![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
The Twin II of our club has an empty weight of 415 kg wich, with a max.
permitable total mass of 580kg leaves a max. payload of only 165kg......... Now we are trying to solve this problem because we want to ad an extra 20 kg of payload. so the payload can be increased to 185 kg the options are to: replace the big heavy mainwheel and tyre by new TOST or Beringer lightweight aloy wheels Grind down the very thick (GROB style) gelcoat to a minimum Replace the battery for a LiPO type Remove radio and electro sink-clim indicator incl all electrica wiring. Remove all pollstry. And then????????? Someone recognises this problem and who encouterd a solution?? Eric |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 5, 4:31*am, Eric van Geetsum wrote:
replace the big heavy mainwheel and tyre by new TOST or Beringer lightweight aloy wheels Lighter weight wheels are often less durable, and more prone to breakage. And I don't know about the ones you mention, but I rather doubt that they are much lighter than the original. Grind down the very thick (GROB style) gelcoat to a minimum That's an interesting candidate. Gelcoat generally runs .012" to .020" thick, and weighs about 10 lbs/gallon. A Grob twin is going to have about 520 ft^2 of painted area, so there'll be around 1200 cubic inches of gelcoat on it; that's around 5.2 gallons and about 52 lbs. However, the gelcoat is rarely very evenly applied, so some spots will be thicker than others. If you try to sand some of it off, you won't get very deep before you get to green in some spots. You might get maybe 1/4 of it off before that happens Then you either leave those areas and sand others, resulting in an uneven surface, or you stop there. After the sanding, you'd probably end up applying a gallon or so of finish to clean it up some. That sounds to me like a rather dubious enterprise. Replace the battery for a LiPO type Remove radio and electro sink-clim indicator incl all electrica wiring. Remove all pollstry. And then????????? Someone recognises this problem and who encouterd a solution?? All aircraft gain weight as they age, and they generally gain more than anybody expects. I think maybe it is proof that dark matter exists. I think that the thing to do is, at next annual inspection, first clean out all the dust and dirt and grime from everywhere that you can reach. Then, as you suggest, strip the instrumentation and wiring down to the bare minimum. I think you need the radio and antenna, but maybe use a newer, lighter one. Remove any extra plumbing. Recruit lighter instructors. Thanks, Bob K. |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Put bags of helium into the fuselage?
|
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 5, 4:31*am, Eric van Geetsum wrote:
The Twin II of our club has an empty weight of 415 kg wich, with a *max.. permitable total mass of 580kg leaves a max. payload of only 165kg.......... Now we are trying to solve this problem because we want to ad an extra 20 kg of payload. so the payload can be increased to 185 kg the options are to: replace the big heavy mainwheel and tyre by new TOST or Beringer lightweight aloy wheels Grind down the very thick (GROB style) gelcoat to a minimum Replace the battery for a LiPO type Remove radio and electro sink-clim indicator incl all electrica wiring. Remove all pollstry. The Beringer wheel/brake/tubeless tire (forget TOST for weight savings...), LiFePo4 battery (not LiPo) like this: http://www.batteryspace.com/lifepo42...rweight-1.aspx (damn shame they are out of stock on these), less/different instruments and wiring, skimping out on the upholstery will probably buy you ~10kg, but it'll cost a few thousand Euros to make the glider less safe/comfortable to fly, not to mention the EASA implications... but grinding gelcoat to shave weight?? I suppose you can have it all (mostly all) ground off and then refinished in PU for a scant 15,000 more Euros or so... but at that point you could just sell your current ship and as is and upgrade to one with more useful load or different type altogether. Besides that you have Bob's skinny instructors and jsbrakes's helium! ![]() -Paul |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 5, 7:49*am, Bob Kuykendall wrote:
