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Conference vmszoo::rc

Title:Welcome To The Radio Control Conference
Notice:dir's in 11, who's who in 4, sales in 6, auctions 19
Moderator:VMSSG::FRIEDRICHS
Created:Tue Jan 13 1987
Last Modified:Thu Jun 05 1997
Last Successful Update:Fri Jun 06 1997
Number of topics:1706
Total number of notes:27193

583.0. "Flying in Strong Wind" by --UnknownUser-- () Mon Jun 27 1988 11:13

T.RTitleUserPersonal
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583.1Wind blows you Peace of Mind!MJOVAX::BENSON__Frank Benson, DTN 348-2244__Mon Jun 27 1988 13:2613
    I've done that myself, several times... The turn becomes a hover
    as you come into the wind.  That's why I'm very thankful we keep
    a nice area of high weeds off the end of the runway... you can just
    set it down into those with little fear of damage.
    
    In higher winds, I find that I start my final 180 about 40' UPWIND
    of the downwind threshold (at about 10' altitude) and can usually 
    place it well in the center of the field!
    
                             |                      
   \	       	         ____|____                      /   Regards,
    \________________________O_________________________/    Frank.
    
583.2wind 2, airplanes 0!ANNAP::COXScott C. CoxMon Jun 27 1988 14:2842
    Well, I did it now!  As my wife says "I ran out of airplanes and
    had to come home early".  This weekend here in Maryland was interesting
    to say the least!
    
    The winds were out of the south at about 10-15 with gusts over 20.
     The problem was that our runway at GMAC runs east-west and is about
    20 yards from a line of trees to the south so we were in a wind
    shadow.  Taxiing was great  and takeoffs smooth and uneventful.
     The Eagle 63 with the O.S. FS-48 was running beautifully until
    I climbed to about 50' when the wind hit me.  Having soloed only
    a month ago, my first reaction was that I was taking RF interference,
    the plane acted like I was over controlling and dual rates didn't
    help.  I decided to get down to safety fast and made a BIG mistake
    by turning into the wind and throttling back to idle.  With the
    flat bottom airfoil  and gusts it was a nightmare.  I finally got
    down and hooked a wingtip slightly but enough to crack a wing bolt
    attachment.
    
    After calming down I decided to take up the Duraplane, nothing can
    hurt it, right?  Same situation smooth takeoff right into h**l at
    about 50' but the Duraplane was able to penetrate the wind  but
    the gusts were hard for a novice like me to handle.  If you all
    remember Our field has two radar test platforms at each end 80'
    tall and made of steel girders.  On my cross-wind approach to final
    I was blown into the east tower at about 3/4 throttle.  There it
    was jammed into a stair railing 80' from the ground.  Luckily one
    of the NASA security guards was watching us fly and had a key to
    unlock the gate to let me climb the tower to retrieve my Duraplane.
     Guess what?  After hitting the railing and being jammed tight enough
    to get hung up the only damage was a slight dent on the leading
    edge of the wind and a cut fuel line when the externally mounted
    tank was thrown against the propeller!  They could use this story
    in their advertising!
    
    That was enough for one day!  So I sat around and watched people
    destrou one Electric Lady, cartwheel a 1/2 A pylon racer and land
    a PT 40 in the weeds!  I did learn an important lesson - look at
    the leaves on the trees to determine wind conditions everywhere
    not just where you're standing and never cut power when flying into
    gusty winds.
    
    Scott