...although I may be more challenged than most...
Nah. You're in the top tenth of a percent. If you represented just average challenged then hang gliding would have no problems beyond the immutable physics of the environment.
...and I don't think getting it through to students would be all that useful as long as they understand the towline will not impart any control input.
Yeah, that's good enough to make someone a safe, competent flyer. But a real PILOT should understand the physics of what's going on. And the more real pilots we have in the population the fewer opinions we're gonna hear. And the easier it will be to disembowel morons who have them.
The center of gravity of the system has still shifted, has it not?
Yes and no. It's shifted in space but the glider doesn't really understand that because it can't see the horizon and is only reacting to what it feels. (Kinda like if one of us humans flies a Cessna into a cloud bank he's screwed without an artificial horizon.)
Are you saying that the loading is only balanced because the glider rolls to make it balanced?
Yeah. But think of it as one of those Einsteinian thought experiments Brian Greene illustrates on Nova. Leave the glider alone, instantly shift the Earth and increase its mass.
And why does the glider feel the need to roll to stay perpendicular to gravity?
It doesn't know it's rolling. It thinks it's remaining level.
Most gliders have pretty neutral roll stability. When you put them in a bank they'll stay at that bank despite the fact that gravity has moved.
It stays in the bank BECAUSE OF the fact that gravity has moved. When you use muscle to initiate and coordinate the turn you're thrown to the outside of the curve by centrifugal force (the glider wants to turn, Sir Isaac says you're trying to keep going straight (which you will start doing again if your carabiner fails)). Centrifugal force is measured in Gs. G is short for Gravity. The glider can't tell the difference between you pulling yours and Earth pulling its.
I can understand what you're saying with regard to pitch, as gliders have positive pitch stability.
We're not concerned about stability here - just how the glider initially responds. If you keep pulling from the front then the glider will trim to a stable pitch attitude and climb. If you keep pulling from the side you'll soon find yourself in a lockout. But forget those - just think about the glider's initial reaction.
At any rate, if the glider says 'gravity has shifted' when a rope pulls the pilot, what does it say when the pilot pushes/pulls on the control frame?
When the pilot pushes/pulls on the control frame there MUST/WILL be differential wire tension. Points on the glider - nose, tail, left and right wings - WILL be unequally loaded and the glider will know its center of gravity is no longer balanced and will react accordingly.
Roll left, roll right, pitch down, pitch up.
Yes.
I believe that in the roll cases as long as the passengers stay at the wingtip...
Again, don't worry about what happens as things progress, just the initial response. That's all we need for the purposes of the exercise (and I'll probably find myself out of my depth if we take things too far).
But we're talking about 100% weight shift, which is as I previously said how I thought pitch control was effected.
Yes. And roll control is basically/partially effected the same way.
Where does differential wire tension come in for pitch?
The same thing. Look what happens with your nose wires when you push out - or tail wires when you pull in.
If the nose/tail wires are just there to keep the control frame from collapsing, I don't see why the tension on them would be significant.
They do most of their work keeping the control frame from collapsing when you're pushing out and pulling in.
How about attaching the tow rope solely to the keel at the hang point, then?
We had a discussion with Mike about that on Kite Strings. That was an idea Bart Doets had - and somebody else experimented with - before people figured out you needed to route half or more of the tension through the pilot.
Mike Lake - 2011/03/08
Glider scrap.
Poor fellow, a vegetable for a while then spent the rest of his life as someone else.
One of several really good reasons why I don't fly with "backup" releases.
It's pulling on the same part of the glider as when attached to the pilot. Is the only advantage of towing from the pilot over this configuration the fact that his weight shifts will be more effective with his increased effective weight?
Mike Lake - 2011/03/08
Pulling from nothing but the hang point, by this I mean a SINGLE line at just the heart bolt area is fine and offers the same roll stability (or a reduction in instability) as other configurations.
The trouble is a small surge can (and does) rotate the glider around the pilot. It's easy to visualise how this would happen.
On my early two point designs I always considered the bottom line to be there just to stop the glider tucking.
No.
I'm still fuzzy on the rope/magnet thing.
To make things easier and cheaper... Lose the flying wing passenger plane and truck tow a sailplane - using the surface tow point under the CG - out on the salt flats. The sailplane reacts to the rope the same way a hang glider does. Gas the truck and the sailplane pitches up. Swerve to the left and the sailplane rolls to the right.
Or, hell, just run around on a soccer field with a kid's kite.
Because we execute the most dangerous portions of flight from the downtubes.
1. When flying from the slopes on one of those portions we fly from the downtubes by necessity, the other we nearly always fly by choice - often a really poor one.
2. I'm not remembering any of the hundreds of "students" I launched off the dunes having down versus base tube specific problems.
Transitioning early off launch can be very hazardous.
Any time anyone takes a hand off the control frame CAN - depending on the circumstances - be very hazardous. This is a point that folk like Donnell, Peter, and purveyors and users of the Wallaby Release address through massive denial.
I wasn't there but that may have been the cause of Danny Jones's crash.
I dunno. Conditions were nasty, I'm having a hard time visualizing someone fighting a roll with his hands on the downtubes and letting go of a lot of pressure at a critical moment without a lot of incentive do do so, and I've never before heard of something like this precipitating an incident. It's kinda like taking your hand off to blow the first stage on your Koch release - it's not time critical, you can do it pretty much at your convenience when everything is reasonable.
It's difficult to transition while flying with any speed.
Which is why I think it's a really good idea to stay on the basetube until the glider trims out in ground effect.
If I need to turn immediately off launch (e.g., ridge soaring in light wind), I'll stay upright until I'm established on the ridge.
I wish everyone had learned soaring on the dunes. One tends to lose a lot of inhibitions when several inches become critical.
Somewhat unfortunate example. I DID admit being wrong - the problem is that I WASN'T. We subsequently figured out that what was going on WAS consistent with the vector diagrams.
Much better example was when we were dissecting adverse yaw and you fixed my thinking about sweep being analogous to a rudder instead of a vertical stabilizer.
http://kitestrings.prophpbb.com/post31.html#p31I'd had that stuck in my head wrong for decades.