- I started writing Mousetraps as documentation for myself and anybody else (such as yourself) to be able to duplicate the equipment I had developed.
- I then expanded it to include an aerotowing procedures manual before Gregg Ludwig asked me for help - doing the same thing - on revising the USHGA procedures.
- Until well along in the previous decade I was still suffering a lot from Deference To Experts Syndrome.
- As per what I said at:
http://www.kitestrings.org/post1299.html#p1299
I used what I considered at the time to be the best sources available.
- Upon review of my source materials it appears that I probably screwed up with respect to:
The glider heading has diverged more than twenty degrees from the tow.
I think that should have read:
The glider has diverged more than twenty degrees from the track of the tow.
in which case it would be neither an issue of glider yaw nor a problem for it. It could only but probably wouldn't be a problem for the tug which would pull his tail sideways. And unless he were low and headed for the trees it would be a self correcting problem. And a Dragonfly has so much rudder authority I doubt he'd notice anything wrong anyway.
...but wrote no procedure...
- You're right. I missed that. The intent was - with the original/existing wording - that you release before your bridle got too close to the leading nose wire.
- However, if it's a matter of being off track it's the tug's potential problem and he should wave you off if he feels threatened or blow you off if he IS threatened.
- This:
The glider fails respond to a roll correction within a second.
from USHGA Aerotowing Guidelines documents is crap. In - I'd say - most situations in which the glider isn't responding releasing is the LAST thing you wanna do.
Do you consider 20 degrees yaw as an incipient lockout ?
Not at all.
- Towed gliders are roll unstable as hell but they're yaw (and pitch) stable.
- The only yaw problems on aerotow I know about occur when and for a short time after the glider lifts off the cart in a strong crosswind. If you just hold the glider level it starts auto correcting immediately and the tug auto corrects when it gets airborne.
...or an issue 'cause...
But, yeah you definitely don't wanna get so far out of whack that your bridle comes in contact with a nose wire. But to my knowledge the only times that's happened with a tight towline have been in surface towing when some moron has decided to crab in a strong crosswind to stay over the runway and in line with the truck.
45 degrees seems to me a lot...
That's also crap from USHGA Aerotowing Guidelines. In a lockout the glider may already be dead, in a tip stall letting go could be suicide or murder or make no difference.
On rethinking emergency go / no go decisions... Trying to specify parameters for making calls is a dangerous waste of time.
- There are too many variables - airspeed, turbulence, altitude, ground obstructions, gradient, glider responsiveness, bridle configuration, line tension, driver responses - to be able to predict a call.
- People aren't crashing or dying 'cause they don't know whether or stay on or get off. People crash and die 'cause they:
-- don't use ribbons and launch into crap which will slam them in no matter how good their equipment, skills, and reflexes are;
-- can't stay on tow 'cause their weak links, towlines, releases, or drivers drivers suck;
-- can't get off tow 'cause their releases suck;
-- have crap tension management 'cause their drivers suck.
Any freakin' ten year old kid standing along the runway who's never seen a glider before can tell when something bad will happen:
- no matter what if:
-- the glider comes off tow
-- the glider doesn't come off tow two seconds ago
-- the pilot takes a hand off the basetube
-- tension is increased, maintained, or decreased
If only we could get drivers and flight park operators up to that level.
If you're gonna look at procedures - emergency and otherwise - stay with the Guidelines. That's the more recent document and it's pretty solid.
P.S. Some day when I'm feeling less negligent I'll try to get everything updated and consistent.