http://www.kitestrings.org/post8937.html#p8937
Tad Eareckson - 2016/01/24 14:04:41 UTC
And the launch is pretty much just the landing in reverse 'cept ... in light air you have to generate the power rather than dissipate it.
Minor error in the execution of a dolly or platform tow launch... Essentially never happens.
Minor error in the execution of a foot launch...Karen Carra - Maryland - 61868 - Exp: 2016/06/30
- H3 - 1998/07/22 - Judy McCarty - AT FL AWCL CL FSL RLF TUR XC
- P2 - 2002/06/12 - Scotty Marion - FL FSL RSGlider crashes. And it almost always crashes in terrain in which one would really rather it didn't.Kenneth Andrews - California - 76491 - H5 - 2014/03/22 - Alan Crouse - AT FL AWCL CL FSL HA RLF TUR XC - OBS
An environment in which there is zero NEED...miguel - 2013/04/02 16:45:50 UTC
I have been watching him land for over 25 years. Nothing but perfect greasers. Even in gusty crosswinds and rotors, which used to be the norm at McClure.
http://farm8.staticflickr.com/7151/13952329131_4903a4ca2f_o.png
for perfect greasers - 'SPECIALLY in the gusty crosswinds and rotors which used to be the norm at McClure.
Where he fails bigtime...
Steve Davy - 2013/04/04 02:51:53 UTC
Two broken legs, after a blown launch at Dunlap last September.
...is a foot launch at Dunlap ninety miles to the southwest in which this consummate master pilot does NOTHING WRONG. Right? Anybody heard anything about him doing anything human on this one?Scot Huber - 2016/01/29 20:19:28 UTC
He had some vertebra fused together in his neck after a blown launch at Dunlap a couple of years ago...
So if there's any truth to this:
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34002
Fatality reported at McClure--Ken Muscio
...then foot launch has gotta be considered as a contributing factor.Scot Huber - 2016/01/29 20:19:28 UTC
I don't know if the restricted neck movement contributed to the accident but it well might have.