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Why Teach Out Dated Stuff
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knowvne(at)aol.com
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PostPosted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 4:13 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Hi John Iv' e been flying since 1979 .. Soloed in a Acrobat C-150.... 
The  Compass VOR,  ADF, and YES the Sectional was the only way to fly....
At least until 88 when I took up HangGliding Cool


120 GA hours - Longest XC 500 miles 2000 hours Plus in HangGliders -  longest XC 81 miles.... Lots of trees up here 8-(
5 hours in sail planes - Just around the patch and some thermal and ridge soaring...

10 hours in Trikes - maybe 2 hours of XC all dead reckoning  ( my new love )
Also Two Static Line Parachute jumps...   3000 ft straight down...
That was enough hahaha Cool


I suppose the faster you fly the more helpful the GPS can be to helping you stay
Well ahead of what your flying....  But it seems to me THATS all the more reason
to know how to use the compass and dead reckon if the thing Fails... At 250 kts
imagine how little time would need to pass for you to be WAY off course...




Today the way I fly I like to enjoy the Roses as I pass over them...
 In HGs I rarely reached 60 kts  usually teens to 30s ( airspeed)..
In Trikes its about the same for Kolbs 50 to 60 is about average...


The GPS is a great tool for quickly figureing fuel requirements once your in the air...


It can tell you pretty quickly how close you are to your preflight  estimate ..


No more do we have to pass a couple predetermined checkpoints and watch the clock
to know how close we are...






Mark






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John Hauck



Joined: 09 Jan 2006
Posts: 4639
Location: Titus, Alabama (hauck's holler)

PostPosted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 5:07 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Mark:

That's very interesting.

Unless I missed it, you didn't tell us where you were from, what you are building or flying, and who you are.

You can quickly figure fuel with an E6B, along with a lot of other valuable info. Do you use an E6B?

I also learned to fly cross country by pilotage and dead reckoning. Flew that way through most of my Army career, and until 1993, when I got my first GPS. I have a few more cross country hours than you do over the last 40 years and use my GPS for my primary nav instrument. It is a very important instrument, very reliable, improving my flight safety many times over my back up of pilotage and dead reckoning.  Once in a while I will hit a dead spot where no GPS signal can be obtained. Usually lasts for 20 or 30 miles. That has only happened 3 or 4 times in the last 2,500+ hours of flying. I have flown with GPS all over CONUS, Canada, and Alaska. Would not leave home without it.

Recommend you get a GPS, use it and discover the many tasks it can perform for you. You will be amazed.

Right off the top of my head, I think knowing what your ground speed is at all times is a function that is impossible to obtain constantly using pilotage and dead reckoning. Another is sunset at your destination, how long it will take to get there and how much fuel it will take. Nearest airports have saved my buns many times on cross country flights. John W and I used that feature many times during our last cross country flight out West. We encountered several thunderstorms, and many days of high winds, and periods of reduced visibility. Finding fuel and a safe landing area was quick and at our finger tips at all times.

Take care,

john h
mkIII
Titus, Alabama



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John Hauck
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hauck's holler
Titus, Alabama
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PostPosted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 5:53 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Hi John
Sorry about that.. 
I'm up  here in New England... Not building much of anything these days..
Maybe a Few RCs now and then... Rather spend my limited free time flying instead of building...
Although I would love to build a Carbon Dragon Sail Plane like a buddy of mine has..
It has a Sink Rate of 98 ft per  min.. That give you the potential of soaring all day Cool  
Finding 100 fpm lift is very common on a good soaring day....  Great GAS Mileage Cool


I do own and use a GPS  a garmin 76CS and a Etrex Legend. I  didn't mean to imply 
I don't use them.. I just don't rely on it for my primary NAV tool..... If it fails so what I was using the compass and dead reckoning anyway....  I fly the compass and look out front 
picking way points to head for...  When I get there I'll look at the GPS to confirm how close 
I am to its course line...  It quickly confirms how well I'm doing.. 


GPS is my back up tool to confirm what I already know..  Like I said real time GS is what 
I like most about them..  Makes figuring fuel needs quick and simple..


BTW 
was in AK last Aug.. Would have loved to got some air time over some of those Glaciers
we hike on...  Cool


Mark






Mark:
 
That's very interesting.
 
Unless I missed it, you didn't tell us where you were from, what you are building or flying, and who you are. 
You can quickly figure fuel with an E6B, along with a lot of other valuable info.  Do you use an E6B?


Yea I own the Circular Slide Rule.. No battery powered version there either.. Cool




 
I also learned to fly cross country by pilotage and dead reckoning.  Flew that way through most of my Army career, and until 1993, when I got my first GPS.  


I have a few more cross country hours than you do over the last 40 years and use my GPS for my primary nav instrument.


It is a very important instrument, very reliable, improving my flight safety many times over my back up of pilotage and dead reckoning.


  Once in a while I will hit a dead spot where no GPS signal can be obtained.  Usually lasts for 20 or 30 miles.  That has only happened 3 or 4 times in the last 2,500+ hours of flying.
  
