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#81
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Don
First - I agree entirely that you are contemplating which of two evils you should perpetrate having got yourself into an untenable situation. But having got there you need to at least have considered what you should do in the event. I doubt there would be much time for deliberation. I suggest that the correct action depends on the aircraft to some degree, but that flutter is much more damaging to the structure than moderate overstress in most cases since it introduces large cyclical and localised loads on the structure in addition to whatever G load the aircraft is exposed to. First generation glass, before the finite element analysis programs allowed the designers to design to the limit is probably much safer to over stress than overspeed. Similarly the latest carbon designs seem to have G limits imposed by the JAR22 deflection limits rather than ultimate strength. Presumably these aircraft have huge strength reserves. For interest look at the wing test on the DG1000. When I asked Schempp-hirth about the possibility of flutter damage in an incident where a Std Cirrus had made a loud chattering noise on a high speed pass, they replied that it would be unlikely to have been flutter. This because they did not think it likely that the aircraft would remain controllable due to control system damage in the event of flutter. In inspection we found that the noise came from an airbrake cap that had lost some tension in the retention springs. It was sucking slightly open and banging against the sides of the slot as the pilot pulled up. Over one G, close to Vne and soft springs combined to allow a millimeter or so of play. The noise was disconcertingly loud from the ground, we thought there might be a glass-fibre confetti shower. I'd take a gamble on the Cirrus's wings handling more Gs than the manual said if my life depended on it. Conversely I take great pains not to get even near that point in a 32 year old glider. |
#82
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At 19:18 30 March 2004, Bruce Greeff wrote:
When I asked Schempp-hirth about the possibility of flutter damage in an incident where a Std Cirrus had made a loud chattering noise on a high speed pass, they replied that it would be unlikely to have been flutter. This because they did not think it likely that the aircraft would remain controllable due to control system damage in the event of flutter. and this is really the crux of the whole thing. Once flutter starts there may be a complete loss of control; end ex. Probably one of the best demonstrations of flutter I have ever seen was the video of a suspension bridge breaking up in high wind. Once started complete destruction is guaranteed unless the cause can be removed (speed reduced), In the case of the bridge the wind speed did not reduce, it not being controlled. If loss of control of the glider occurs, same result, lots of little bits. The other point I neglected to mention earlier was that any margin on the VNE is established on an airframe where the control hinges are a good fit and all the control rods have no slack. Having looked at and lifted the bits of my ASW17 I think I am happy that there is a reasonable margin on the loading placard. |
#83
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On Sun, 28 Mar 2004 20:30:57 +0200, Denis
wrote: Edward Downham wrote: It is important to note that this margin is there to cope with things such as ASI position and calibration errors. When you fly a glider at an _indicated_ speed of Vne, you might actually be nearer Vd and the realm of the test pilot. No. VNE is an indicated airspeed limit (IAS). If there is a airspeed calibration error, VNE has been reduced to correct it. The margin is there for instrumental errors, and *pilot* errors. Well, this one is just a little scary. For more than one glider of my acquaintance Vne is given as a TAS in the manual. This can be converted to IAS of course, but the IAS would, of course, decrease with altitude. Vstall, on the other hand, seems just about always to be given as an IAS, and as an IAS the stall speed will remain about the same as altitude increases. This is all pretty basic stuff I know, so I probably misinterpreted your statement about Vne. One way to look at the "coffin corner" situation where some very high-flying aircraft, such as the U-2, I suppose, can end up at an altitude where the stall speed, in TAS, has come very close to the Vne, as a TAS. |
#84
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I agree with Eric and Bert - and the guys who taught
materials, structures and aerodynamics in school 20+years ago. Couple of points to clarify: Some have been talking about the G-load in the manual, others (like me) have talked about the ultimate loading to which the airframe is tested (a bigger number). In a panic I'd probably pull past the first, but wouldn't get near the second. I don't think Don was recommending anything much different - Don? References to what aerobatic pilots do ('pull as much as necessary') are not applicable to gliders for one simple reason: aerobatic aircraft are generally good for Gs past G-LOC (G-induced loss of consciousness) - not so for gliders. For GRP or CRP structures pull to the ultimate load at your peril. You'll probably get away with going over the placarded limit. The main point for me remains that I can't tell how many Gs I'm pulling from my butt alone - at least not with a whole lot of accuracy. Flutter is a dynamic effect and can happen to the wing, or any of the control surfaces - I think the horizontal and vertical stabs are generally