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For those that have the my short take off demo, they will find it hard to believe , its possible to get in somewhere a little EXTRA short , but believe me if you push it , you better be ready, when somewhere I cant make a step turn , I have found my EMERGENCY ROPE can save the day, you have to find a light cord your thrust will break ahead of time , Taxi to shore, tie the tail over the bank and tight to a tree, then just get in and firewall it , I would be the last to admit its happened ...but..
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Even though it was an April first post, it makes sense when you're talking about floats and skis, where you don't have a brake option. May I make a suggestion when using this method?
You cut the rope/cord, so that you have a short piece attached to the aircraft, preferably by a hitch, and long piece attached to shore, also with a hitch. Then use a sheet bend to attach the aircraft rope to the shore rope, as close to the aircraft as practical.
The breaking strain at the sheet bend will be approximately half that of the rope, and the hitches should be much stronger than this. This way, you control where the break is going to happen. Otherwise, you might have it break at the far end, and with the recoil, it may end up fouling control surfaces or even wrapping itself around the propeller.
Decent quality 6mm cord would beak at around 1,500 lbs at a sheet bend, so probably 5mm cord or less, tested for an appriopriate breaking strain at a sheet bend before hand is probably the way to go, otherwise you might find it too hard to break.
Cheers,
Paul
Paul -
Just wondering why the sheet bend (my favorite Boy Scout knot) breaking strain is half of the rest of the rope?
Thanks - Brad
ME and granny knots get along fine, the tail tie down is sharp enough to aid in cutting the rope, but thanks for all the cool suggestions
I am not - please describe the method/technique
Dave
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