Certainly there is some loss of efficiency when gliding at higher weights, as the best glide speed will come with increasing parasitic drag. Is it simply negligible?
c) is the answer...The point is increase airspeed to increase energy so ya got some to deal with things.
Glad I got it right. But my reasoning had nothing to do with "increasing energy", but with minimizing the time in the headwind.
There's no free lunch, so in a glider it sure seems like any increase in energy has to come from a decrease in altitude, and I still think that's a net negative in general.
But, again, I'm no glider pilot.
If you are slower than your max L/D, then increasing your airspeed (hence kinetic energy) will actually reduce your altitude loss (per mile).
This is why I said that question is bogus.
Glad I got it right. But my reasoning had nothing to do with "increasing energy", but with minimizing the time in the headwind.
There's no free lunch, so in a glider it sure seems like any increase in energy has to come from a decrease in altitude, and I still think that's a net negative in general.
But, again, I'm no glider pilot.
Thats pretty much it. Doesn't necessarily have to be a loss of altitude, just how fast you're going down in the piece of air you're in. If it's going up pretty fast you can be going down in it, but gaining altitude.
I'm getting it that when weight changes, airspeed must change to maintain the best glide angle available . But I'm having trouble getting my head wrapped around that the glide angle will be shallower and I will travel farther, or the same distance over the ground when I'm heavier. Wouldn't that make the whole Newton and the Apple thing a lie?
I've just started on getting a Glider add on rating. Here's a question on the Pre-solo test I've been given to do.
A sailplane pilot should do which of the following when flying his final approach into a 20 mph headwind and seems to be under shooting.
a) Raise nose to slow just above stall speed and decrease the sink rate.
b) Use spoilers
c). Lower nose to increase penetration
d) Stretch the glide by flying at minimum sink speed
Everything I've read so far tells me that "minimum sink speed" is the same thing as "minimum rate of descent"' so I'm throwing out a) and d) because angle is what I need, not rate. I'm tempted to go with b), but that implies I have some spoiler out and my "use" would be to bring them back in. c) I don't get. Is there some thing called "penetration" that is the answer? All I can see is penetrating something short of the runway.
Ok. I'm at the Gliderport. c) is the answer. The point is increase airspeed to increase energy so ya got some to deal with things. It isn't about trying to "stretch" the the glide by shallowing the glide angle which obviously won't work. It may get you down in ground effect which might get you to the runway. If there are "things" on short final you might have some energy to "jump" them.
Which is the whole deal with wave soaring. You're flying forward fast enough not to move over the ground, but airspeed is relatively high, and you're going up like a freight elevator.
Old Sol provides glider pilots (and power pilots who need it and recognize it) with lots of "free lunch".
If you haven't thermaled a power plane, you're missing out. Very little glider time and you'll learn how to feel the "bump" of running into a nice solid updraft, and the automatic reaction to circle in it. Heh.
I've done it in the 182 to hurry up the climb out of a valley. Thump, turn, find the center, move the edge of the circle, try to spot the feature on the surface that's creating the heat source, just for reference, ahh nice, 2000+ fpm up with full power...
2nd floor, housewares, kitchen appliances, going UP!
Always fun to see where the beanstalk goes. Ha.
Hang out in a thermal for a minute or two, and bail at your proposed cruising altitude and no need to slog along at low airspeed for miles in the climb. Now you're already at cruise speed or can get there real quick.
They both . . . float?
Ok as one of the resident glider nerds, here is the reasoning for answer C.
First the wrong answers.
a) Just above stall speed is even worse than min sink.
b) should be obvious. When low you do not need to increase your sink rate
d )Min sink is good for thermaling, but it had a lower glide ratio than max L/D. You will maximize time in the air, but not distance.
Correct Anser
C is correct because a headwind is reducing your ground speed. since glide ratio is a function of sink rate (time aloft) and ground speed, the optimum speed in sink and/or a headwind will be greater than your best L/D speed (no wind/no sink). As an added bonus you will have some extra energy when encountering the likely wind gradient in this scenario.
For some good L/D explanations this site is very good.
http://avia.tion.ca/documentation/polar/
True, best answer would be to not be in that situation in the first place. I guess I should have said "best answer" and also stated that the assumption would be that the glider is at the book landing speed.
Well if you are low and slow in a Schweizer you are pretty much frucked anyway...
You should feel right at home in something with the glide ratio of an auto rotating helicopter ;-)
Btw where are you flying?