I have flown with GPS all over CONUS, Canada, and Alaska.  Would not leave home without it.
 
Recommend you get a GPS, use it and discover the many tasks it can perform for you.  You will be amazed.








 
Right off the top of my head, I think knowing what your ground speed is at all times is a function that is impossible to obtain constantly using pilotage and dead reckoning.  Another is sunset at your destination, how long it will take to get there and how much fuel it will take.  Nearest airports have saved my buns many times on cross country flights.  John W and I used that feature many times during our last cross country flight out West.  We encountered several thunderstorms, and many days of high winds, and periods of reduced visibility.  Finding fuel and a safe landing area was quick and at our finger tips at all times.
 
Take care,
 
john h
mkIII
Titus, Alabama
 
 
 
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PostPosted: Sun Jun 22, 2008 6:13 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Nothing wrong with reading highway and other signs! -- I even carry binocularsdo  not archive

On Jun 22, 2008, at 12:19 PM, knowvne(at)aol.com (knowvne(at)aol.com) wrote:
[quote]Jack Good Tip, but dont the locals get upset using those things for Race Pylons Cool


Back home in CA were I got lost we use to joke about flying low enough to read  
Free way signs hahaha
Today I use a compass  most flights and the GPS as my confirmation... 



BTW  I have family in Winchester and Nabb IN..


Know any Vaughns or Johnsons  down there?


Mark


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 23, 2008 12:56 am    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Nothing wrong with reading highway and other signs! -- I even carry binoculars>>

Why not Russ? Here flying by following the railways used to be standard practice. You just dropped a little lower to read the station sign. Locally, I often follow the pub signs as I know where most of them are.

My ex partner in the Eurostar is a railway buff. He knows where all the old lines which are now dismantled used to run. While flying he will point to a long straight field or a hedge an say `Thats where the old Bath and Radstock line used to be` and pinpoint his position.

Talking of flying low. The No 1 Training School of the Royal Flying Corps, before it became the Royal Air Force between the Wars, was on Salisbury Plain. There was a serious proposal from the RFC that Stonehenge ( all of 20ft high) be removed as a danger to flying.

Cheers

Pat


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 23, 2008 1:12 am    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

It has a Sink Rate of 98 ft per min.. That give you the potential of soaring all day Cool
Finding 100 fpm lift is very common on a good soaring day.... Great GAS Mileage Cool>>

Hi Mark,
it was a long time ago when I was in gliding but 98fpm doesn`t mean much to me without the distance that you fly in that time. I learned to fly in a stick and string glider that would fly in a straight line about 20 miles before it hit the ground from a mile high. When I finished gliding I had a 19 metre plastic beast that would do over 40 miles from a mile high, and at nearly twice the speed.

The way to go is a motor glider. Makes you independent of launching facilities, gets you home when the day goes flat and is so slipery that it gives cross country MPG undreamed of in any other machine.

Cheers

Pat


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PostPosted: Mon Jun 23, 2008 6:34 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Hi Mark,
It was a long time ago when I was in gliding but 98 fpm doesn`t mean much to me without the distance that you fly in that time.


 I learned to fly in a stick and string glider that would fly in a straight line about 20 miles before it hit the ground from a mile high. When I  finished gliding I had a 19 metre plastic beast that would do over 40 miles from a mile high, and at nearly twice the speed.
 
The way to go is a motor glider. Makes you independent of launching facilities, gets you home when the day goes flat and is so slipery that it gives cross country MPG undreamed of in any other machine.
 
Cheers
 
Pat











Pat 
You seem to be in a Hurry to get someplace... Cool Thats not the goal in the Dragon... Its purpose is to soar...
Beleive me you WILL be looking up at steves Dragon while your packing up your motor glider...  
He may have got there slower but as the sun sets he does get there and is still in the air to prove it hahahaha




Below are some specs the Carbon Dragon was designed to meet or exceed ....
and here is a Web site of a Photo of me soaring beside Steve in his CarbonDragon
as well as some Pix of his bird..


http://www.sailplanehomebuilders.com/steve_arndt_cd.htm





Steves  plane is modified and a bit lighter than the plans call for so his sink rate reflects this...
But even a stock Carbon dragon is amazing to watch...... 


Steves Plane is also Super Clean just like a fast XC  ship would be..


Pat 
The purpose of a Carbon Dragon is to Exploit Micro LIft... Very Light Lift in very small pockets..
Also to take advantage of dynamic soaring conditions...
Climbing in Micro Lift  is something the typical sailplane just can't do given its speed and  turn
radus when thermalling.. 






A carbon dragon can easly  orbit inside the bases of a base ball field..  It has the same  turn
radious as your Typical Flex wing Hangglider but Half the sink rate ....  


I often out climb sail planes in my Hangglider because Im able to turn alot tighter and climb in 
the Thermals core .. Steve also does this and with  half my Sink rate so climbs much faster...






Spec:  Required for exploiting microlift ... mostly from Gary Osoba
100 fpm Very low sink rate 
 25 mph Very low speed at above sink rate 
Extremely small thermalling circle diameter (directly related to the speed squared ... v2) 

 26:1  A decent glide ratio at a respectable speed ...



