Probably the same as arthritis mobility Mike which the members are familiar 
with. 

From: Mike Borgelt 
Sent: Tuesday, December 01, 2015 4:41 PM
To: [email protected] ; Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in 
Australia. 
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Wing frequency Procedure

I wonder if/how the frequency varies with temperature with glass gliders????


Mike





At 04:18 PM 12/1/2015, you wrote:


  From the old MOSP 50. Section 3 on Form 2s 

  Â ============================================Â 

  3-2-2

  (3) Wing Frequency Check

  All new sailplanes delivered now have stated in their airworthiness 
documentation the natural vibrational frequency of at least the wings.

  We all know that a drinking glass will “ring” when tapped, but if it is 
cracked it will be “dead”. Similarly our sailplane structure will respond 
to internal damage, loos wing root fittings etc by changing the frequency at 
which it wants to vibrate. 

  Clearly it will be important to KNOW the frequency of the structure when new 
and keep track of any natural lowering of this value with age such that a 
sudden change can be detected and become meaningful. 

  Â 

  WHEN:

  At each Form 2 and after any air load or ground load incident particularly 
heavy landings and ground loops.

  HOW:

  With the sailplane sitting on its undercarriage, tyres at correct pressure, 
on a paved surface, empty, wings level, gently grasp one wing tip and shake it 
up and down. The wing will flex at a steady rate. It will find its own 
frequency and it is next to impossible for you to change it. Using a suitable 
watch, time the natural frequency, a complete cycle being UP and DOWN. This 
value should then be compared to what was found last time or what is specified 
for that sailplane.

  Â 

  As a guide only, some typical values:-

  F.R.P ……  Â   135 cycles per minute

  Wood  ……3">    180 cycles per minute

  Metal  ……Â    192 cycles per minute

  Â 

  Remember -Â  excessive heaving and shoving at the wing tip can be quite 
damaging. 

  ============================================

  Regards

  SWK



    ----- Original Message -----

    From:

    "Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia." 
<[email protected]>


    To:

    "Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia." 
<[email protected]>

    Cc:


    Sent:

    Tue, 1 Dec 2015 15:15:48 +1100

    Subject:

    Re: [Aus-soaring] Wing frequency Procedure



    >>a document on how the GFA would like it performed


    Doesn't this vary from manufacturer to manufacturer? Some allow wing

    frequency checks while on the wheel while others require the fuselage

    to be in a cradle or similar. My guess is that the GFA would say

    'follow the manufacturer's recommendations'.


    Here's one they prepared earlier:


    Wing oscillation frequency:

    approx. 160/min 15 m span with winglets

    approx. 130/min: 18 m span without parting

    approx. 124/min: 18 m span with parting and winglets


    Aircraft should rest on both wheels during frequency measurements.


    I think the last part is critical for each manufacturer.


    D

    _______________________________________________

    Aus-soaring mailing list

    [email protected]

    http://lists.base64.com.au/listinfo/aus-soaring


  _______________________________________________
  Aus-soaring mailing list
  [email protected]
  http://lists.base64.com.au/listinfo/aus-soaring
Borgelt Instruments - design & manufacture of quality soaring instrumentation 
since 1978
www.borgeltinstruments.com
tel:   07 4635 5784     overseas: int+61-7-4635 5784
mob: 042835 5784                 :  int+61-42835 5784
P O Box 4607, Toowoomba East, QLD 4350, Australia 



--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
_______________________________________________
Aus-soaring mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.base64.com.au/listinfo/aus-soaring
_______________________________________________
Aus-soaring mailing list
[email protected]
http://lists.base64.com.au/listinfo/aus-soaring

Reply via email to