Mike quote
“----The winch-man could be the pilot’s only hope. His job should be to watch the glider like a hawk and ease up at the first sign of trouble. Note ‘ease up’ the tension and not kill it. ---”
BC response:
Good suggestion Mike, about the, “---Note ‘ease up’ the tension and not kill it. ---”
I had been watching for the winch to either be under load after the crash or back lashing due to freewheeling the winch/reel. I forgot to include my findings in my previous posts.
While the truck was braking to a stop I could see some slack in the towline a time or two, right in the truck box area, and I remember now about gnashing my teeth when seeing the total slack and waiting for a winch lock up with a snag due to the slack. Fortunately it did not lock up the winch/reel.
A lock up due to A back lashing snag would have added to the problem moving a pilot that should be immobilized due to a possible spinal injury.
I would expect the weaklink would brake if the winch snagged and froze up before the tow truck came to a stop. But----
Depending where the weaklink was installed the crash might have snagged the towline beyond the weaklink dragging the glider and not breaking the weaklink.
Good reason to not totally kill the line tension just like you said.
Mike you just proved one of my points about the benefit of brainstorming a problem. You mentioned the, “Note ‘ease up’ the tension and not kill it. ---”
--when I forgot to put it in my posts. It is an important consideration for platform pilots that hadn’t thought of that problem before.
Thanks Mike, for catching that and posting it.
I let it get away.
Mike quote “---Apologies for any egg sucking tuition given and mild dyslexia.”
BC response--
I compose all my posts in Microsoft Works Word Processor first and still it comes out looking like it does.
When I walked across the stage to get my high school diploma all my English teachers broke out in tears, went to the bar later and got drunk toasting each others efforts of scarcely getting rid of me.