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#1
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Now that I have my seatpan out (again) ...
My Ventus 2C had a drain/vent hole in the fuse directly under the seatpan, about 6 or 7mm diameter. At first I wondered what it was for, because nothing ever came out, so I kept it taped over. After I got delivery of my new ASG29 in March, my first flights with ballast leaked a significant amount of water into the cockpit, and I immediately understand what the hole in the V2C was for. So I'm wondering ... should I drill a hole in the Schleicher for same purpose? My leaking problem seems to have been resolved by using larger "O" rings on the drain plugs, but if it leaks again, I have no way of even checking if there's water, much less draining it. I'm inclined to poke a new hole unless there's a compelling reason not to ... 2NO |
#2
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On Jan 11, 8:14*am, Tuno wrote:
Now that I have my seatpan out (again) ... My Ventus 2C had a drain/vent hole in the fuse directly under the seatpan, about 6 or 7mm diameter. At first I wondered what it was for, because nothing ever came out, so I kept it taped over. After I got delivery of my new ASG29 in March, my first flights with ballast leaked a significant amount of water into the cockpit, and I immediately understand what the hole in the V2C was for. So I'm wondering ... should I drill a hole in the Schleicher for same purpose? My leaking problem seems to have been resolved by using larger "O" rings on the drain plugs, but if it leaks again, I have no way of even checking if there's water, much less draining it. I'm inclined to poke a new hole unless there's a compelling reason not to ... 2NO I can't figure how leaking water ballast gets into the cockpit. Isn't the whole arrangement in the wing? If you do drill a drain hole then maybe you can use it to run a new speaker wire. ;-) 9B |
#3
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My 29 was built with vent holes in the leading edge of the wing root
ribs. The purpose of these holes is to provide additional drainage and ventilation when the wings is trailered after flying with ballast. For flight, the holes are filled with small plugs, about 7mm diameter, which are sealed with pairs of "O" rings. The plugs that came with my glider weren't quite big enough for the hole in the left wing, and Fidel fixed the problem by putting larger (thicker) O rings on the plugs. So far, this seems to have fixed the problem. But when water leaks past that plug, it ends up very shortly in the bottom of the fuse. An even larger potential leak point is the panel and gasket that covers the dump mechanism in the wing root. (711 had problems with this gasket, iirc.) The maintenance manual recommends removing this panel and gasket to allow the wing tank to vent, when not used for ballast for (arbitrarily) long periods of time. But when that gasket leaks, the water goes straight into the bottom of the fuse. 2NO (with a brand new drain hole, 4 inches in front of the main gear doors) |
#4
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Just curious -- why did you shift from a V2c to an ASG-29? Do you
notice much difference between the two? Tuno wrote: Now that I have my seatpan out (again) ... My Ventus 2C had a drain/vent hole in the fuse directly under the seatpan, about 6 or 7mm diameter. At first I wondered what it was for, because nothing ever came out, so I kept it taped over. After I got delivery of my new ASG29 in March, my first flights with ballast leaked a significant amount of water into the cockpit, and I immediately understand what the hole in the V2C was for. So I'm wondering ... should I drill a hole in the Schleicher for same purpose? My leaking problem seems to have been resolved by using larger "O" rings on the drain plugs, but if it leaks again, I have no way of even checking if there's water, much less draining it. I'm inclined to poke a new hole unless there's a compelling reason not to ... 2NO |
#5
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On Jan 11, 12:11�pm, Greg Arnold wrote:
Just curious -- why did you shift from a V2c to an ASG-29? �Do you notice much difference between the two? Tuno wrote: Now that I have my seatpan out (again) ... My Ventus 2C had a drain/vent hole in the fuse directly under the seatpan, about 6 or 7mm diameter. At first I wondered what it was for, because nothing ever came out, so I kept it taped over. After I got delivery of my new ASG29 in March, my first flights with ballast leaked a significant amount of water into the cockpit, and I immediately understand what the hole in the V2C was for. So I'm wondering ... should I drill a hole in the Schleicher for same purpose? My leaking problem seems to have been resolved by using larger "O" rings on the drain plugs, but if it leaks again, I have no way of even checking if there's water, much less draining it. I'm inclined to poke a new hole unless there's a compelling reason not to ... 2NO- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - The wing loading between the V2C and the newer 18 Meter ships are what's different. The V2c is around 10.7 lbs max., where the 29 is 11.8 lbs. The V2CX and V2CXA are now at the same wing loading as the 29 and all the other new 18 Meter ships (LS 10 and JS 1). Climb performance at these higher wing loadings are what's equal or maybe just a tad better than the older 18 meter ships. Then these newer 18 meters simply cruise away from the older ones after climb because of the higher wing loading. We saw in Uvalde that the new 18's can race in the open class and compete pretty well. Both the 29 and V2cx did extremely good. Tim Well's in his V2cx won a day. The Worlds in Luesse, also confirm's this, as we see only these newer 18 Meters at the top of the score sheet. My water leak, that Tuno mentioned, filled my cockpit with water. To make it simply, on the very early 29's, they sealed the panel to the wing root using a sealant. My right wing panel cover wasn't sealed, and when the panel poped lose in flight with full tanks (I was at the 18 Meter Nationals in Hobbs) from the wing root, is when about 5 gals of water got into the cockpit. When this happened, I was very concerned for a few seconds, as I thought I had failed, but the water tasted fine. I almost landed out because of this, but climbed back up and made it to Hobbs. After landing, we found the problem and it was an easy fix. |
