Bob Kuczewski - 2011/11/19 21:01:28 UTC
Tad claims he wants to be very exact about this sport, but then he makes ridiculous statements like "EVERYBODY" does this or that.
Get your DNA sequenced. Fifty bucks says they're gonna find a big gap where the common sense was supposed to be.
That might not make much difference to you, but how do you think all the instructors feel who ARE doing it right?
They're probably curled up under the covers sobbing uncontrollably as we speak.
Does Tad ever think about them when he paints with his sweeping broad brush? No.
If there WERE any instructors who really cared about this issue the way they should they'd read that statement, say "Damn right!", and be here standing shoulder to shoulder with me and organizing to get something done.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=14931
Tad's release (even more)
Freedomspyder - 2009/02/14 17:43:30 UTC
Tad,
I've found your posts on both hook-in checks and releases very interesting and well thought out.
Best of luck dealing with the Oz Report forum cult and its leader.
Where the hell have they been when I've been out there on one the postmortems on the Jack and Davis Shows firing in all directions till my barrels are glowing red with just about zilch in the way of help? Where are their magazine articles? How much support did they give Doug Hildreth when he was screaming this message for fourteen years?
The only thing Tad really thinks about is how he can seek revenge on everyone who's disrespected him.
The ONLY thing? Give some of the threads here a skim. Certainly one of the more enjoyable things but far from the only.
He's using your safety as an excuse to commit his jihad against everyone else.
I'm sure Zack will thank you from rescuing him from the delusional fog in which he's been lost all this time.
If you've ever been in a windy, gusty, cliff launch situation with minimal crew, you will know that lift and tugging before committing to launch is NOT something you want to be doing.
If you've ever been in a windy, gusty, cliff launch situation with minimal crew, you're a moron who's a threat not only to yourself but to your minimal crew, the vehicles in the parking area behind launch, and the already thinly stretched national emergency response and medical care resources.
You might get away with it on any given day, but you've increased your statistical exposure significantly.
Yeah? You got actual statistics on that? Just kidding. How 'bout something anecdotal then? Don't worry, I've got plenty of time...
And for what? Because you can't remember the hook-in check that you did 30 to 60 seconds ago?
A lot of people have ended their hang gliding careers because they remembered the hook-in check they did thirty to sixty seconds ago. Our buddy Rooney had a major interruption of his like that and his passenger probably lost a lot of appreciation for the sport that afternoon.
If you really aren't disciplined enough to remain hooked in for that period of time (just prior to launch), then please stay out of any air where anyone else is flying.
Ya know what, Bob? 99.9 percent of the time ANYBODY is DISCIPLINED enough to remain hooked in for that - or damn near ANY - period of time.
1977/03/05 - Robert Sage - 23 - Kestrel - Sierra Vista, Arizona
In the process of switching his wire launch man, Sage forgot to hook in.
1979/06/22 - Marvin (Sam) White - 20 - Alpha 185 - Chandler Mountain - Steele, Alabama
A tragedy with a clear lesson. White did a harness check on himself, but then unhooked to check his cousin's gear. Forgot to hook in again. Fell 150 feet to a rocky ledge.
Doug Hildreth - 1991/04
Werner Graf, a Long Beach, California pilot was vacationing in Switzerland in October 1990. He prepared to launch, but unhooked to adjust his camera. He then proceeded to launch without hooking back in.
Since this pilot was killed outside the United States he will not be counted as a U.S. fatality. But it should be noted that he is just as dead as he would be had it happened in the U.S., and we report it here to once again try to get everyone's attention about this extremely basic, but terribly serious mistake. You MUST ensure that you ARE hooked in within 15 seconds of launch--EVERY TIME.
Bill Bryden - 2000/09
This is an old topic with another tragic ending. Richard Morris Zadorozney died April 26 when he launched without being hooked into his glider. We discussed the topic of hook-in failures a year and a half ago and Luen Miller and Doug Hildreth discussed it almost annually for the decade before I started authoring this column.
Richard was an advanced pilot with at least fourteen years of hang gliding experience. He was a very active pilot, flying once and often twice a week year round. On the fateful day, he was planning to go X-C from a site about fifty miles east of San Diego with a couple of other pilots. Richard prepared to launch and had two spectators assist holding his side wires. Another pilot behind Richard observed his suspension and saw that it was looping up from the back of his harness up under one wing, suggesting he was hooked in, but it probably was simply secured to his shoulder area.
