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#61
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Bruce Hoult wrote in message ...
In article , (Todd Smith) wrote: As a newly licensed glider shopper, I wanted better performance than the PW-5 would have given me. I bought a used Grob-102 and have had lots of fun. A 102? That's a good few steps below a Libelle or Cirrus. In fact, I think you'd have trouble beating a PW5 most days (in north island NZ conditions at least). Hell, I remember when I was flying a K6 and a guy in his G102 asked if I minded if he followed me. I've only flown with a Libelle for 1 contest and don't really remember how we compared. A std cirrus seems about equal to the G102 when I've flown with them. No problem keeping up with a K6 or PW5. My choice was really just a lucky combination of price, nearby location, good condition and immediate availability. Any decent glider that had no damage or other issues would have been fine with me. Todd Smith G102 "3S" |
#62
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And it's sort of a silly question. At the point most soaring
pilots are ready to buy a glider, they're going to buy a retract, not a fixed gear anyway, I would guess... That's my whole damn point !!! When it is time for a new pilot to buy a glider he want's the best he can get for his money. Todd Smith Grob 102 "3S" As is common here, we are now in violent agreement! I think this is a good argument that the next WC glider should be allowed to compete as a retract. The AC-4c is a fine example of a low price, lightweight, short wing, low insurance rate glider. Maybe just offer a tilt up canopy, eh? ![]() -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#64
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![]() "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... ...a simple latch that would keep the canopy from opening in flight. By "opening", I mean it might allow the rear edge of the canopy to rise an inch or two, but no more. The usual latches would still be used to secure it closed. Sure! You mean like the safety latch on the hood of a car. A good idea, but it would have to be incorporated into the design of the latch/handle so that the canopy could be raised in one operation (so as not to trap someone inside who urgently wants to depart). Again, this dual function would operate just like the hood latch on many (older) cars! When was the last time you saw an accident caused by the hood of a car opening accidently? ... I don't think the canopy needs to be totally self-latching, as a partial latch that keeps the canopy from flying completely open would be a big improvement. It would pop up and inch or two during tow, alerting the pilot to the situation without causing him a problem. He could release and land, or perhaps simply push it closed after releasing from a normal tow. I agree. Vaughn |
#65
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That's my whole damn point !!! When it is time for a new pilot
to buy a glider he want's the best he can get for his money. If the the WC was an LS-4 or Discus CS, then I at least would have had no hesitation in buying one. No hasitation in buying one??? Take wild guess how much would you have to spend on newly manufactured Ls-4 or Discus Cs???? There goes your major DAMN hesitation!!!! Thats why you're flying 20 year old G102 NOT even used Ls-4 or Discus Cs. Sorry but no glider is worth 80 - 100 thousand, it is truly sad to see one country gaining monopoly on glider manufacturing and dictating the prices. I'm no fan of Pewee but making a glider thats going to cost 80 grand a new WC is not going to make gliding more popular either! |
#66
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![]() "Bob Kuykendall" wrote in message om... The problem as I see it with self-latching canopies on modern sailplanes has several quite thorny aspects, and I have no intention of going there. It may not qualify as a "modern sailplane" but the L-13 has such a latch. Have you ever heard of an L-13 having a canopy accident? I haven't, (though someone probably will dredge one up); the G-103 is a different matter! The key to the problem is the activation impulse required to activate self engaging latches: the slam. It is a matter of design and training. First, no slam should be necessary. The mechanism should be designed so that the canopy always latches with gravity, so that the canopy will always be latched when closed. An inadvertant slam could also be damped with padding or mechanical dampers. Furthermore, slams can (and should) be minimized with training. Every student of mine comes away from his/her first lesson having heard the "canopy lecture", which includes instructions to not slam or stress the canopy in any way, to always check that the canopy is latched when it is closed (particularly if you are going flying), and to never walk away from an open canopy, and the "checklist lecture" (the canopy is on the checklist). As a first experiment, I'd suggest you go buy an ASW-27, remove the gas spring from the canopy pivot mechanism, and then spam the canopy closed several hundred times. Please report your findings in this forum. Though I respectfully disagree with you that canopy cracks must result from self-latching mechanisms, how many cracked canopies would it be worth to prevent an accident like this one below which (as I recall) killed a young girl taking her first glider ride? Aircraft: Burkhart Grob G 103C, registration: N103VT Injuries: 1 Fatal, 1 Serious, 1 Minor. During takeoff for a glider tow operation, the towplane and the glider both became airborne. An FAA Inspector witnessed the takeoff and said his attention was drawn to the 'erratic pitch changes' of the glider. The glider pilot's canopy was open, and the pilot repeatedly attempted to close the canopy. Pitch changes and climbs above the tow plane accompanied each attempt to close the canopy. As the towrope reached a vertical position, the towplane struck the ground, nosed over, and came to rest inverted. The towrope separated, and the glider continued past the towplane, rolled left to an inverted position and impacted the ground. http://www2.ntsb.gov/ntsb/brief.asp?...11X11267&key=2 Vaughn ![]() Thanks, and best regards Bob K. |
