Hi Mike,
While Bill works at feeling better and finding his detailed info, I may be able to help some. I've been a crew member using an ATOL truck tow system (and been towed up by that method 150-200 times). As a crew member, I've participated in (easily) a few hundred truck tows. An average turn around time (getting the glider on board the truck, then launching, achieving altitude, releasing the glider, rewinding the tow line and returning the truck to the flight line) was in the area of 15 minutes. Lower altitude tows could go faster and "step tows" could go 50% or more longer.
I've also done some aerotowing, but that was a long time ago (mid to late 1980s). If memory serves, from glider set up (as in attaching it to the tow plane) to the tow plane being ready to tow the next person, the turn around time was ~ 15 - 20 minutes. The process was a bit quicker then because we weren't yet using "carts" for the gliders. We simply ran off the ground behind the tow plane. Adding in the use of a cart obviously lengthens the turn around time - but also may not have that much effect. The reason being, having multiple carts available one pilot could be getting their glider prepared on one cart while another pilot is on another cart about to be towed.
Of course, turn around times also depend upon what altitude the pilot is towed to before release. Turn around time for someone being towed to 500 feet is much quicker than someone being tower up to 3,000 feet.
All the tow operations I've been involved with were more informal commercial operations, as opposed to high intensity tow operations. I've seen a good number of videos where (high volume) tow pilots come very close to DIVING out of the sky after they release their tow pilot. Clearly, when you need to make a (bigger) profit turn around times can be made quicker!
MikeLake wrote:Out of interest what’s the turnaround time for an average launch using your payout system(s)? Or indeed any other towing you might do.