He did not lift the glider to do a hook-in check before launching and was reportedly distracted, talking to the wire-men just before launch about the relative safety of hang gliders versus the motorcycles that they drove. Richard did not loiter on launch and presumably was rather impatient to join a buddy in the air.
The problem is that people are human and humans get DISTRACTED and make mistakes - except, of course, magnificent and perfect examples of human evolution such as yourself.
Zack... Steve Kinsley doesn't think he's disciplined enough to remain hooked in for that period of time (just prior to launch), and I'm sure he'd be honored to have him in the air with you any time you feel like it.
I don't really want anyone who DOESN'T doubt everything I say participating in this forum. This is not and will never be a "'cause Tad says" sorta place.
Tad is lying right there. This is exactly a "Jim Rooney is not welcome ... because Tad says so" kind of place.
Well, actually Jim Rooney is not welcome 'cause he's a nasty stupid lying hypocritical scumbag who spends all his spare time convincing people who've crashed because of 130 pound Greenspot failure that it kept them from locking out and dying a couple of seconds later and Kite Strings is a forum devoted to the scientific advancement of hang gliding. But, hell, you created and are modeling US Hawks for people just like him so he'll always have a place to call home and I have no doubt whatsoever that you two will get along famously.
Tad used lift-and-tug for decades at many sites in every sort of conditions without issue.
Lots of people can tell you that they've used lots of techniques throughout their career without issue. So from a statistical standpoint, Tad's assertion means nothing.
But when you throw in Rob Kells and consider that reports of lift and tug incidents are NONEXISTENT and will still be at the conclusion of your post the assertion starts amounting to something.
And he's not flying anymore so I can't challenge him to go to a site in difficult conditions and demonstrate his approach with enough repeatability to be statistically significant.
I go to ANY site in difficult conditions I'm gonna have enough crew to do the job with more than the half inch of safety margin that you always leave for yourself. I can tighten the goddam strap and launch and relaunch till hell freezes over without the tight strap EVER being an issue.
Go through thirty years of magazines and any forum you can think of and find an incident report to indicate that that's not the case for everyone.
Instead, he's urging people like you to stand on the edge of a cliff in life-threatening conditions and allow the glider to float up - substantially out of your control - just to verify that you're hooked in.
No Bob, I'm URGING people like YOU to stand on the edge of a cliff in life-threatening conditions as often as possible and I don't give a rat's ass whether or not you allow the glider to float up. Just don't do it with an adequate crew and DO do it as frequently as possible.
Be my guest Zack. Please let us know how that works out for you.
It'll work out just fine for him 'cause he's smart and responsible enough to always have adequate crew.
As far as I'm aware, Bob, you've never attempted it in the conditions you're afraid of.
And I never will.
But you WILL launch in conditions you're afraid of. And I'm TOTALLY cool with that.
You said to try it with people on my wires, and in those circumstances I might try it.
- Meaning you've NEVER ONCE EVEN DONE IT when you've had people on your wires. And it sounds like you've never once done it in the most benign conditions imaginable 'cause if you had you'd be be doing it when you had crew.
- You MIGHT *TRY* IT. How extraordinarily brave! Just who we need in a discussion on hook-in checks.
But I've wrestled with enough gliders on launch to know that I'm NOT going to do that when I don't have a full crew to back me up.
Yeah, just keep doing that Bob. Make LOTS of launches with inadequate crew in conditions in which you hafta wrestle gliders so close to the margin that letting the strap go tight is gonna tip the balance.
I've personally seen gliders get flipped on launch flinging their pilots like rag dolls through the air and slamming them onto the ground.
UNDOUBTEDLY solely because they were checking their connection status, right? So why didn't you post an advisory in Hang Gliding magazine and tell the idiots who connect themselves to gliders in insane conditions without proper assistance to disregard all of Doug Hildreth's pleas to do the lift and tug check?
I was in the air over Torrey when I saw that happen to a friend of mine. He was in the hospital for some time with various broken parts (including his pelvis as I recall).
- He was a friend of YOURS, Bob. Just how choked up about this are we supposed to get?
- And he, of course, told you while you were visiting him in the hospital that the flip was precipitated by a check of his connection status. But if he DID you'd be having a field day with this one. So he DIDN'T, right?