On Apr 5, 4:31*am, Eric van Geetsum wrote: replace the big heavy mainwheel and tyre by new TOST or Beringer lightweight aloy wheels Lighter weight wheels are often less durable, and more prone to breakage. And I don't know about the ones you mention, but I rather doubt that they are much lighter than the original. Grind down the very thick (GROB style) gelcoat to a minimum That's an interesting candidate. Gelcoat generally runs .012" to .020" thick, and weighs about 10 lbs/gallon. A Grob twin is going to have about 520 ft^2 of painted area, so there'll be around 1200 cubic inches of gelcoat on it; that's around 5.2 gallons and about 52 lbs. However, the gelcoat is rarely very evenly applied, so some spots will be thicker than others. If you try to sand some of it off, you won't get very deep before you get to green in some spots. You might get maybe 1/4 of it off before that happens Then you either leave those areas and sand others, resulting in an uneven surface, or you stop there. After the sanding, you'd probably end up applying a gallon or so of finish to clean it up some. That sounds to me like a rather dubious enterprise. Replace the battery for a LiPO type Remove radio and electro sink-clim indicator incl all electrica wiring. Remove all pollstry. And then????????? Someone recognises this problem and who encouterd a solution?? All aircraft gain weight as they age, and they generally gain more than anybody expects. I think maybe it is proof that dark matter exists. I think that the thing to do is, at next annual inspection, first clean out all the dust and dirt and grime from everywhere that you can reach. Then, as you suggest, strip the instrumentation and wiring down to the bare minimum. I think you need the radio and antenna, but maybe use a newer, lighter one. Remove any extra plumbing. Recruit lighter instructors. Thanks, Bob K. The problem with being a light instructor is you get assigned all the overweight pilots to fly with. It gets old after a while. Pedal powered self launch may be the answer. Just keep working at it until the power to weight ratio becomes favorable. Andy |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 11:31 05 April 2011, Eric van Geetsum wrote:
The Twin II of our club has an empty weight of 415 kg wich, with a max. permitable total mass of 580kg leaves a max. payload of only 165kg......... Now we are trying to solve this problem because we want to ad an extra 20 kg of payload. so the payload can be increased to 185 kg the options are to: replace the big heavy mainwheel and tyre by new TOST or Beringer lightweight aloy wheels Grind down the very thick (GROB style) gelcoat to a minimum Replace the battery for a LiPO type Remove radio and electro sink-clim indicator incl all electrica wiring. Remove all pollstry. And then????????? Someone recognises this problem and who encouterd a solution?? Eric Is this a Grob Acro II. The RAF operate those for the Air Cadets. We never had a problem with weight with them, in fact the opposite. We were able to put 242lbs on both seats, making a total of 484lbs (220Kg) payload. From memory 415Kg seem rather a lot for an Acro II |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Apr 5, 7:31*am, Eric van Geetsum wrote:
The Twin II of our club has an empty weight of 415 kg wich, with a *max.. permitable total mass of 580kg leaves a max. payload of only 165kg.......... Now we are trying to solve this problem because we want to ad an extra 20 kg of payload. so the payload can be increased to 185 kg the options are to: replace the big heavy mainwheel and tyre by new TOST or Beringer lightweight aloy wheels Grind down the very thick (GROB style) gelcoat to a minimum Replace the battery for a LiPO type Remove radio and electro sink-clim indicator incl all electrica wiring. Remove all pollstry. And then????????? Someone recognises this problem and who encouterd a solution?? Eric Eric, That seems on the heavier end for a Grob 103 Twin II. I have the weight and balance sheets form 3 different G103s in my folder here (including one I'm a part owner of) and the average empty weight is about 882 pounds (which is just about exactly 400kg). The lightest one is about 870 pounds (around 395kg). This is with standard instruments and a single battery under the rear seat. Two obvious questions: - Has the ship had major repairs? - Is there some heavy ballast installed? Finding 20KG of extra payload sounds pretty unlikely unless there is something strange going on... Erik |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Fiberglass cloth weight vs 'finished' weight | Fred the Red Shirt | Home Built | 12 | April 5th 08 04:24 PM |
troubles with ATC | john hawkins | Piloting | 3 | May 6th 07 05:30 PM |
Glider Weight/Wing Loading and determing speed for best L/D for a given weight | 65E | Soaring | 3 | January 26th 06 09:26 PM |
Weight of a Harley Evo / Twin-cam 88 for aircraft? | Wright1902Glider | Home Built | 3 | June 4th 04 01:56 PM |
Empty/Gross weight Vs. Max. Pilot weight | Flyhighdave | Soaring | 13 | January 14th 04 04:20 AM |