too stiff to go first. Each flutter mode has a different natural frequency, damping (positive or negative) and corresponding airspeeds at which they can start. I've heard of several cases of control surface flutter in sailplanes (often older ones with looser control circuits - and Grobs with poor mass balancing). I've not heard of sailplanes fluttered apart in flight (though this isn't to say it has never happened). Maybe it's because everyone who has been forced to make a choice pulls the wings off first. Something to think about... At 18:18 30 March 2004, Eric Greenwell wrote: Bert Willing wrote: Non-catastrophic may happen if you have a structure which has a plastic behavious prior to rupture. Ironically, you don't have that with 'plastic' gliders. You might well enconter that you can pull more g's because the designer has put lots of margins, and nothing will happen But if *something* happens, you're wings are simply gone on a GRP/CRP ship. The idea that you'll get away with some sort of damage and land the ship is, hm, fairly naive. But to the initial question: If you are going to exceed Vne in a dive, you can chose between putting your joker on a good spacing between Vne and flutter speed, or put your joker on a pessimistic design margin and a well crafted serial number. There is actually no way to tell the answer beforehand. I agree with Bert. To imagine Don's advice to be suitable for all gliders is too ignore the huge differences in design and materials. For example, the flexible, fiberglass wing of ASW 20 probably means it has a greater strength reserve because of the extra material needed to control flutter, while the stiffer carbon wing in the ASW 27 might give it the reverse margins. Consider the Standard Cirrus with it's relatively thick fiberglass wing: where are it's margins the greatest? And, it appears the 25 m gliders may have special problems. Until you have discussed the design of your _particular_ glider with it's designer, you are simply speculating about the dangers of overspeeding versus overloading. Even the designer may not know, if the glider hasn't been tested to flutter! And if you damage the structure during a high G pull-up, what do you suppose will happen to the speed at which flutter occurs? You may now have damaged glider experiencing flutter! Fortunately, this situation seems to rare. Personally, I have never encountered it in 4500 hours of soaring, not even an incipient spin. Here is more speculation: I think the reality is most pilots that have the problem will use Don's method out of reflex, not training or conscious choice. -- ----- change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#85
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Jim wrote in message
One way to look at the "coffin corner" situation where some very high-flying aircraft, such as the U-2, I suppose, can end up at an altitude where the stall speed, in TAS, has come very close to the Vne, as a TAS. More precisely, I think it's when the stall speed (IAS in the cockpit) but really a TAS issue) approaches the limiting Mach number. Since Mach vs TAS decreases with altitude, and TAS vs IAS increases with altitude, the problem is inevitable for the right (or wrong, depending on your point of view!) kind of plane. Kirk |
#86
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Well. I have no experience fortunately from such situations. Statements that I have made are almost
directly taken from the book "Glider aerobatics". About lowering the wheel: I don't know how much does it help, but if you try to fly around with the wheel out, the performance loss is there and one can feel it. Afaik in fitting the fixed wheel glider with retractable-one gives some 1-2 L/D points better performance. I agree with you regarding the problem of switching hands. However, I think that in most gliders at high g, just disarresting the wheel will lower it. One don't have to fix it. "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... iPilot wrote: You may be correct. However, I have heard of some cases where there have been structural failures resulting from excessive g-forces, but the glider has remained landable after that. Aerobatics books also recommend to "pull as hard as necessary", but to keep an eye on your g-meter and ASI. Aerobatic aircraft are built to much higher G and Vne limits, and the pilots flying them are also accustomed to using high Gs. How many sailplane pilots have a G meter and will be looking at it in a spin recovery gone wrong? High AoA eats energy rather fast. Flutter from overspeeding will definately disintegrate your wing. It is this claim that we are discussing. I know of many people that have experienced flutter and not lost a wing. I also know flutter can have many different modes, including those that involve the rudder, elevator, ailerons, wing, and tail boom. It seems most dogmatic to claim "Flutter from overspeeding will definitely disintegrate your wing". Since you are so certain, perhaps you could tell us the reasons for your certainty? Excessive-g may not. Has flutter caused any of the in-flight breakups discussed here? Perhaps I missed them. I thought all were due to exceeding G limits, some likely due to the reduced G loadings with the spoilers extended. The trick is to stay within the limits as long as possible. Therefore it's necessary to know the limits and their use. In abovementioned Nimbus 4 incident it seems that pilot exchausted g-limits before the Vne arrived. But no-one knows what really happened. BTW, there is one energy-burning device on every glider that may save you the very necessary second or two - the wheel. Lower it as soon as you feel the threat of overspeeding. You may lose the wheel doors because of the speed and g-forces, but this is not nearly as catastrophical as losing wing because of pulling the airbrakes at Vne and high-g. Does anyone have an idea of how much effect this would have? If it is small, perhaps a pilot should not even think of attempting it as he struggles with a recovery near Vne. In many gliders, it requires the pilot to switch hands on the stick to lower the gear, and would be a distraction at critical time in all of them. -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#87
