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#1
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
Either a large majority of us are unaware that we are on the verge of death every time we adjust our spoilers while landing, or some people are being taught this and causing them to unnecessarily fear spoilers and using them to their full degree of helpfulness and effectiveness.
Here's a video I made trying to demonstrate what happens when you use spoilers while turning...nothing! I was a little bit of a punchy mood while taking the video - sorry for being a little bit snarky. https://youtu.be/tC-Yqp-uHo0 Here is the description of the video: I had been flying gliders for almost 20 years before someone on the internet wrote to me that adjusting spoilers while turning to land can kill you. What?!?! Supposedly, because your inside wing is flying so much slower than the outside in a turn, a little spoiler can spoil the whole day. I have been freely adjusting my spoilers as needed during landing my entire flying career. Why have none of the glider manuals I have ever read warned about this? I've asked multiple CFI-G's (glider instructors) and they are also baffled this is being taught to students. I've now heard from 4-5 different people (all pilots outside of USA) that have been taught this by their instructors. Time to try to debunk this. Glider is an ASW-27B flown dry at the time of this video out of Cedar Valley, Utah. Thanks for your insights and comments to try to help clarify the confusion. Bruno - B4 |
#2
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
I've never heard of this. YGTBSM!
17 years flying gliders, 12 years as an instructor, moving the spoliers at will, turns or no turns, no problems. I've never read anything in any glider flying manual, FAA handbook, or aerodynamic study. Better warn the airlines, no spoiler actuation during turns! I love to do a flight review with some of those pilots and watch them when I use the spoliers. BillT |
#3
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
In Australia there is a definite fear of using the blue handle during turns in the pattern (circuit).
Seems unjustified to me. Jim |
#4
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
"In Australia there is a definite fear of using the blue handle during turns in the pattern (circuit). Seems unjustified to me. Jim " I have flown in Australia for some 15 years, instructing for the last six, yet I have never heard such nonsense. Sure if you are very slow pulling g and then open air brakes, you may have problem, but that problem stems from the slow speed. Paul |
#5
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
At 08:44 02 June 2015, Paul B wrote:
"In Australia there is a definite fear of using the blue handle during turns in the pattern (circuit). Seems unjustified to me. Jim " I have flown in Australia for some 15 years, instructing for the last six, yet I have never heard such nonsense. Sure if you are very slow pulling g and then open air brakes, you may have problem, but that problem stems from the slow speed. Paul I have heard of problems changing flap settings in aborted approaches ,but I always thought the increased wing loading steadied every thing and increased aileron response. It is probably prudent to leave the brakes where they are during the turn, then sort out the approach on the old "one thing at a time " theory, but I would be reluctant to shutting the brakes for the turn then opening them after. |
#6
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
I was taught to open the airbrakes to a certain point ⅓-½ at the right time in the pattern to not change the setting , unless of course necessary. If you fly a power plane, do you pump the throttle in the pattern? |
#7
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
Hmmm.... never heard of this either. Flying for ~40 years (in sailplanes) & a CFIG for 8 years.
Maybe the "original issue" was sailplanes that had a noticeable pitch attitude change with change in spoliers/dive brakes (add spoliers, nose pitches up, thus slower/higher AoA?). Rather than point that out, the decision was made to not use them in a turn. Kind of like training that, "Go fast in the pattern so you don't stall/spin", rather than stall/spin training & recognition. |
#8
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
On Monday, June 1, 2015 at 10:12:22 PM UTC-6, Bill T wrote:
I've never heard of this. YGTBSM! 17 years flying gliders, 12 years as an instructor, moving the spoliers at will, turns or no turns, no problems. I've never read anything in any glider flying manual, FAA handbook, or aerodynamic study. Better warn the airlines, no spoiler actuation during turns! I love to do a flight review with some of those pilots and watch them when I use the spoliers. BillT Wait and you will see. I am already starting to get pilots defending this on the comments section of the video! That's why I brought it up. Wait till Europe wakes up tomorrow, sees the video and starts commenting. Should be very interesting! Bruno - B4 |
#9
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
I can't remember the last time my airbrakes were closed during a final turn in a high performance glider - and I live in Europe.
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#10
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Debunking Glider Spoiler Turns Causing Spin Thinking
Hi John,
If you're having to use the airbrakes everytime have you considered opening up the circuit? Or is there something at Portmoak that prevents this? I'm quite happy to use (or have my pupils use) airbrakes during final turn if they were using them on base leg. Less happy for pupils to open them during the turn. The final turn probably takes about 5 seconds so why not wait 'til wings are level and the picture has stabilised before opening the brakes. Why increase the workload for the sake of a few seconds? KN At 06:26 02 June 2015, wrote: I can't remember the last time my airbrakes were closed during a final turn in a high performance glider - and I live in Europe. |
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