Departing the launch cart
Now let's sit back and wait for another ten pages worth of Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney talking about a bunch of fake issues with fake and backwards solutions while studiously ignoring all the shit that he and his asshole buddies have done to crash and kill people and prevent the brain dead easy fixes from being implemented for more than the three or four people who've gone to the flight park Tad runs.George Stebbins - 2007/08/30 15:55:29 UTC
Just like launching the mountains, you adjust your launch to conditions.
- But not the 583 (taking off at 5500' AGL) that Davis repeatedly references in his Cowboy Up review?As I said previously, I've towed behind trikes, 582s, 914s, turbo tug, all kinds of stuff.
- It's incredible that one human brain can accommodate all the knowledge involved in all those different techniques.
- And you almost never launch unhooked.And I almost never break a weak link...
- As far as we know Zack Marzec only ever broke one weak link - and that was at the tail end of his career.
- I guess that's 'cause of all the different techniques you've learned and stayed up to speed with.
- So how badly have you been locked out and how high have you been when your weak links increased the safety of the towing operations?
- And don't bother telling us anything about what you're using for a weak link, where it's installed, and what your flying weight is - 'cause none of that information could POSSIBLY have the least degree of relevance to the discussion - asshole.
Bullshit. Everyone has thier 582 "asphalt grinder" horror story to tell... but they all start the same way... "I was towing behind a 582...and have never done an asphault grinder.
Just using "by rote" weak links and cheap pro toad bent pin crap for your releases.On the other hand, I'm not doing some "by rote" launch.
Really? That's not what I was taught. I was taught that it's the early bird that gets the worm.I watch how the glider is flying (or not flying!) When it first starts flying, I don't leave the cart.
Not too much. You'll get up to Mach 5 and blast by the tug like it's standing still.I give it some more time. How much?
Get fucked.That depends on the pressure on the hoses/line.
Are you sure that's not happening because of the tire tension?Sometimes that means the cart comes up.
That happens when the hoses/line pressure is balanced with the tire tension.Sometimes it means it doesn't.
Oh good. Another mutual masturbation society alive and well.But the key, as Davis and Jim point out is to adjust your technique.
Have you checked out:Just like launching the mountains.
A short story: A friend of mine, who shall remain nameless, is a HG pilot and an Engineer. He is the stereotype of an Engineer. He used to land his glider by the technique of putting a hall windspeed indicator on a 5-foot boom out in front of his glider. When the indicator read what he had calculated was his stall speed (or probably just hair above) he would flare. Never mind gusts, wings level, lift, sink, whatever.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=26379
Landings
All, of course, in narrow dry riverbeds with large rocks strewn all over the place.The predictable results were some very good landings mixed with a bunch of very bad ones.
Coming from:He made no allowance for variable conditions.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=12512
Weak Links
George Stebbins - 2008/07/13 21:01:44 UTC
(I'm not that knowledgeable about weak links, I mostly just trust Quest on this, and use their links when possible, and Hungary Joe's when not. I think his are the same as theirs.)
...and someone who always has a bent pin barrel releases within easy reach.If the wind increased a bit or decreased a bit or changed direction a bit he crashed.
...to whipstall his glider to a dead stop for every landing in his primary Happy Acres putting green.And he really had no feel for how MUCH to flare, either. We finally convinced him that he couldn't calculate his way out of this problem and that he had to adjust his technique...
Never once noting that a narrow dry riverbed with large rocks strewn all over the place wasn't an element of the conditions....to the conditions.
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2095After much practice, his landings got better. They are still a bit sloppy, but they are way better than before.
Should we try a different way? Designwise....
Steve Corbin - 2015/09/02 22:26:04 UTC
Standing around in the Andy Jackson Memorial International Airpark at a busy fly-in shows that a PG landing is a total non-event, while everyone stands up to watch HG's, piloted by "experts", come in to land. A good landing by a HG is greeted by cheers, an acknowledgement that landing one successfully is a demonstration not just of skill, but good luck as well.
But for tow launch you never adjust your equipment such that you're capable of releasing while flying the fucking glider. Just as for landing you never consider the option of flying the glider until it decides to land - the way all the sane people do in all the sane aviation flavors.As I said above: You adjust your launch (and landing!) to conditions.
Must've had help from Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney.(By the way, he had a similar problem with launches, but that seems better now too!)
Bummer that that worked out as horribly as it did. (And while you were being trained to be a Physicist you learned that "pressure" was a synonym for "tension" - or that there was no such thing as "tension" and "pressure" was a pull on anything long and thin..And yes, I used to be a Software Engineer and before that trained to be a Physicist.
Nah. All these stories all turn out to be about Davis Dead-On Straub and Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney - 'cause they're the self serving parasitic assholes to whom you douchebags have handed the sport.But the story isn't about me.
Just as long as the people who know what the fuck they're talking about and have his number are excluded from it.Damien Gates - 2007/08/30 22:32:00 UTC
Brisbane
Hi All,
Hey Jim do you like a good debate :O) ,
If you really understood him you wouldn't be talking to him with any detectable degree of respect or civility.I really have to disagree with your suggested technique, or have I simply misunderstood you?
