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Check your rudder cables!



 
 
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  #1  
Old October 19th 13, 06:51 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Ramy
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Posts: 746
Default Check your rudder cables!

We just had another rudder cable failure at the junction with the pedal S tube. Luckily this time it happened in a two seater and resulted in lost of rudder control only for the back seat PIC. Fortunately the front seat passenger was also a licensed pilot and could continue flying the glider, but not before they momentarily considered bailout until they realized the front seat still had full control.
A similar incident in a single seater last year resulted in a bailout. Due to the pedal spring, a cable failure may result in a full opposite rudder and unrecoverable spin/spiral.
It will be a good idea to inspect this area often, and even adjust the rudder pedal back and forth to expose and inspect more cable. At least in some models there should be a plastic sleeve to protect the cable there.

Ramy

  #2  
Old October 19th 13, 12:05 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Nigel Pocock[_2_]
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Posts: 53
Default Check your rudder cables!

At 05:51 19 October 2013, Ramy wrote:
We just had another rudder cable failure at the junction with the pedal S
t=
ube. Luckily this time it happened in a two seater and resulted in lost

of
=
rudder control only for the back seat PIC. Fortunately the front seat
passe=
nger was also a licensed pilot and could continue flying the glider, but
no=
t before they momentarily considered bailout until they realized the

front
=
seat still had full control. =20
A similar incident in a single seater last year resulted in a bailout.

Due
=
to the pedal spring, a cable failure may result in a full opposite rudder
a=
nd unrecoverable spin/spiral.=20
It will be a good idea to inspect this area often, and even adjust the
rudd=
er pedal back and forth to expose and inspect more cable. At least in

some
=


Type of glider please?
models there should be a plastic sleeve to protect the cable there.=20

Ramy



  #3  
Old October 19th 13, 05:00 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Ramy
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Posts: 746
Default Check your rudder cables!

Schleicher. But most gliders nowadays using the same rudder pedal adjustment mechanism using S tube. My 27 has plastic cover where the cable enters the S tube.

Ramy
  #4  
Old October 19th 13, 06:06 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Jim White[_3_]
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Posts: 286
Default Check your rudder cables!

I don't understand? Are the front pedals not connected to the back ones and
the back ones connected to the rudder? Which model of Schleicher glider
please.

At 05:51 19 October 2013, Ramy wrote:
We just had another rudder cable failure at the junction with the pedal S
t=
ube. Luckily this time it happened in a two seater and resulted in lost

of
=
rudder control only for the back seat PIC. Fortunately the front seat
passe=
nger was also a licensed pilot and could continue flying the glider, but
no=
t before they momentarily considered bailout until they realized the

front
=
seat still had full control. =20
A similar incident in a single seater last year resulted in a bailout.

Due
=
to the pedal spring, a cable failure may result in a full opposite rudder
a=
nd unrecoverable spin/spiral.=20
It will be a good idea to inspect this area often, and even adjust the
rudd=
er pedal back and forth to expose and inspect more cable. At least in

some
=
models there should be a plastic sleeve to protect the cable there.=20

Ramy



  #5  
Old October 19th 13, 06:58 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Eric Munk
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Posts: 179
Default Check your rudder cables!

http://www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0...l?dsId=3402451

says ASH-25.

BTW: Most glassfibre Schleichers have a mandatory 3000-hour life on rudder
cables (and some others), that is taken up in the 3000-hour inspection
program. I find that this gets overlooked sometimes by owners
unintentionally, not insinuating that is what happened here.

  #6  
Old October 20th 13, 05:23 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Mike the Strike
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Posts: 952
Default Check your rudder cables!

Occasional inspection of rudder cables is not a bad idea. Some decades ago, I severed my rudder cable at a point where it passed along the cockpit in a tube in the sidewall with an errant screw when installing a boom mike. When the repair shop pulled out the cable, they found almost identical damage a few feet back in the fuselage caused by the factory! I had been flying it for over a year with just a couple of strands left.

Mike
 




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