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#1
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Fat boy wants to soar...
Hi,
after a hiatus of nearly 20 years I'd like to start soaring again only this time I'm carrying a few extra pounds. Having decided on this last year I started working on the weight in Jan and am down to 230lb in boxers though I am continuing work on it. As I start to look for a club can anyone point to gliders that can handle taller (6') people with larger front seat max weights so I can look for clubs with them? I'm located in south west PA so if anynoe knows a club with a bigger ship within a few hours that can help that would be great. Cheers. |
#2
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Fat boy wants to soar...
On Mar 17, 7:00*am, toggles mcfarley
wrote: Hi, *after a hiatus of nearly 20 years I'd like to start soaring again only this time I'm carrying a few extra pounds. Having decided on this last year I started working on the weight in Jan and am down to 230lb in boxers though I am continuing work on it. *As I start to look for a club can anyone point to gliders that can handle taller (6') people with larger front seat max weights so I can look for clubs with them? I'm located in south west PA so if anynoe knows a club with a bigger ship within a few hours that can help that would be great. *Cheers. Look at the SSA Where to Fly map for opportunities. Click on each one to examine the fleet. Any with a G103, 2-33, L-13, or L-23 should work IF they have a light instructor. Wear light shoes. You appear to have maybe 6-7 options within a 150 mile radius. Frank Whiteley |
#3
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Fat boy wants to soar...
SoaringNV has a 2-32 we use for instruction for folks with extra pounds. We have someone in the high 200's who finished his private certificate with us last year and now comes every week for more soaring. I know, Minden is a long way from Pennsylvania, but if you want to do a concentrated program and get your certificate, we can accommodate you. And as Frank says, shed just a few more pounds or fly in your briefs and you'll be ok for the K-21 or Duo Discus. So if you want some really outstanding soaring, come visit and get your instruction at SoaringNV in Minden! Fred LaSor SoaringNV Minden, NV 775 782-9595 |
#4
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Fat boy wants to soar...
6ft and 230# will not work in our 2-33A, the front seat student will not be
able to effectively move the control stick as needed. Legs and belly get in the way. And yes, you need a very light weight instructor. Most "European" gliders of the Grob 103, L-23 design are limited to 242# per seat and our Grob 103 is limited to 400# total useful load. We use our Grob 103 for the larger students, and at 230#, the instructor has to be 170# or less. We have one of those. We have also found that even at 230-240# in the front seat, our student is having problems with smooth landings and keeping the nose up for landing. He runs out of elevator travel at touch down speed, an extra 5knts helps, but then he still two points it. BT "Frank Whiteley" wrote in message ... On Mar 17, 7:00 am, toggles mcfarley wrote: Hi, after a hiatus of nearly 20 years I'd like to start soaring again only this time I'm carrying a few extra pounds. Having decided on this last year I started working on the weight in Jan and am down to 230lb in boxers though I am continuing work on it. As I start to look for a club can anyone point to gliders that can handle taller (6') people with larger front seat max weights so I can look for clubs with them? I'm located in south west PA so if anynoe knows a club with a bigger ship within a few hours that can help that would be great. Cheers. Look at the SSA Where to Fly map for opportunities. Click on each one to examine the fleet. Any with a G103, 2-33, L-13, or L-23 should work IF they have a light instructor. Wear light shoes. You appear to have maybe 6-7 options within a 150 mile radius. Frank Whiteley |
#5
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Fat boy wants to soar...
