from the north to south. As you drop lower you make a rectangular pattern over the site checking for any missed obstacles. The downwind is fast with the tailwind, as you turn base you estimate you are 400 feet. Your adrenaline is pumping as you prepare for a fairly technical landing. You want to keep it close so that you don't end up short back into the wind and you turn base a little too soon. You are on short final about 350 feet, but about 100 feet over full spoilers decent. What do you do? Slip? "S" turns? Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? Dive until near the ground, and then decelerate? Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? 360 degree turn? In the real world nearly 15 years ago this was in a 1970 "A" model Standard Cirrus. If you think the Duo will float try the Standard Cirrus. What should we be teaching students? You are somewhere between 11 and 30 seconds from being on the ground and that 100 extra feet will take you past the whole safe landing area and into the tree stumps. Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? Maybe, but can you dive, lose the altitude, decelerate and get it on the ground for a tail wheel first, full stall landing? I would give this a 6 out of 10. This also shortens the time available to make adjustments and requires rapid and precise decisions. Dive until near the ground, and then decelerate? My guess is your chances are slim that you can pull this off and get the ship stopped. Especially, if you were flying my Std. Cirrus. My rating is a 1 out of 10. 360 degree turn? I never like to turn my back on a field. Low and with the winds a good result is not likely. My rating is a 0 out of 10. Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers? This technique is useful for very high approaches, but must be broken off before 300 feet agl because you must have height to accelerate and be able to recover from any inadvertent stalls. From about 1000 feet to 500 feet this technique has the advantage of giving a higher decent rate and giving the pilot more time to evaluate the situation, but the pilot must be ready to respond to any sign of stall. My rating is a 0 out of 10 here. "S" turns? This might be useful. You are low, but may have time to extend the your descent. Any turn at this point will require nearly at least 180 degrees of turning (45 away, 90 back and 45 back to final.) and up to 360 degrees with three changes in direction and roll. The advantage is your speed stays constant and you can see the touchdown point the whole time. A disadvantages is you are no longer lined up on the target so your perception changes as you roll and move to the side. My rating is a 7 out of 10 here. Slip? The forward slip can be very effective at bringing "most" ships down. Check you flight manual of your aircraft and practice at altitude. The old joke about you could always tell who the Std. Cirrus and Libelle pilots were because they were slipping on final is true. But we got very good at it. It would nearly double the sink rate and when kicked out you were nearly at the correct speed. The Std. Cirrus if flown even 5 knots too fast would float a long way before settling. The nice thing about a slip is your speed and angles all stay the same without speeding up the process. You can use your trained judgment to say the angle looks about right here and kick out of the slip and proceed with a normal landing. My rating is a 10 out of 10 here. Summary Each situation is different, but I think we should focus on teaching techniques that are robust and give that average pilot the best opportunity to have a good outcome in an off-field landing. I know of very few off-field landings that start at 1000 feet at the end of down wind. If I have found that much lift on downwind I have cycled the gear and am climbing out, not landing. Any technique that requires bleeding speed in ground effect should not be taught as anything other than a curiosity and never considered for off-filed landings. Great summary Tim ! To further your point on training: One thing we need to do in training is demonstrate the effect of flying the final too fast. Back-to-back pattern flights with different final speeds and the same aim point really help pilots internalize this. Especially for transition pilots (Cirrus, 1-35 come to mind), practicing this on an appropriately long runway brings religion to pattern energy management like no amount of briefing... Be careful out there, Best Regards, Dave "YO" |
#60
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 24, 7:09 am, wrote:
Great summary Tim ! I agree. A quick response to the above choices would be based on how much too high I was. And Tim's list is pretty much in the correct order: 1. Slip 2. "S" turns The first one likely being an overshoot of the turn to final, then a 120-180 back toward the runway, repeat if necessary, then line up on the runway. 3. Dive until intercepting normal angle for spoilers 4. Dive until near the ground, then decelerate Not sure if I like this one... I think #3 is the proper way to do it. Though, if one is REALLY high, then the proper angle for 'normal' final would be pretty close to the ground. I would be in this situation if there are strong winds and chance of downbursts (been there, done that). Turn final way high expecting the 40+ headwind to be there (perhaps downburst since the storm is nearby), but instead the wind quits! In my ASW-20B, I just did a full flap, full spoiler slip with the nose way below the horizon, so it really was a diving slip - remember I was WAAAY high. Ended up stopping at my intended spot even though there was a slight 2-3 knot tailwind. 5. Slow down until intercepting normal angle for spoilers Perhaps 6. 360 degree turn Actually, I doubt one would be on final when this decision is made, so perhaps a 270 degree turn from base to final. But only if the weather is considered to be benign. I watched an ASW-22BL do this at a fairly low altitude while going into a fairly short field on a relatively calm day and it made sense. Due to the ship's low sink rate, the pilot was able to drop perhaps 100' and also end up slightly farther away from the touchdown spot. -Tom |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
MA-8 with parachute extended S63-00693.jpg | [email protected] | Aviation Photos | 0 | April 10th 07 02:52 PM |
spoilers vs. ailerons | [email protected] | Piloting | 36 | August 8th 05 11:24 AM |
Frozen spoilers | stephanevdv | Soaring | 0 | November 4th 04 05:24 PM |
Extended GPX Schema | Paul Tomblin | Products | 0 | September 25th 04 02:44 AM |
L-13 Spoilers | Scott | Soaring | 2 | August 27th 03 06:08 AM |