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Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight



 
 
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  #1  
Old September 1st 12, 11:34 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
danlj
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Posts: 124
Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

Exactly what effect on CG is caused by leaving the tail dolly on in flight?

I've seen many comments that this will "throw the CG off", risking safe control in a stall. But... I know gliders have successfully flown with the tail dolly in place. But I doubt that there's reason to panic, especially if one keeps the airspeed up.

And... some gliders are designed to carry tailfin ballast. For example, my Ventus can carry 2.0 L (kg), 4.4 lb of water in the tail. My tail dolly weighs 4.2 kg = 9.3 lb, only twice as much, and is a couple of feet forward of the tail ballast tank.

If I can lift the tail with the elevator during takeoff, I am going to be able to fly. So I can, to be safe in that circumstance, simply complete the takeoff, fly comfortably above stall speed, fly a normal pattern, and make a main-wheel landing to avoid the unknown control behavior close to stall and to avoid running the tailwheel caster down the runway at high speed, possibly shaking the thing to death.

Why not weigh one's dolly and do the weight-and-balance calculation? Then we will understand the consequences, if this happens to us, and will not panic.

Thanks for thinking about this.
Danl J
  #2  
Old September 2nd 12, 12:01 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Todd
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

That approach is far too logical. Any rated glider pilot should be able to do that as it is a required PTS task. But then, given the glider communities propensity to destroy gliders and kill them selves, logic and fact and a through understanding of the flight characteristics of our gliders may not be relevant (or desired).
  #3  
Old September 2nd 12, 12:29 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Duster
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

On Sep 1, 6:01*pm, Todd wrote:
That approach is far too logical. Any rated glider pilot should be able to do that as it is a required PTS task. *But then, given the glider communities propensity to destroy gliders and kill them selves, logic and fact and a through understanding of the flight characteristics of our gliders may not be relevant (or desired).


The recent triple-fatality at the Greater Houston Soaring Club
involved a Lark. While the dolly was left on, I can't find a single
post in the RAS thread that said the CG would have been a major factor
in moving the CG too far aft. Though the NTSB only has a preliminary
report on it, one factor might have been that someone got on the radio
and called out "abort, abort, abort" when they saw the dolly hadn't
been removed. Both the towpilot and glider pilot (CFIG I think)
released the rope at around 75 feet. The Lark then spun in. One
wonders what might have happened if the radio call had been qualified
with "your tail dolly's on".
  #4  
Old September 2nd 12, 02:34 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
T[_2_]
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

Or waited until a more reasonable altitude, like maybe TPA, to advise them of the tail dolly.
T
  #5  
Old September 2nd 12, 03:01 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
son_of_flubber
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

On Saturday, September 1, 2012 6:34:25 PM UTC-4, danlj wrote:

Why not weigh one's dolly and do the weight-and-balance calculation? Then we will understand the consequences, if this happens to us, and will not panic.


Sounds like a good idea to me.
  #6  
Old September 2nd 12, 02:59 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
GC[_2_]
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

On 2/09/2012 09:01, Todd wrote:
That approach is far too logical. Any rated glider pilot should be
able to do that as it is a required PTS task. But then, given the
glider communities propensity to destroy gliders and kill them
selves, logic and fact and a through understanding of the flight
characteristics of our gliders may not be relevant (or desired).


Yes. See the recent discussion about 'crow hops'.

Since Wilbur and Orville taught themselves, probably around 100 million
people globally have been taught to fly conventional aircraft.
Nevertheless, Jerry saw converting a qualified pilot to a certified
glider as a plunge into barely explored territory for which he had to
find his own unique solution. He could not be convinced that smarter
people than he had already solved the problem.

Not only that, the glider he wants to fly was built by one of the most
reputable aeronautical engineers in gliding to a certified, tested
design yet he decided, before flying it and after consulting only
himself, that the flight control system needed modifying.

One simple explanation for the high accident rate is that gliding seems
to attract a lot of this type of personality. Sometimes this is
beneficial - but not to the accident rate.

GC
  #7  
Old September 2nd 12, 11:47 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Craig R.
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

I know glider operations that have taken off with the tail dolly attached to a IS-28b, a rudder lock on a 2-33, aileron locks on a 2-33 and in all 3 instances have successfully landed without incident. The glider still flies even with the extra hardware and operating limitations.

Don't panic. Altitude = time (to work out the problem). Teamwork with the tow pilot after recognizing the problem is a main factor in dealing with these issues. Fly the glider! Make a plan. Execute the plan. Don't panic! Don't yell abort to someone unless you are darn sure you know that is the only course of action.

  #8  
Old September 4th 12, 05:13 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
JohnDeRosa
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

I had been told, anecdotally, that having maximum aft CG based on PIC weight is "best" for glider performance. I don't hope to understand the aerodynamics of why this is so (but it would make an interesting read in "Soaring").