On Mar 18, 2:00*am, toggles mcfarley
wrote: Hi, *after a hiatus of nearly 20 years I'd like to start soaring again only this time I'm carrying a few extra pounds. Having decided on this last year I started working on the weight in Jan and am down to 230lb in boxers though I am continuing work on it. It's really not a big deal. Yeah, most gliders have the seats placarded as 110 kg (242.5 lb), but it's not as hard a limit as some people like to make out. All gliders are built to take at least 5g of acceleration at the placarded maximum weights, so they have huge amounts of reserve strength in normal flying never going above 2 - 3 Gs. There are a number of things that impose weight limits, but the main one for the standard 110 kg per-seat limit is that the seat belt straps and mounting points are rated for a 40g load with a 110 kg pilot in the event of a crash. If you're a bit over, like me, then try to keep any crashes down to 35g. Weight of the non-lifting parts is an important limit. You can compensate for that one with a light instructor, in which case feel free to throw the beast around as much as you like. Otherwise go easy on the aerobatics and fly a bit slower in rough air than the book says. The other technical thing to worry about is CofG. Most gliders are very tolerant of a too-forward C of G. It's pretty common to not be able to completely trim out the elevator force in a thermalling turn, even for pilots within the placarded limits, but you'd have to be grossly out of trim for it not to fly ok. I'm not very proud of this, but I once forgot to look under the seat for ballast and took off in a Janus with around 145 - 150 kg in the front seat, between me and the ballast I didn't notice, and with a reasonably large guy in the back seat as well. I did notice on liftoff that the stick needed to be maybe half an inch further back than normal, but it flew just fine with no problems at all in tight thermalling or in the flare on landing, and it could still be stalled at right around the normal speed. More of a worry, especially with operators in the USA, seems to be insurance. Some places are absolutely strict about doing everything by the book. As far as I can tell they are worried about claims being denied in the event of an accident. Or maybe being sued, I don't know. Here in NZ a claim could only be denied if exceeding a particular placarded limit can be shown to have contributed to the crash, but it may be different elsewhere. Excess weight is of great concern in powered aircraft as it can easily contribute to failure to take off in the available space, or failure to get an adequate rate of climb, but that is far less of an issue in gliders where we regularly throw 200 kg of ballast in the wings and we're probably only talking at most 10 or 20 kg extra in a pilot. Maybe it's a different attitude here but, for example, it is absolutely standard for agricultural operators to take off at 30% over the manufacturer's MTOW and the aviation authorities and insurers are happy with it as long as the excess can be jettisoned in a few seconds. |
#6
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Fat boy wants to soar...
On Mar 17, 8:49*pm, Bruce Hoult wrote:
On Mar 18, 2:00*am, toggles mcfarley wrote: Hi, *after a hiatus of nearly 20 years I'd like to start soaring again only this time I'm carrying a few extra pounds. Having decided on this last year I started working on the weight in Jan and am down to 230lb in boxers though I am continuing work on it. It's really not a big deal. Yeah, most gliders have the seats placarded as 110 kg (242.5 lb), but it's not as hard a limit as some people like to make out. All gliders are built to take at least 5g of acceleration at the placarded maximum weights, so they have huge amounts of reserve strength in normal flying never going above 2 - 3 Gs. There are a number of things that impose weight limits, but the main one for the standard 110 kg per-seat limit is that the seat belt straps and mounting points are rated for a 40g load with a 110 kg pilot in the event of a crash. If you're a bit over, like me, then try to keep any crashes down to 35g. Weight of the non-lifting parts is an important limit. You can compensate for that one with a light instructor, in which case feel free to throw the beast around as much as you like. Otherwise go easy on the aerobatics and fly a bit slower in rough air than the book says. The other technical thing to worry about is CofG. *Most gliders are very tolerant of a too-forward C of G. It's pretty common to not be able to completely trim out the elevator force in a thermalling turn, even for pilots within the placarded limits, but you'd have to be grossly out of trim for it not to fly ok. I'm not very proud of this, but I once forgot to look under the seat for ballast and took off in a Janus with around 145 - 150 kg in the front seat, between me and the ballast I didn't notice, and with a reasonably large guy in the back seat as well. I did notice on liftoff that the stick needed to be maybe half an inch further back than normal, but it flew just fine with *no problems at all in tight thermalling or in the flare on landing, and it could still be stalled at right around the normal speed. More of a worry, especially with operators in the USA, seems to be insurance. Some places are absolutely strict about doing everything by the book. As far as I can tell they are worried about claims being denied in the event of an accident. Or maybe being sued, I don't know. *Here in NZ a claim could only be denied if exceeding a particular placarded limit can be shown to have contributed to the crash, but it may be different elsewhere. *Excess weight is of great concern in powered aircraft as it can easily contribute to failure to take off in the available space, or failure to get an adequate rate of climb, but that is far less of an issue in gliders where we regularly throw 200 kg of ballast in the wings and we're probably only talking at most 10 or 20 kg extra in a pilot. *Maybe it's a different attitude here but, for example, it is absolutely standard for agricultural operators to take off at 30% over the manufacturer's MTOW and the aviation authorities and insurers are happy with it as long as the excess can be jettisoned in a few seconds. Many BGA gliders get a weight concession for non-aerobatic flights, but that's strictly a BGA matter AFAIK. Not sure if it will apply after EASA gets done. |
#7
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Fat boy wants to soar...
