
Has anybody done this on other planes? Specifically a Pacer? Any pics or info would be greatly appreciated.
SD

scottf wrote:Not a structural engineer so this may be way off base and a definitely and over-simplified example... but if you had a 2000 pound airplane with 2 struts on each side in a -1G maneuver, isn't each strut is supporting a compression load of around 500 pounds? Never tried it myself but it doesn't seem like a hammock, where only roughly half your body weight would be supported by a compression force on the wing strut would really tax the structure.
scottf wrote:For those pilots I'd recommend snoozing in the utility category.
I think I the rope angles necessitated by the the height of the wing tie down point are too extreme and overstressed the spreader bar so it's back to the drawing board on that one. Another thought I had that is similar to the tripod/teepee is a nylon tiedown strap for a tiedown which has a loop at about the same height as the bottom of the strut at the fuselage.this would put about 95lb worth of force on each.scottf wrote:Not a structural engineer so this may be way off base and a definitely and over-simplified example... but if you had a 2000 pound airplane with 2 struts on each side in a -1G maneuver, isn't each strut is supporting a compression load of around 500 pounds? Never tried it myself but it doesn't seem like a hammock, where only roughly half your body weight would be supported by a compression force on the wing strut would really tax the structure.
It's very comfortable, and with a little tightening of the straps, it hangs from the tie down of my P172D with my butt clearing the ground by several inches. It doesn't seem to pull the wing down any more than snugging tie downs does--and I'm at 192# as of a few days ago.Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest