Moin Arp.
ARP wrote:I have flown a divergent hang glider so it is possible to do
Was it a publicly known model? The valkyrie perhaps?
but it needs constant attention as, once passed a certain point, weight shift will not retrieve the situation.
My thoughts are mainly a result of contemplating why riding a bike comes so easy to us humans:
1) Pitch instability of a wing and roll instability of a bike are quite similar. Both provide a torque that gets worse the farther away the system is from equilibrium. This sounds like bad news. But it is actually good. For it also means, the torque reduces to arbitrarily small values when close to balance.
2) We use the vestibular system and visible clues to detect any beginning fall. For this to work most efficiently, the orientation of the pilot should be fixed relative to the wing. Dangling from from a hang strap is probably less than optimal.
3) Controls should be sensitive. On the bike you can turn the handle by at least 90°. But only a few degrees are needed to keep us from falling.
4) Controls should be as effortless as possible. On the bike, next to no muscles are needed to operate the handle.
Sensitivity and effortlessness are kind of conflicting. Pulleys or lever action to improve one will also worsen the other. I try to come up with ways to let the legs do the work.
After take off the tail would need to be pulled down to its "in-flight angle" and then locked adding to the complexity of the glider.
Fair enough.Unstable during launch is probably not a good idea. I still like the idea to make a pitch stable glider unstable on landing.
Try it out on models first before committing life and limb in full size testing.
A good amount of training on a ground simulator will probably be necessary to train reflexes. Actually, a simulator will help me to see whether or not the whole idea is sound or just a case of wishful day-dreaming.
---<)kaimartin(>---