Knowing flying over the MTOW or out of the CG range can cause an insurance
company to deny a claim. Continued flight over Max GW can increase the fatigue on an aircraft over time and increase failures to controls, hinges or wing structures. Knowingly flying out of CG range, and you are a test pilot. You mention the Janus with extra weight, our Janus C has a lot of useful load, max the seats at 110kg each and yes, it can still carry more to reach Max allowable GW. You mention needing more aft stick to keep the nose up. Yes, the aircraft will still stall about the same speed, but recovery can be delayed because more tail force is needed to raise the nose after stalling, that means more airspeed for recovery to get the elevator to be effective. You mention loading up "200kg" of water in the wings. Most single seat gliders are made to carry ballast "up to max GW", to knowingly fly over the max allowable GW with extra water ballast. Again, you are a test pilot. Not all gliders can be "filled" as in filling the the water bags to the max quantity without going over max GW. Each glider is different and should be checked. "Bruce Hoult" wrote in message ... On Mar 18, 2:00 am, toggles mcfarley wrote: Hi, after a hiatus of nearly 20 years I'd like to start soaring again only this time I'm carrying a few extra pounds. Having decided on this last year I started working on the weight in Jan and am down to 230lb in boxers though I am continuing work on it. It's really not a big deal. Yeah, most gliders have the seats placarded as 110 kg (242.5 lb), but it's not as hard a limit as some people like to make out. All gliders are built to take at least 5g of acceleration at the placarded maximum weights, so they have huge amounts of reserve strength in normal flying never going above 2 - 3 Gs. There are a number of things that impose weight limits, but the main one for the standard 110 kg per-seat limit is that the seat belt straps and mounting points are rated for a 40g load with a 110 kg pilot in the event of a crash. If you're a bit over, like me, then try to keep any crashes down to 35g. Weight of the non-lifting parts is an important limit. You can compensate for that one with a light instructor, in which case feel free to throw the beast around as much as you like. Otherwise go easy on the aerobatics and fly a bit slower in rough air than the book says. The other technical thing to worry about is CofG. Most gliders are very tolerant of a too-forward C of G. It's pretty common to not be able to completely trim out the elevator force in a thermalling turn, even for pilots within the placarded limits, but you'd have to be grossly out of trim for it not to fly ok. I'm not very proud of this, but I once forgot to look under the seat for ballast and took off in a Janus with around 145 - 150 kg in the front seat, between me and the ballast I didn't notice, and with a reasonably large guy in the back seat as well. I did notice on liftoff that the stick needed to be maybe half an inch further back than normal, but it flew just fine with no problems at all in tight thermalling or in the flare on landing, and it could still be stalled at right around the normal speed. More of a worry, especially with operators in the USA, seems to be insurance. Some places are absolutely strict about doing everything by the book. As far as I can tell they are worried about claims being denied in the event of an accident. Or maybe being sued, I don't know. Here in NZ a claim could only be denied if exceeding a particular placarded limit can be shown to have contributed to the crash, but it may be different elsewhere. Excess weight is of great concern in powered aircraft as it can easily contribute to failure to take off in the available space, or failure to get an adequate rate of climb, but that is far less of an issue in gliders where we regularly throw 200 kg of ballast in the wings and we're probably only talking at most 10 or 20 kg extra in a pilot. Maybe it's a different attitude here but, for example, it is absolutely standard for agricultural operators to take off at 30% over the manufacturer's MTOW and the aviation authorities and insurers are happy with it as long as the excess can be jettisoned in a few seconds. |
#8
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Fat boy wants to soar...
On Mar 18, 12:43*am, "BT" wrote:
Knowing flying over the MTOW or out of the CG range can cause an insurance company to deny a claim. Can anyone anywhere cite a single example of an insurance company denying a claim due to flying outside MTOW or CG ranges? |
#9
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Fat boy wants to soar...
On Mar 18, 2:23*pm, Guy Byars wrote:
On Mar 18, 12:43*am, "BT" wrote: Can anyone anywhere cite a single example of an insurance company denying a claim due to flying outside MTOW or CG ranges? Wow, Guy. I'd guess the answer thus far is "no". |
#10
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Fat boy wants to soar...
On Mar 18, 2:23*pm, Guy Byars wrote:
On Mar 18, 12:43*am, "BT" wrote: Knowing flying over the MTOW or out of the CG range can cause an insurance company to deny a claim. Can anyone anywhere cite a single example of an insurance company denying a claim due to flying outside MTOW or CG ranges? The insurance issue isn't getting a settlement for the first accident related to an over gross flight - you will get paid. However, a problem may arise at renewal time. There is really no excuse for operating outside the CG envelope. The JAR 110 Kg seat limit is a little restrictive for us chubby Americans but, hey, it's an incentive to cut back on the bacon burgers and fries. The idea that the gross weight limit isn't a hard rule is just wrong. Aircraft manufacturers gain nothing by understating load capacity. The certificated max weight is as high as can be safely allowed. It may only be my impression but it seems to me that gliders that are habitually operated over gross suffer undue wear and damage to the landing gear, seats and cockpit area. I've noticed that some POH's call for tire pressure above the max pressure on the tire sidewall. I wouldn't think operating those gliders over gross is a good idea. |
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