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I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a
Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks |
#2
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On Sep 7, 4:53*pm, Jimmie L. Coulthard
wrote: I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks Jimmie, I have a few (50 - 60?) winch launches in a Ka8. I think it was a "b" model. Couldn't be easier! And I was a "low time" pilot with probably less than 100 hours when I took my first winch launch. With a competent winch operator, this wonderful glider gives a great winch launch. Just listen to the instructors. What glider will you prepare with for the winch launch? K7? K13? Other? I trained on a K7. The K8 is a sweet handling glider, in my opinion. and gives a great launch. Do what the instructors tell you to do and it should be fine. What to expect? Big grins! Our winch could routinely get me to around 600 meters above ground level and one memorable flight I got to 700 meters agl. Ray Lovinggood |
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Jimmie,
All the information needed to conduct a safe winch launch with a K-8, or any glider, is beyond the scope of this forum. Perhaps another reader with winch experience can direct you to reading material and a site that could give you winch launch instruction and a checkout. For the latter it would be helpful to know where you fly. Karl Striedieck "Jimmie L. Coulthard" wrote in message ... I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks |
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Jimmie,
Forget what I said and listen to everything Mr. Striedieck says. By the way, the Ka-8b I flew can be seen at: http://www.djk-landau.de/flzpark/ It didn't have the spiffy paint job on it when I flew it, but it still was one nice glider way back when....! Ray Lovinggood |
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On Sep 7, 6:18*pm, "Karl Striedieck" wrote:
I hesitate to disagree with such an august personage as Karl, but I would have thought that this is as germane to the group as any other soaring subject. I doubt anyone would object if we talked about aero-tow or thermalling techniques. Ed Jimmie, All the information needed to conduct a safe winch launch with a K-8, or any glider, is beyond the scope of this forum. Perhaps another reader with winch experience can direct you to reading material and a site that could give you winch launch instruction and a checkout. For the latter it would be helpful to know where you fly. Karl Striedieck "Jimmie L. Coulthard" wrote in ... I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks |
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On Sep 7, 4:53*pm, Jimmie L. Coulthard
wrote: I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks Jimmie, the Ka-8 is a very benign trainer and I have a lot of winch launches in it. The way we were taught was to keep the stick well forward and the left rudder on. Reason: the CG hook is very low compared to the wings so there is a chance of the glider going into a too steep of a climb too early, especially if you are a light weight person and just barly make the minimum cockpit load (I had to fly with close to 20kg of lead-shot filled seat cushions - wish that would be the case today...) The winch operator should know to advance the throttle smoothly after all the slack has been taken up. If the he does a lousy job and snatches you up with a hard jerk, you are sure to bang the tail skid into the ground, since the Ka-8 rests on it's skid with the tail up. If the acceleration and the elevator action is correct, the tail skid never touches the ground. The rudder should be held to the left for as long as it takes to become effective. The CG hook is mounted left of the center line, so there is a slight tendendcy to turn to the right if not countered with a bit of left rudder early in the ground roll. Once you notice the rudder to become effective and you are going straight, you can nutralize it and bring the stick back to lift off. The first 50m should be climed at a moderate angle for safety reasons after which the full climb angle can be assumed by bringing the stick further aft. The best climb speed to maintain during the climb is around 90km/h. As some of the previous posters mentioned, the best prep for a winch launch in a Ka-8 is training in a Ka-7 of Ka-13. Have fun and safe winching! Uli Neumann |
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![]() On 7th Sept '08 Jimmie Coulthard wrote :- I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks Jimmie, Hi Jimmie, Although advice on wire launching the Ka8 was covered very well by Uli Neumann I would just like to emphasise a couple of points from personal experience. A couple of years ago, I had for some time been only flying the club SZD 'Juniors', which have to be 'encouraged' to climb well on the wire, otherwise you can end up at 400' over the winch! One day, seeing the Ka8 laying unused at the lauch point, I thought I would have a quick flight in it. However, I approched the wire launch in a rather 'laid back' manner (thinking 'it's only a Ka8') and forgot the entirely different wire launching characteristics that require keeping the stick well forward on the ground run! The reasult was that within a few yards the Ka8 pointed skyward like it was taking off from Cape Canaveral, but with the tail-skid still dragging along the grass. I got away with it that time, but if the weak-link or wire had broken it would have been impossible to have avoided a serious accident! Thus, remember to initially keep the Ka8 stick well forward at the start of the launch, but also remember that when you move on to 'glass ships' they will almost certainly require a different technique! Regards Tony (London) |
#8
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Hello Tony Clark, you wrote at 09.08.2008 06:23
Thus, remember to initially keep the Ka8 stick well forward at the start of the launch this hint may help another something: push trimmer straight nose down before launching does make this more easy. Again, at a safe altitude of about 50-70 m (150-200 ft) you may take it back to indifferent or sligtly nose up to make the climbing phase of the winch launch a bit more easy. Ka8 is fun in weak thermals; you'll stay airborne when all the glass ships "fall" back to the ground. But, if trying to speed forward to the next thermal, it will loose altitude very quickly. Until now, I've flown (in this order) K13 (our double seater trainer for the beginners), Ka8 (our first single seater trainer), Ka6 and Astir in my Club - and still mostly love the Ka8. Regards Werner |
#9
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Its been a good few years now, but so long as you are prepared its a fine
machine to winch launch. Bear in mind that it likely to be a lot lighter than two seater gliders or even glass single seaters you have winched before, so it accelerates a lot faster even on 'mild' winch machines, with powerful winches see if you can hold off winching until you know you don't have a newbie winch driver on the other end. old hands know to be a litte more gentle with the throttle. The glider will feel like it has leapt skywards, , expect to hold close to full, if not full, forward stick on the early rollout and climb and carry out a transition into normal speed/attitude control once you have sufficient flying speed and peg the launch like you have been taught (check the manual for speeds etc). If you can persuade someone to (carefully) hold the tail skid of the glider down on the ground for the initial movement of the launch thats a bonus, I used to find that the glider sits on its nose skid with its tail in the air (I'm not light) and if the winch driver is anything other than incredibly gentle, as soon as the glider moves, its jerked, and the tail whacks the ground and that can accentuate the leaping skyward feel of the initial launch, I've not heard of damage being done to the tail but I wouldn't be surprised if its happened in the past if a real hamfisted driver handles the throttle. I used to find that at the top of the launch, the K8 would often back release just as I was thinking of pulling the release knob... Its a pleasure to fly, never did cross country in it, but it was a hoot on a non-soarable day to take a launch and chuck the old thing aroud the sky a little, very benign haldling, its also adequate for local soaring on a good day when nothing else was available.. Have fun with it, get a good briefing with a local instructor and a few other pilots that are a little more current than me and fly away. Peter On Sun, 07 Sep 2008 20:53:38 +0000, Jimmie L. Coulthard wrote: I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks |
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On 7 Sep, 21:53, Jimmie L. Coulthard wrote:
I am new to using this site. Can anyone tell me about winch launching a Ka8b and what one needs to expect. Thanks Amongst the many other points, it's worth noting whether yours has a spring trimmer or a proper aerodynamic one. The spring one takes ages to adjust, and even then doesn't work very well. Ian |
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