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#1
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Yesterday afternoon Mark Mocho (MM Fabrication) opened
the canopy of his Pegasus to get his cell phone. By the time he made a call to me, his soaring hat, which was lying atop the glare shield, was smoking. The canopy was acting like a big magnifying glass and focusing the sun's rays onto a quarter-size spot just above the instrument panel. Scary to think what would have happened if he'd walked away for a few minutes. Photos are at http://www.silentwingsairshows.com/canopy.html Notice the burn marks on the instrument panel from previous solar encounters. One shot is of Mark (no that's NOT Jack Nicholson) duplicating the sun angle with a flashlight. I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. Seems it's not the light coming through the canopy, but the light reflected from the inner surface (which is roughly parabolic in shape), that causes the problem. At a shallow grazing angle, enough light is reflected to get smokin' hot. Nice trick to know if you ever get ants in your cockpit ;o) Bob |
#2
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Just take a look at the backseat headrest of most newer K21s - They are all
pitted with burn marks from the magnifying affects of the canopy. rgds Stephen "Bob C" wrote in message ... Yesterday afternoon Mark Mocho (MM Fabrication) opened the canopy of his Pegasus to get his cell phone. By the time he made a call to me, his soaring hat, which was lying atop the glare shield, was smoking. The canopy was acting like a big magnifying glass and focusing the sun's rays onto a quarter-size spot just above the instrument panel. Scary to think what would have happened if he'd walked away for a few minutes. Photos are at http://www.silentwingsairshows.com/canopy.html Notice the burn marks on the instrument panel from previous solar encounters. One shot is of Mark (no that's NOT Jack Nicholson) duplicating the sun angle with a flashlight. I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. Seems it's not the light coming through the canopy, but the light reflected from the inner surface (which is roughly parabolic in shape), that causes the problem. At a shallow grazing angle, enough light is reflected to get smokin' hot. Nice trick to know if you ever get ants in your cockpit ;o) Bob |
#3
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Photos are at http://www.silentwingsairshows.com/canopy.html
what is that, THREE moving map displays on the panel? And what are those wires coiled around the hat band of the bucket hat-some sort of induction device that is part of an experimental head-up display? There is secret experimental nav testing going on here and the cat is out of the bag....spill the details!! ps: how does that Ball GC work for you? I sold one to a Russia pilot about five years ago after I could not make it work with GPS input. - - Mark Navarre 2/5 black ace LoCal, USA remove brain to reply - |
#5
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![]() I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. I believe it occurs when the sun angle is parralel with the top of the open canopy and the magnification is caused by rays passing through the plexiglass at almost a zero angle. The fire is started on any object that is close to the focus point, ie. instrument panels, head rest on K-21 or DG-300. I know of an ASH-25 that was *totaled* after a cockpit fire caused by this phenomenon. JJ Sinclair |
#6
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I believe it occurs when the sun angle is parralel with the top of the open
canopy and the magnification is caused by rays passing through the plexiglass at almost a zero angle. I've had it happen twice over the many years. I found that it happens when the open canopy top is almost parallel to the sun rays, which are reflected off the bottom surface and are focussed somewhere near the instrument panel. I don't believe it happens if the sunrays pass through the canopy, since the reflected rays are significantly lower in strength, having had two surfaces to pass through. Maybe someone would like to experiment? Bob |
#7
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I've seen it happen on an ASW-24. The 24 was oriented
with the tail towards the southwest (northern hemisphere, in North Carolina, USA). The canopy was fully open and pointed towards the sun and we smelled plastic. It was melting a portion of the trim around the glare shield. We then moved the canopy up and down and watched the bright white spot form on the glare shield when the canopy was in the 'sweet spot.' It looked just like it looks when using a magnifying glass out in the sun when burning paper or ants. Since my LS-1d has the removable canopy rather than a hinged one, I guess I don't have to worry about it. :-) Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA At 13:54 04 May 2004, Jj Sinclair wrote: I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. I believe it occurs when the sun angle is parralel with the top of the open canopy and the magnification is caused by rays passing through the plexiglass at almost a zero angle. The fire is started on any object that is close to the focus point, ie. instrument panels, head rest on K-21 or DG-300. I know of an ASH-25 that was *totaled* after a cockpit fire caused by this phenomenon. JJ Sinclair |
#8
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And thus the checklist for my ASH-26E states "tail NOT pointed at sun".
Last season, the canopy reflected sun burned holes in my little PZL compass on top of my instrument panel cover. It gets your attention real fast to whiff a bit of that petroleum based liquid and think you have a fuel leak! Kemp 9J I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. Seems it's not the light coming through the canopy, but the light reflected from the inner surface (which is roughly parabolic in shape), that causes the problem. At a shallow grazing angle, enough light is reflected to get smokin' hot. Nice trick to know if you ever get ants in your cockpit ;o) Bob |
#9
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I melted the aft facing edge of the GPS antenna that was mounted on the
shroud that covered the instrument panel on my LS-1F. I think it's not the light passing through the canopy, but reflecting off the inside surface when the open canopy is facing the sun. My glider was tail pointed to the east and this was in the morning sun. Fortunately the design of the LS-1 is such that it's unlikely that anything would find it's way into the focal point of the beam in most cases. Bob C wrote: Yesterday afternoon Mark Mocho (MM Fabrication) opened the canopy of his Pegasus to get his cell phone. By the time he made a call to me, his soaring hat, which was lying atop the glare shield, was smoking. The canopy was acting like a big magnifying glass and focusing the sun's rays onto a quarter-size spot just above the instrument panel. Scary to think what would have happened if he'd walked away for a few minutes. Photos are at http://www.silentwingsairshows.com/canopy.html Notice the burn marks on the instrument panel from previous solar encounters. One shot is of Mark (no that's NOT Jack Nicholson) duplicating the sun angle with a flashlight. I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. Seems it's not the light coming through the canopy, but the light reflected from the inner surface (which is roughly parabolic in shape), that causes the problem. At a shallow grazing angle, enough light is reflected to get smokin' hot. Nice trick to know if you ever get ants in your cockpit ;o) Bob |
#10
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I had the great idea of putting felt on the glare shield of my LS-3 to
hold down reflections. After burning a couple holes in it, I removed it. Mark Zivley wrote: I melted the aft facing edge of the GPS antenna that was mounted on the shroud that covered the instrument panel on my LS-1F. I think it's not the light passing through the canopy, but reflecting off the inside surface when the open canopy is facing the sun. My glider was tail pointed to the east and this was in the morning sun. Fortunately the design of the LS-1 is such that it's unlikely that anything would find it's way into the focal point of the beam in most cases. Bob C wrote: Yesterday afternoon Mark Mocho (MM Fabrication) opened the canopy of his Pegasus to get his cell phone. By the time he made a call to me, his soaring hat, which was lying atop the glare shield, was smoking. The canopy was acting like a big magnifying glass and focusing the sun's rays onto a quarter-size spot just above the instrument panel. Scary to think what would have happened if he'd walked away for a few minutes. Photos are at http://www.silentwingsairshows.com/canopy.html Notice the burn marks on the instrument panel from previous solar encounters. One shot is of Mark (no that's NOT Jack Nicholson) duplicating the sun angle with a flashlight. I'd heard of this phenomenon before, but couldn't figure out exactly how it happened. Seems it's not the light coming through the canopy, but the light reflected from the inner surface (which is roughly parabolic in shape), that causes the problem. At a shallow grazing angle, enough light is reflected to get smokin' hot. Nice trick to know if you ever get ants in your cockpit ;o) Bob |
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