 


Pat BTW  
Todays top of the line Hangliders  which we call RWs  have the same performance as your old stick and String Glider...
The  difference is these gliders let you land on your feet in someones back yard Cool Oh and it fits on the Roof of your car..Cool




 Mark


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Jim Baker



Joined: 30 Mar 2006
Posts: 181
Location: Sayre, PA

PostPosted: Mon Jun 23, 2008 7:00 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

X-SpamReason %%SpamReason%%:

Quote:

It doesn't just happen to Kolbers, Brother Kinne....one fine summer Sunday
morning in 1955an Eastern Air Lines Martin 404 did that very thing at Bowman
Field in Louisville.

And the USAF folks have have been remiss at times.....

Working the tower at Yokota AB Japan one day, and a C-5 inbound, Tachikawa AB
is about 3 1/2 miles southeast of Yokota. We hear a rather frantic Japanese
voice come up on guard channel, "Big-a bird on final, GO AWAY! GO AWAY!" If he
had gotten in, he wouldn't have been able to get out...3700 feet at Tachi vs
11,000 at Yokota.

Jim Baker
580.788.2779
Elmore City, OK


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 24, 2008 10:22 am    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Hi Mark,
really interesting How is the dragon launched, cable or just leap off a hill.?

Things have obviously moved on since I flew gliders. I had a 19mtre span Jantar and only flirted with hang gliders for a short while. I have always envied the hang gliders ability to stick the whole thing on a car and travel to and from a gliding site.

Home built gliders are very few and far between in the UK. I dont know anyone who has built one although there are some stirrings with a glider to operate withinn the ultralight spec at the moment.

Looks as though the Dragon would be really fun. Provided you don`t want to go anywhere. It seems to me that Hangliders and paragliders are reinventing the wheel and doing everything that the the gliding movement went through in the 30`s. First the flight sticking to hills, then the venturing into thermals, then going from thermal to thermal to go cross country. The perfect answer to those who think that gliding has got too technical

Somewhere there is a Dagling in which I have a £5 share. I never had the nerve to fly the thing. In my gliding club we launched it with a winch cable once. I think that with 1000ft launch the Dagling landed about 10 seconds after the cable end hit the ground.

Cheers

Pat


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PostPosted: Tue Jun 24, 2008 1:22 pm    Post subject: Why Teach Out Dated Stuff Reply with quote

Hi Mark,
really interesting   How is the dragon launched, cable or just leap off  a hill.?


Hi Pat
The Dragon Kit is designed with Bomb Bay Doors below the cockpit so you could foot launch it if you wanted to
but Steve built his with a floor..Its so light that an Ultralite can tow it...  He's also  launched it a few times
by a Car tow..




Things have obviously  moved on  since I flew gliders. I had a 19mtre span Jantar and only flirted with hang gliders for a short while.  

I have always envied the hang gliders ability to stick the whole thing on a car and travel to and from a gliding site.


Pat
They have indeed...... 
Today we even have sailplanes that are Electric powered using a Folding boom that comes up behind the cockpit.. 



The Apis Sail plane I believe even gives you the ability to recharge the Battery in flight by Simply raising the boom and letting the
Prop wind mill as you ridge soar or climb out in that  Ripper to cloud base.. Cool
Now THAT sounds like the perfect Air toy if you can afford one.. Cool


And yes HangGliders have greatly evolved as well in the past 20 years I've been flying them.....10:1 to 20:1 Alum Tubes to
carbon fiber spars ..  Transporting them to various sites  is a big plus and in fact around the world is possible...
Ive flown in Sydney, AU and Hawaii ... Fun Flying Vac....


Also some gliders can now be short packed  to 8 ft.. This does require some Extra assembly once your ready
to set her up but its very portable and great for traveling... 






 
Home built gliders are very few and far between in the UK. I don't know anyone who has built one although there are some stirrings with a glider to operate within the ultralight spec at the moment.


Pat 
I believe there is at least ONE Carbon Dragon on  your side of the pond... I thought I read some place about one being built
 over there...






 
Looks as though the Dragon would be really fun. Provided you don`t want to go anywhere.  


Well they fit in a trailer just like the Race ships do  so you can GO XC and land out.. Your slow enough that your Chace crew easily keep under you as you go.... Its nice sometimes to have some eyes on the surface confirming Wind Direction and slope of chosen LZ Cool




It seems to me that Hangliders and paragliders are reinventing the wheel and doing everything that the the gliding movement went through in the 30`s. First the flight sticking to hills, then the venturing into thermals, then  going from thermal to thermal to go cross country. 


The fun thing about HangGliding is you often never know where you'll land...
 And when you do you meet some amazed people just full of Questions... 
They're shocked to learn you just flew 100 miles in a KITE hahahaha ...
BTW  I believe the Open Record is 450 miles and to a Declared Goal just under 400miles.....      
My longest is only 81 but have many 50 to 70 mile flights We have Oceans of trees  here that we have cross over
So Distance can be a reall challenge for us... I think our Area REcord is 125




Mark
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