In fact, I was flipped myself on top of Kagel when I was a Hang 2. Fortunately, only my pride was bruised, but I know first-hand how quickly a glider can go from just slightly out of control to a life-threatening disaster. You don't EVER want to do ANYTHING to increase that probability.
And, of course, you don't EVER want to do ANYTHING to DECREASE that probability - like having people on your wires when you're in a situation in which a glider can quickly go from just slightly out of control to a life-threatening disaster.
You especially don't want to do something that you KNOW you can do 30 seconds earlier in complete safety - a hook-in check.
Yeah Bob. Pretty much everybody who did a hook-in check thirty seconds earlier was in complete safety thirty seconds earlier. But thirty seconds earlier just never seems to be the point at which the issue of hook-in status is a life and death matter.
Now I'm not against making the "lift and tug" a part of one's regular routine.
And those of us who've survived all the HORRORS of lift and tug as part of our immutable routines for our entire hang gliding career are ABSOLUTELY THRILLED to hear that - pending further study - YOU will not oppose continuation of the practice.
And when conditions are so tough that you know you can't follow your regular routine, then that should make you uneasy and even more vigilant because you're not following that routine.
- How odd. I just don't seem to ever remember having put myself in a situation in which conditions were so tough that I knew I couldn't follow my regular routine.
- But ya know what, Bob...
George DePerrio - 1926-1988/07/03 - Advanced, ten years - Vision - Mount Saint Pierre, Quebec
Forgot to hook in again after completing his hang check, fell over 100 feet to steep shale slope. Many distractions and extenuating circumstances. Pilot who launched just before got blown back but was unhurt. Conditions were a little stronger than he was used to (his comment).
In the REAL world sometimes those tough conditions are the DISTRACTION that CAUSES the pilot to break his regular routine.
But I can never endorse something that removes the pilot's ability to use his or her own judgement in a given situation.
If the fucking "pilot" judges that in his or her given situation does not call for a verification of hook-in status JUST PRIOR TO LAUNCH, he or she is not a fucking pilot. He or she is a fucking moron.
That's what Tad is trying to do by specifying that "just prior to launch" effectively means "during launch". I cannot support that.
Good. I'd seriously question my position if you DID support that. The fact that people - like Rob Kells and Steve Kinsley - who actually DO IT support it is all I really need.
Tad, if you want to build some kind of association or club or cult that follows exactly what you say, then I have no problem with that.
Yeah, well I do. I want the kind of association in which the participants question the hell out of what I say and see if it lines up with reality. And so far that seems to be working out just fine.
Go in peace.
Got to hell.
But please stop pestering the people who want to build the US Hawks based on those safe practices that we (we without you) agree upon.
Who's "WE", Bob? Besides without me?
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=23&t=821
Fatal hang gliding accident
Sam Kellner - 2011/11/07 02:47:58 UTC
Preflight, Hangcheck, Know you're hooked in.
You and your goddam US Hawks halfwits agree on whatever the fuck you want and put it into practice with my full endorsement.
You've made it abundantly clear that you don't like what we're doing, so just build a better organization yourself.
Nah. I changed my mind. I ABSOLUTELY *LOVE* what you're doing. The more fatality reports you assholes generate the better able I am to get through to the dozen or so people in this rotten sport about whom I give a rat's ass.
We don't have that much of a head start on you, and with all of your superior intellect you should be able to surpass us in no time.
In terms of quality I surpassed US Hawks when Kite Strings was just me and Zack.
Show us all what you can do. If you do a good job, we might even join you.
No, Bob. You're NEVER gonna join me.
Like you said...
Bob Kuczewski - 2011/12/15 01:26:16 UTC
Some things are more important than a hang gliding club.
Some things are WAY more important than a hang gliding club.
I predict that you won't do that because you've never been interested in building a better organization or in saving people's lives.
Not yours anyway.
Instead, you're just interested in beating up on the people you feel have slighted you. That's why you come to US Hawks ... to take your jabs at Sam and Peter and Jim Rooney and me.
Sam and Peter and Jim Rooney and you. Yeah, that's a pretty homogenous grouping. Speaks volumes.
You use safety as an excuse, but your real agenda ... is destruction and revenge.
If it wasn't before it sure is now - motherfucker.