My point is that if a glider was at max aft CG, and then you add a tail dolly, the glider could be out of CG and you could have a major problem on your hands. If at max aft CG the problem would be, I assume, the glider pitching violently upwards as soon as sufficient speed for lift was attained. Yes/no?

Would this event be compounded by having a CG hook? Mitigated by a nose hook (until release from tow)? Elevator authority? Trim setting?

Sign me, Curious Glider Pilot

PS - I can only imagine that fellow that called "abort, abort, abort" feels incredibly awful, and is repeatedly second guessing his decision and if it contributed in any way to the accident.

  #9  
Old September 4th 12, 06:31 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
BobW
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Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

On 9/4/2012 10:13 AM, JohnDeRosa wrote:
I had been told, anecdotally, that having maximum aft CG based on PIC
weight is "best" for glider performance. I don't hope to understand the
aerodynamics of why this is so (but it would make an interesting read in
"Soaring").


It has to do with the theoretical minimization of trim drag, a conceptually
simple idea with "the usual" aerodynamically and mathematically complex details!
- - - - - -

My point is that if a glider was at max aft CG, and then you add a tail
dolly, the glider could be out of CG and you could have a major problem on
your hands. If at max aft CG the problem would be, I assume, the glider
pitching violently upwards as soon as sufficient speed for lift was
attained. Yes/no?


"No (though with "the usual caveats)," regarding the sentence immeedjutly
ahead of the question. Not necessarily "violently", and maybe not at all,
depending (on Joe Pilot, the plane, etc.).

The aft CG limit is not definitionally defined (by the FAA, anyway, so far as
I'm aware), though something called the "neutral point" IS. The N.P. is
definitionally the point at which the aerodynamic center (the point through
which the plane's total lift forces effectively act) and the plane's CG
coincide on the pitch axis. AT that point, the plane is
definitionally/mathematically neutrally stable. If the CG is aft of the
aerodynamic center, the plane is definitionally/mathematically - *genuinely*
complex stuff! - unstable. But what it actually DOES in the real world isn't
subject to "easy definition"...

Textbooks could be - and have been - written about this concept. Whole college
courses, in fact. Shoot - some mathematically gifted folks make specialized
*careers* in it! :-)

What the preceding means to a glider's designer, is that a decision needs to
be made about where the aft CG will be declared in the POH. I'd bet Real Money
most designers choose to place the aftmost allowable CG "somewhat forward" of
the aerodynamic center, for "perceived handling" reasons. Over the years, the
FAA has sometimes insisted on the FAA's opinions being adhered to in "the
handling regard". (The 1-35 springs immediately to mind...)

Point being that handling doesn't "change stepwise" as the CG passes some
arbitrary point. Understand, the handling may not change *linearly*. It's
possible (for example) perceived larger (more difficult for the pilot to
easily/instinctively/intuitively deal with) handling differences will occur
per unit-of-movement of the CG position as the CG nears the aerodynamic
center. Though this isn't necessarily a given, it's yet another reason to pay
Real Test Pilots. :-)
- - - - - -


Would this event be compounded by having a CG hook?


Entirely possible, and arguably likely...
- - - - - -

Mitigated by a nose
hook (until release from tow)? Elevator authority? Trim setting?


Yup, yup, yup...and, of course, the devil is always in the details.
- - - - - -

Have we any St'd Cirrus drivers willing to share 0'beer thirty tales of how
their ship's all-flying-stabilator early models transition from
positively/neutrally stable in pitch to "something abbie-normal"? By that I
mean most of us are used to having to apply increasing back force in order to
generate increasing G-load, but I've been told (never flown one) by more than
one "reasonably technical" St'd Cirrus driver they've experienced having to
REDUCE aft stick force at some speeds/CG's in order to NOT continue to
generate increasing G-loads on higher-speed-of-entry pullups. None of these
pilots admitted to flying with an out-of-aft-range CG.

Certainly, over the decades, the FAA has changed their opinions on what
handling standards must be met in order to obtain an Approved Type
Certificate. (F'r'example think powerplane spin criteria...)

Bob W.
  #10  
Old September 4th 12, 06:45 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Bart[_4_]
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Posts: 122
Default Effect on CG of tail dolly left on in flight

On Sep 4, 9:13*am, JohnDeRosa wrote:
My point is that if a glider was at max aft CG, and then you add a tail dolly, the glider could be out of CG and you could have a major problem on your hands. *If at max aft CG the problem would be, I assume, the glider pitching violently upwards as soon as sufficient speed for lift was attained.. *Yes/no?


The only aircraft I have ever flown with CG aft of the limit was -
thankfully - a RC one. It would not fly level without significant
effort on my part; it wanted to either pitch up or _dive_, depending
on my input.

Bart
 




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