#67
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In article ,
Robin Birch wrote: My first glider was, and still is come to that, an Astir 77. Not sparkling performance and it climbs like a lump of concrete compared to, say, a DG300, however it was cheap, probably cost me 8k ukp when I bought it. Is a very nice glider to fly and is quite capable (shame I'm not :-)) of doing a 300k task in UK conditions. This is what any glider that is being introduced as a cheap, early solo, machine has to compete with. UK conditions must be even more ****e than I've been lead to believe if you can't do a 300k in a PW-5 there. Surely people were (and are) doing that sort of flight in K6's? -- Bruce | 41.1670S | \ spoken | -+- Hoult | 174.8263E | /\ here. | ----------O---------- |
#68
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The UK has usually 0-3 absolutely superb days each year (like this year,
1000km in an ASW22, lots of 750's and more, and possible 750 in PW5 or 500+ in a Ka6E, 300km in a K8 - all those have been done at times). Rarely more than 3 such days and sometimes none in a year. More frequent days happen when usually 500km in good glass is possible or 300+ in lower perfomance glass and Ka6E is possible - I doubt if many years happen with no such days, there are usually maybe 5-10 or more most years. It is that kind of weather I imagine Robin was talking about. Weekend only pilots many take several years of trying, however, before they, the glider availability, and the weather all work out OK at the same time. I believe that the emergence of 1:40+ gliders has transformed UK soaring from a struggle to do long tasks except on the few really good days to a pattern of lots of days of 300km+ capability. A lot of pilots (I was one such until very recently) plug on with wood or low performance glass, either out of financial necessity or stubbornness/enjoying the challenge. Others find the wherewithal to go to better glass and are more often able to do long flights. There are also the factors of spreadout - sometimes the wooden glider simply cannot jump the gaps between areas with lift; and penetration, when wood/PW5's etc. cannot complete closed circuit tasks because the into-wind leg is impossible. (I speak from experience, e.g. 4 outlandings downwind in 5 days flying in Competition Enterprise this year, because of strong winds all week. The 6th and last flyable day I did not compete in my Ka6E because of the wind strength, though a few glass gliders did.) Chris N. |
#69
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Eric Greenwell wrote in message ...
On my ASH 26 E, the gas spring and the weight of the canopy supply a noticeable closing force when the canopy is held open a few inches. I think this would be plenty to engage a simple latch that would keep the canopy from opening in flight. By "opening", I mean it might allow the rear edge of the canopy to rise an inch or two, but no more. The usual latches would still be used to secure it closed. I suppose there is a first time for everything and at Parowan I manged to launch with my P tube trapped under the instrument panel of my ASW-28. Didn't notice the problem until well out on course so my options were don't pee, or open the canopy to free it. I very carefully held the canopy frame on one side and released the latch on that side. Nothing happened. I then repeated the procedure on the other side holding on even more strongly. Again nothing happened. I was very surprised that I had to strongly push up on the canopy to get it to open the half inch I need to free the P tube. I was trimmed for about 60kts I think. It may behave differently at different speeds. Andy |
#70
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Andy Durbin wrote:
Eric Greenwell wrote in message ... On my ASH 26 E, the gas spring and the weight of the canopy supply a noticeable closing force when the canopy is held open a few inches. I think this would be plenty to engage a simple latch that would keep the canopy from opening in flight. By "opening", I mean it might allow the rear edge of the canopy to rise an inch or two, but no more. The usual latches would still be used to secure it closed. I suppose there is a first time for everything and at Parowan I manged to launch with my P tube trapped under the instrument panel of my ASW-28. Didn't notice the problem until well out on course so my options were don't pee, or open the canopy to free it. I very carefully held the canopy frame on one side and released the latch on that side. Nothing happened. I then repeated the procedure on the other side holding on even more strongly. Again nothing happened. I was very surprised that I had to strongly push up on the canopy to get it to open the half inch I need to free the P tube. I was trimmed for about 60kts I think. It may behave differently at different speeds. I am curious about how different canopies will react to being unlatched. The Schleicher design appears to have air pressure holding it down, at least in the closed position. I don't know what happens if turbulence were to bounce it up a few inches. A friend had his DG 400 canopy open in flight, and stay open, so he had to pull it closed. His headphones and various things flew out of the cockpit. Fortunately, he was quite high at the time, and dealt with it successively, but (as I recall) could not retrieve the headphones, so the cord kept the canopy from latching after he pulled it back down. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
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