Django wrote:
I've always wondered how they didn't just rip the cable right off the glider from the force of going from a dead stop to airborne in a few seconds.
The line which payed out from the drum in the tow aircraft was steel. The "snatch line" draped across
the poles was Nylon and stretched somewhat like a bungee cord. The design of the winch played a large
part in gradually transferring the load of the static target to the towbird and reeling them in.
If you go back to the thread Wheels Up linked to about the Dreamflight 2009 project Gliderman1 and I (starting page 3)
start to get into the "bits and pieces" of the apparatus. He and I disagree on a few points..but it was a pretty fascinating
discussion for me...there ain't a lot of material on this subject on the web or in books, for that matter.
We've had unseasonably good weather and my workload has been rather brutal..but crappy weather is due
soon, so maybe as soon as this weekend we can resume that thread.

The first time in a long time that I've
been "happy" about crap weather!!! I have a few corrections and misunderstandings tied to wording I'd like
to clarify and discuss the subject further with Charles.
Because of the fallout of interest in Dreamflight, I finally found a copy online of All American's, "Air Pick-up Handbook"...
Found and started to read a copy of the CG-4A Repair Manual and a few other goodies. No telling what else will turnup
as this project gathers momentum.
The apparatus has come a long way from rural Australians posting their mail into a "bucket or bag"
tied to an aircraft flying in a banking cone overhead while the farmer posted!!!(IIRC)
