benyflyguy
En-Route
Saw this over on reddit. Pretty scary.
Over on BeechTalk somebody said the video was leaked by the investigators.2:45 if you don't want to sit through a bunch of ignoring vfr cloud clearances and get to the exciting part. Very nearly a natural selection event. I'm constantly amazed by people who do unbelievably stupid things and then post video on the internet.
Over on BeechTalk somebody said the video was leaked by the investigators.
This was in New Zealand, I believe; the rules may allow for cumulogranite hunting.2:45 if you don't want to sit through a bunch of ignoring vfr cloud clearances and get to the exciting part. Very nearly a natural selection event. I'm constantly amazed by people who do unbelievably stupid things and then post video on the internet.
From the conversation, it appears that they got it sorted without actually hitting anything.Did the glider suffer damage?
The student is probably a certified pilot seeking a glider rating. Certainly bad decision-making, whoever made the decision, to head to the left over the ridge. Should have turned right and stayed upwind.From what I could tell it was totally legal, until they went into the cloud. From what I could see of the rules, Clear of clouds was all that was really required within 3000 feet of the ground. Based on the video it looks like they were more like 5-700feet. Which would have been legal even in the USA.
I think this was probably a case of who is PIC? The instructor in the back seat had more limited visibility and probably thought the pilot flying (student?) could see where they were going. The pilot flying probably thought the instructor would say something if the pushed into the clouds to far.
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL
I read of something similar, but as a way to get through a cloud layer from VFR-on-top. Being in the clouds would likely end up like the glider video.Glider pilots are pretty nuts. Bruno Vassal's YouTube channel has some good pucker factor moments in there as well
**what happened here was stupid.. however, I will say that, these guys stayed relatively calm and they survived this incredibly close near death experience thanks to staying calm and level headed**
QUESTION: I thought I read somewhere that back in the bi-plane days a common way to get out of IMC was to put the plane in a spin and fall out the bottom.. that's basically what happened here, no?
Yea, hard to stay shiny side up without a gyro of any kind.
Indeed!!So long as the bottom of the clouds and the bottom of the sky are far enough apart
Spin vs "graveyard spiral". I'm guessing the latter.QUESTION: I thought I read somewhere that back in the bi-plane days a common way to get out of IMC was to put the plane in a spin and fall out the bottom.. that's basically what happened here, no?
That lasted into WWII. I used to fly with a guy who was a PB4Y-2 pilot who said most military pilots weren’t trained on instruments, they just flew formation on somebody who was. Even in the PB4Y they were taught to spin down through the clouds if necessary.QUESTION: I thought I read somewhere that back in the bi-plane days a common way to get out of IMC was to put the plane in a spin and fall out the bottom.
Glider can slip like any other airplane. Gliders also have spoilers.Gliders can be pretty slippery. Getting to VNE can happen fast.
Damn... I can't imagine spinning a plane that big!That lasted into WWII. I used to fly with a guy who was a PB4Y-2 pilot who said most military pilots weren’t trained on instruments, they just flew formation on somebody who was. Even in the PB4Y they were taught to spin down through the clouds if necessary.
That’s actually one of the least unimaginable things that generation did IMO. Voluntarily or not, they had some big brass ones.Damn... I can't imagine spinning a plane that big!
QUESTION: I thought I read somewhere that back in the bi-plane days a common way to get out of IMC was to put the plane in a spin and fall out the bottom.. that's basically what happened here, no?
Some gliders have a ball indicator which could help in an emergency, but I don’t think it makes the glider IFR certified!
A skid ball won't help you in IMC. Gliders usually have a yaw string instead of a skid ball, does the same thing but more sensitive. You can see it taped to the canopy in the video.
My boss when I was flying gliders told me about the Bohli compass, but I couldn’t figure it out from his description...had to build a model of one. Cool instrument.Some gliders do have turn coordinators, some are starting to even have electronic attitude indicators, There is even one called a Bohli compass that is totally unpowered. Current US Soaring competition rules prohibit having working attitude instruments installed during competitions. It is an old rule that was intended to prevent competitors from try to get an advantage by flying into clouds.
http://www.hkavionics.com/Bohli_man/ba_kompi_e4.pdf
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL
Glider pilots are pretty nuts. Bruno Vassal's YouTube channel has some good pucker factor moments in there as well
The bad decisions made in this flight, and there are many, abhor me. I just want to assure those on the board who are not glider pilots that we are not all so stupid.
I have no Idea what it is. Not a common thing.Non-glider person here.
What was the flashing light on the instrument panel.??
Correction: Most glider pilots aren’t nuts. Bruno however pushes the edge of that.
^^^ Lance isn’t nuts. Nor is @brcase. Nor a bunch of others. One other here who contests regularly for distance is now a DPE in almost all fixed wing categories. He’s also not nuts.^^^
Non-glider person here.
What was the flashing light on the instrument panel.??
I have so Idea what it is. Not a common thing.
Brian
CFIIG/ASEL
The engine out warning.Non-glider person here.
What was the flashing light on the instrument panel.??
It was flashing. Totally makes sense.The engine out warning.
Some gliders do have turn coordinators, some are starting to even have electronic attitude indicators, There is even one called a Bohli compass that is totally unpowered. Current US Soaring competition rules prohibit having working attitude instruments installed during competitions. It is an old rule that was intended to prevent competitors from try to get an advantage by flying into clouds.
I'm probably missing something, but every compass I've ever seen is unpowered (other than the electric light if it's illuminated).