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Jim wrote:
No. VNE is an indicated airspeed limit (IAS). If there is a airspeed calibration error, VNE has been reduced to correct it. The margin is there for instrumental errors, and *pilot* errors. Well, this one is just a little scary. For more than one glider of my acquaintance Vne is given as a TAS in the manual. This can be converted to IAS of course, but the IAS would, of course, decrease with altitude. I did not want to raise the question of VNE at altitude (a more difficult subject ;-) and the relation between IAS and TAS. I replied to someone who mentioned the errors of static ports : The calibrated airspeed (CAS) may be higher than the indicated airspeed (IAS) depending og static ports location ; in that case, it is measured during the tests and all limits are corrected to be given in *indicated* airspeed. -- Denis R. Parce que ça rompt le cours normal de la conversation !!! Q. Pourquoi ne faut-il pas répondre au-dessus de la question ? |
#88
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Jack wrote:
I never experienced a spin recovery and...[t]herefore I don't know what I would do in such a situation. With your (claimed) thousands of hours of flight experience? Please quote correctly. I never experienced a spin recovery *in a Nimbus 4* -- Denis R. Parce que ça rompt le cours normal de la conversation !!! Q. Pourquoi ne faut-il pas répondre au-dessus de la question ? |
#89
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W.J. (Bill) Dean (U.K.). wrote:
You are just plain wrong. Who are you answering to ? What are you speaking about ? Please reply after what you quote and not before. You also say: "all I want is to give my opinion when I think something is said here that may lead to dangerous flying - such as sentences like "don't exceed VNE, but no problem if you exceed permitted G-loading" ". Who said that, which posting? You in : " pull however hard is necessary not to exceed VNE," Exceeding Vne is outside limits and dangerous, so are any of the alternatives - the discussion is about which of the alternatives is the least worst. No. Pulling airbrakes at or below VNE is safe and permitted, if you respect the G limits. The other two (exceeding VNE or exceeding g-limits) are unsafe and prohibited. I really don't understand why you (and not you alone, unfortunately) cannot understand that. With the Minden accident on 13th July 1999, it is clear from the report that the glider was pitched down to well beyond a 45 degree dive, so the airbrakes would not have been speed limiting. Of course not. But it would have considerably limited the speed increase in the few seconds needed to get at or below 45° dive. You say "I never experienced a spin recovery", presumably you mean in a large span glider. I hope you have done plenty in training and short span machines. Yes. Including some with a VNE at 550 kt... Denis (Denis who and from where?), Does it really import my family name or where I am from ? You'd better try to find more convincing arguments. Anyway the answer to your questions is in my headers or any search engine. -- Denis R. Parce que ça rompt le cours normal de la conversation !!! Q. Pourquoi ne faut-il pas répondre au-dessus de la question ? |
#90
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I'd recommend reading about the asymmetric loading arguments
presented at: http://www.avweb.com/news/columns/182086-1.html The meat of the matter starts about halfway down the page. Essentially it says full aileron and full elevator when applied simultaneously create a much greater chance of wing failure at a lower airspeed than just applying either one independently. I'm not aware of how this may or may not apply to gliders. Perhaps some expert in wing construction can give most welcome educated opinion... ![]() F.L. Whiteley wrote: "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:4064994c$1@darkstar... K.P. Termaat wrote: Yesterday evening I talked with a friend about avoiding excessive speed when recovering from a spin in a modern low drag glider with the somewhat larger span. A lot has been written here about G loads. I recall that the T-34 (an aerobatic power plane I have a little time in which is sortof a tandem Beech 33) had some issues with wings coming off during aerobatics. The recorded G loads and mauevers indicated the aircraft wasn't flown outside of G limits. How did the wings separate? Some smarty folks said it was because the twisting G load that the wing could endure was much less than the static tested load. If the ailerons were deflected and the thing was in a steep spiral (as opposed to straight dive) there were twisting loads. Thought I heard that inspections showed T-34 wings were suffering from fatigue cracks. Kind of shot down some of the 'fighter dude' thrill rides (we have/had one in Colorado). We have a disassembled T-34 wrapped in plastic in our hangar. I recall a conversation about the value dropping by about 50% when the crack problem was discovered. -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
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