Ton Wolfert
a.wo...@hccnet.nl
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I have flown the L-13 and the L-23 (no flap)
For the L-13, the flaps do lower landing speed and the angle of the fuselage
on approach which affects the AOA of the wing. I always found it was easier
to keep the tail wheel off the ground with full flap landings.. those
landing the L-13 without flaps tended to strike the tail wheel on the
ground, not good for the last fuselage former, and prone to cause cracks in
the mount.
I have not had a tail wheel problem with the L-23 and no flaps.
at 1/2 flaps, there is not detent so it must be held there, does allow
better performance in weak ridge/wave or thermals, full flaps does tend to
add to the drag factor. And there is a speed limit with full flaps.
BT
"A.Wolfert" <A.Wo...@hccnet.nl> wrote in message
news:bgjhpq$5va$1...@news.hccnet.nl...
The fowlers let you fly slower, core the thermal better and have a lower
minimum sink simultaneously.
Who cares about the polar? You are only going to do this at low speed,
but the improvement in climb performance is universal - climbs better
with flap out as long as you keep the speed down. Fly too fast and the
extra drag overcomes the benefit.
Bruce
--
henell
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Conversely, my club has had quite a bit of trouble with our L-23's
tailwheel (and the bulkhead which it is attached to) but no trouble
with our much older L-13s. This is despite the fact that probably 75%
or more of the L-13's landings are done with flaps retracted. This
surprised me as the 23's tailwheel LOOKS much more sturdy!
there is now a factory service bulletin to not push the aircraft backwards
across terrain, only paved surfaces.. the spring attach for the tail wheel
is not meant to flex when moved backwards.. only forwards..
BT
"nowhere" <now...@volcanomail.com> wrote in message
news:ad4b9842.0308...@posting.google.com...
The rubber donuts are weak, likely by design, to prevent damage to the
frames. Since both sets failed about the same time of year, I suspect wear
plus heat may be the culprits. Air temps have been in the upper 90F to over
100F daily since 7/1. Surface heat is much higher and the support donuts
are both close to the surface and in an enclosed area that may act something
of a collector. I don't know what effect 120-140F temperatures may have on
the rubber and don't know if it's vulcanized or not. I doubt if they are
custom made, but probably from some other application and adapted to the
tail wheel design. As they are relatively cheap, it would appear a 6 month
replacement cycle would be appropriate for our operation.
YMMV
Frank Whiteley
Colorado
"BTIZ" <bnosp...@coxdelete.net> wrote in message
news:ZPVZa.9576$2g.7946@fed1read05...
We have had three failures in one year with bulkhead 14 deforming on the
L13. One was a ground loop, the others appear to be overstress from
landing on rough grass. Might be an idea to start using flaps on landing
(current procedure is to land with no flaps) - or maybe the summary is
to get our runway graded again...
We try to move the Blaniks forward only for just this reason.
Unfortunately they do sometimes get moved backwards (either because of
ignorance or laziness) and this in addition to the many potholes on
our grass strip certainly puts some strain on them. Pushing backwards
was quite common before we bought a golf cart for towing the gliders
around the field so the ships probably did suffer a lot from this.
One thing I have noticed is that the tails take a lot of abuse when
the ship is braked too hard after landing, putting the nose on the
ground and letting the tail come down with an almighty bang when the
glider comes to a halt. This is likely excacerbated on the 23 as there
is a perception in the club that it is roomier than the 13 with the
result that it is frequently flown by the larger pilots. If you get a
couple of big people on board both wearing chutes the nose grounds out
quite easily. I just ignore the wheel brake altogether normally. The
landing roll of a Blanik on a grass strip into our usual headwind is
virtually nil even without the brakes!