So how many weak link inconveniences have you seen and how many have increased the safety of the towing operations?Lets see ... shall we, I have a fair bit of aerotow experience and plenty of observing aerotow experiences
- So not people you particularly care about.This is what I teach people: (shoulder point attachment only)
- And let's be careful not to call it one point.
Ending a sentence which is a question with a question mark.First the cart (Dolly) needs to be set up correctly for the glider you are flying (we certainly agree here) BUT what is correct.
More than a feeling.Davis has mentioned many times that once you are in the cart and hanging freely (hands off) your base bar should be sitting near your forehead as a rough guide. Essentially though what you need to ensure is that the AoA is set so that when the glider starts to fly it ROTATES slightly like a tail dragger would (reaches speed) this is to ensure the keel lifts up from its holder. No keel lift = problems leaving cart = need to push out - WHY? as the glider wants to fly UP the keel wants to push down on the holder limited AoA postive adjustments = feeling of being stuck.
Reverse analyze:You really need a reverse analysis of a tow to establish what you should be doing.
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-bRrpHNa68iY/UQ6Pv9gRZyI/AAAAAAAAjTg/Hc22bx5122Q/s2048/20943781_BG1.jpg
Impact, tumble, whipstall, Rooney Link increase in the safety of the towing operation, climbing hard in a near stall situation, monster thermal, pro toad bridle. Unfathomable mystery that from which we'll never be able to identify anything that could've been done to achieve a different outcome?
Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney doesn't do theory. He just susses things out and develops opinions he'll wager the house are a bit better than those of armchair warriors - without, of course, ever actually wagering the house.Lets say you can already tow and you are set in theoretical perfect station at the theoretical perfect speed.
Good question. I could use a stiff drink or two after having dealt with as much of this discussion as I have at this point.Where is the bar?
Bullshit. If you pull in and also have the tug pulling you through the control frame the pitch-down effect will double. Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney has seen gliders go negative while still on the cart this way. The results are never pretty.It should be HELD in position by you, that is pulled in from where it would find its trim (If it is at trim eg no back pressure applied then how can you possible get up with the tug if it rises and you fall in station without being at a stalled AoA) .
- If it's a "holder" the keel won't be rising anywhere.So this is where you would want to be set up for while in the cart when you are at flying speed, at the point that your keel has risen slightly from the holder.
- The glider's gonna go to its flying trim. Hopefully the cart's adjusted such that the keel can lift more than "slightly".
Watch the uses of to/too in the following sentences.As speed increases you should lift from the cart, if you do not then you ease off the pressure you are holding (no pushing out) and out you come WITH A SPEED ABOVE STALL.
Practically speaking there's no such thing as too much speed in an AT launch. The tug's not going too fast for the glider to launch even after it's rotated off the runway and leveled out. And nobody's waiting until the tug's lifted off. You can get way the fuck more than you need to safely launch and make life miserable for the cart retrieval monkey but nobody's ever slightly bowed a downtube as a consequence off lifting off TOO FAST.To much speed IS BAD, To little IS BAD, BUT MORE IS BETTER than less for sure.
Can we agree that Zack Marzec got popped too high and had neither the maneuvering speed nor...The idea that you need to have the bar set at a position that requires no push or pull while in the cart seems incongruent with the fact that once you leave the dolly you need 'manoeuvring speed' you need enough that you can get up higher (EASE out a little) or lower if you pop to high (Pull in a little) and still be have enough speed that you can correct a lifted wing, change course etc.
09-00628
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1517/24907340511_e0696ea696_o.png
...the bar travel to pull in a little and get the fuckin' glider back in the pitch range specified in his placard limitations?
Which, since you teach people shoulder point attachment only, they ALWAYS will be and thus your available speed range will be lethally limited without anything particularly nasty or unusual going on with the air.Once again analyse what you do in flight to do this and the principle is the same even if the pressure points/tow force means that they are different positions than normal flight.
I don't really need to hear what my options are. Coming out of a cart so slow that you have no maneuvering speed is totally moronic and I don't give a rat's ass what happens to the perpetrator after that - 'specially if he still needs to be told at that point what his only option is.I have seen negative exits also - these were a case of pulling in way to much putting downward pressure on the cart which will want to slow it while it really should be increasing speed with the glider: fast glider + slow cart = base bar slow, fast wing WHACK!! I have seen exits that are to slow, no manoeuvring speed and your only option is...
Would wheels have been a good idea at this point? Guess not, 'cause that's not something that Davis Dead-On Straub and his fellow douchebags ever consider to be of any value whatsoever in building safety into their systems....too pull in a little (if you have the room) or hope for the best.
- That sentence needs some work.It is also at this time that you are in big trouble if a wing lifts - with out excess speed you surely have little control over corrections you need to make LOCK OUT.
- So would it be a less than stellar idea to be launching pro toads in a gusty fifteen mile per hour ninety cross?
I sure hope so.Are we in disagreement, heated agreement...
If you've read his "explanations" and not found him in serious need of a beheading you need to go back and do a lot of serious homework....or have a read your explanations all wrong? :OD
Not with motherfuckers like Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney and Davis Dead-On Straub anywhere near them.Safe Skies!!
Cheers TEX