#6
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On Jan 11, 5:11*pm, wrote:
My water leak, that Tuno mentioned, filled my cockpit with water. To make it simply, on the very early 29's, they sealed the panel to the wing root using a sealant. My right wing panel cover wasn't sealed, and when the panel poped lose in flight with full tanks (I was at the 18 Meter Nationals in Hobbs) from the wing root, is when about 5 gals of water got into the cockpit. When this happened, I was very concerned for a few seconds, as I thought I had failed, but the water tasted fine. I almost landed out because of this, but climbed back up and made it to Hobbs. After landing, we found the problem and it was an easy fix.- On the 28 the wing root panel only supports the valve push rods and the rocker mechanism that keeps the valve open when the wing is off the fuselage. There is no water path from the wing root to the wing tank unless the valve leaks past the push rod which is does not do. If the valve leaks the water exits by the wing dump port. What did they change for the 29 and how is it better? I already see the ways it is worse! Andy |
#7
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On Jan 11, 5:33�pm, Andy wrote:
On Jan 11, 5:11�pm, wrote: My water leak, that Tuno mentioned, filled my cockpit with water. To make it simply, on the very early 29's, they sealed the panel to the wing root using a sealant. My right wing panel cover wasn't sealed, and when the panel poped lose in flight with full tanks (I was at the 18 Meter Nationals in Hobbs) from the wing root, is when about 5 gals of water got into the cockpit. When this happened, I was very concerned for a few seconds, as I thought I had failed, but the water tasted fine. I almost landed out because of this, but climbed back up and made it to Hobbs. After landing, we found the problem and it was an easy fix.- On the 28 the wing root panel only supports the valve push rods and the rocker mechanism that keeps the valve open when the wing is off the fuselage. �There is no water path from the wing root to the wing tank unless the valve leaks past the push rod which is does not do. If the valve leaks the water exits by the wing dump port. What did they change for the 29 and how is it better? �I already see the ways it is worse! Andy The panels are removable and as Tuno said, the factory thinks its a good idea to take the panels off when your not going to use water ballast for awhile. The panels main the reason is if you have a problem with the dump valve plumbing inside the wing, it allows you to access inside the wing, without cutting big holes. Remember, the tamks are bigger than a 27 and goe all the way to both ends of the inter panel. The 27 doesn't do that and are smaller. Our inter panels carry 45 gals, the 27 is 40 gals. I think they are great for those reasons and now since they have gaskets its simple to remove them. Since mine was one of the very first ones, the gaskets just might have not gotten to the factory from the vendor in time. When I got home from Hobbs, the gaskets were in the mail and I was told to remove the panels and install these gaskets. Yep, I glued them babies on in Hobbs so they wouldn't ever come off again. Ha,it took me all day to get them unstuck. |
#8
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On Jan 11, 6:05*pm, wrote:
The panels are removable and as Tuno said, the factory thinks its a good idea to take the panels off when your not going to use water ballast for awhile. The panels main the reason is if you have a problem with the dump valve plumbing inside the wing, it allows you to access inside the wing, without cutting big holes. Remember, the tamks are bigger than a 27 and goe all the way to both ends of the inter panel. The 27 doesn't do that and are smaller. Our inter panels carry 45 gals, the 27 is 40 gals. I think they are great for those reasons and now since they have gaskets its simple to remove them. Since mine was one of the very first ones, the gaskets just might have not gotten to the factory from the vendor in time. When I got home from Hobbs, the gaskets were in the mail and I was told to remove the panels and install these gaskets. *Yep, I glued them babies on in Hobbs so they wouldn't ever come off *again. Ha,it took me all day to get them unstuck.- Hide quoted text - I guess I need a picture, or a close look at a 29. The valves are removable from a 28 without cutting any holes. I think what you are saying is that the wing tank of the 29 goes all the way to the wing root and is closed by the removable panel. If that is the case the wing tank goes further inboard on the 29 than the 28 and is closed in a different way. On the 28 the tanks neck down to the valve well short of the root rib. Sounds like they compromised the design to get more water on board. Andy |
#9
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Sounds like they compromised the design to get more water on board.
Sounds to me like they improved the design and are just getting the glitches ironed out ![]() All three gliders I've owned had ballast issues -- the 304CZ's bags failed to empty (I landed a few times with water in one wing); the V2C leaked internally (for its first owner) and required glassroscopic surgery; and the aforementioned 29 problems. My 29's problem was the easiest to remedy -- a cheap O ring on the plug. A more daunting problem is finding 5 gallon water jugs that will not crack after one season of use. 2NO |
#10
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On Jan 12, 8:03*am, Tuno wrote:
Sounds to me like they improved the design and are just getting the glitches ironed out ![]() I suppoose it depends on what you take as a baseline to measure improvement from. Your baseline seems to be other gliders with water problems, my baseline was the previous Schleicher model which had no leaks and has easily serviceable dump valves. The only problems with the 28 are the rather long dump time even with the improved double vents of the later models, and the fact that water drains from the vents if the tips are low. Does the 29 fix both those issues? I don't know why they didn't put a decent size vent at the root which I think is what the LS-8 has. Andy |
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