hang glider crash
bisfal bisto - 2014/01/24
dead
019-0725
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I partially dealt with this atrocity back at:
http://www.kitestrings.org/post7051.html#p7051
2014/11/21 13:52:11 UTC
Originally 56 stills but several days ago I amended the collection with another 44. Real classic and it deserved them. And if you check out his YouTube channel you'll feel safe betting that, despite rather minimal damage/consequences, this was essentially a career ender.
This is Quest and the posting date is 2014/01/24 - a year minus a week after Zack Marzec and these fuckin' douchebags are pulling him up on a Standard Aerotow Weak Link. We see him flying a bit cluelessly but whose fault is that? His or his dickheaded excuses for instructors? A quick glance at the chintzy crap he's using for equipment answers that question pretty definitively.
22 frames here for a little review/expansion...
006-0303
-006 - chronological order
- 03 - seconds
- 03 - frame (30 fps)
Comes off the cart slow - no pull-in, leaves it at neutral for the duration of the tow. From the beginning of the clip (with things already rolling) to the increase in the safety of the towing operation - 7.8 seconds.
006-0303
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Brake lever Quest release securely velcroed within extremely easy reach onto the starboard control tube. Spreader shoved down as low as possible to prevent the top of the carabiner (carabineer) from being crushed. (Wills Wing glider. Sport undoubtedly.)
014-0628
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Way high and the bar's way out. No clue what he's supposed to be doing. Last frame before the 130 pound Greenspot Pilot In Command decides to abort. Compare/Contrast current pitch attitude to/with 038-1120 - at which point the glider's about to resume flying mode.
Spinnaker shackle rotated perfectly perpendicularly to the bridal pressure alignment. Is Bobby Bailey a fucking genius when it comes the this shit or what. And one can only wonder what innovations the other people actually working on things will be unveiled in the near future.
I can't begin to tell you how totally sickened I was upon first seeing one of those abortions in the launch line at Ridgely. And if it actually did anything to fix an actual problem then where are all the reports of failures from the zillions of longitudinally/properly aligned configurations that had been going into circulation well over two decades prior to this point?
Tug's on the absolute brink of being nosed in. Trying to blow his release but it's a complex mechanical thing with way too many parts and fails when he most needs it. Thank God bisfal wasn't using a Tad-O-Link or doubled Standard Aerotow Weak Link (like they use to keep the tandems safe).
018-0724
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Focal point of the safe towing system kicks in. No longer is the conspicuously unidentified tug driver being mercilessly driven back into the runway. Good thing we weren't using a Tad-O-Link. (Note the top end of the bridle (and whatever's left of the Flight Park Mafia's precision fishing line) about to disappear below the horizon.)
019-0725
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This is as much as we ever see the bar stuffed.
027-0827
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031-0921
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Good look at the butchered spinnaker shackle flopping around in the breeze and neutralizing the performance gains afforded by the faired downtubes and kingpost.
034-1010
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Minimum pitch - horizon's just above the wing and tug's now just above the horizon.
And now that I think of it... The tow didn't get to a thousand feet so this one's on the house. And it's obvious from his post that he didn't swap in a new hundred dollar faired VG side control tube and go back up for a successful relight to two grand or whatever. So what's the actual dollar cost to just Quest for this safety enhancing inconvenience?
038-1120
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When you see total shit equipment like this you automatically know with one hundred percent certainty without any background whatsoever that the instruction is total incompetent shit. Even with his own video up for review he posts it only with his title and:
Zero debriefing, the slightest hint of help from Quest. Eight respondents, none of them from Quest - or Wallaby or any other AT op., broken weak link. please let me know what I did wrong.
When was the last time you heard a u$hPa instructor advise to commit to the wheels if...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=27086
Steve Pearson on landings
...one's situation is compromised?Steve Pearson - 2012/03/28 23:26:05 UTC
I can't control the glider in strong air with my hands at shoulder or ear height and I'd rather land on my belly with my hands on the basetube than get turned downwind.
Beginning to struggle to get his hands past the obstructions to optimal control positions on the control tubes.
050-1414
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058-1523
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067-2409
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068-2417
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069-2424
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071-2505
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074-2515
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Can't even grasp the concept of staying prone on the control bar and doing a sane controlled landing. I sure am happy that my training didn't kick in to the extent his did.
077-2529
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080-2605
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084-2614
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086-2717
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088-2808
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092-2812
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096-2906
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Philip Montague
Way too high on the tow broke the weak line (before you would have locked-out). Then on approach too late/slow on
Paul Walsh
Get some wheels dude. Seriously.
Andre van der Lingen
Exactly. Too high behind the tow and why don't u have wheels?
bisfal bisto
glider suddenly went high fast.
bisfal bisto
yes, I have wheels , small ones.
Bill Cummings
Search Youtube for the video below for another trick to save your bacon when landing on either grass, class 5 gravel, or pea gravel. There are landing areas like those listed where a flare isn't needed at all.
NO FLARE LANDING, HANG GLIDING
Your right hand hit the flying wire from the tail to the right down tube.
Just like your parachute handle look then grab the down tube earlier than you did.
Next your left hand missed the left down tube twice. Look and grab earlier than you did. Your left hand was at or slightly above your flight deck on the left down tube. No way are you high enough on the down tubes for a flare. Play it back again and see that your elbows are almost locked straight already. With your hands that wide, that low, on the down tubes you will only get the bar forward maybe two more inches.
You have to try for at least midway up the down tubes for a flare. Does you harness fight you getting vertical? If so make some changes.
Bigger wheels helps.
Pull on more speed for final.
Level out with knees slightly bent with toes almost dragging.
Bleed off the speed by holding you're your same height above the grass by letting the control frame pull your hands forward.
When the control frame stops pulling your hands forward that is trim speed.
Once you have trim speed give it one more second then flare by pushing forward and up.
Notice too that the tug was back and forth between your down tubes. That is mild PIO. (Really Designed Induced Oscillation.) If you didn't have a vertical stabilizer on the tail already putting one on will help with the mild PIO.
Don't increase the strength of your weak-link. (Don't--Don't!)
bisfal bisto
thank you.
steve davy
Try this link. http://www.kitestrings.org/topic6.html
Tim Berendsen
lots of stuff did not go well.. try again is the only way!
Tom Vancil
Didn't look like to you where pulling in much after your release off the cart, when the tendency is for the glider to shoot up. I always try to stay low after release from the cart to allow the tug to climb.
When you balloon up on release from the cart you also pull the rear end of the tug up with you and the pilot has to fight like heck to not nose in close to the ground. This is the worst condition for Good for all involved that everyone is fine and live to fly another day. Thanks for sharing
This isn't showcasing bisfal bisto's massive incompetence. This is showcasing the massive incompetence of Quest - after a quarter century's worth of perfecting aerotowing. And remember that the Pilot In Command of this one is out front and way below. And we judge the Pilot In Command by the condition in which his passenger and latter's luggage is delivered back to the surface. Also the passenger's inclination to continue patronage.mike jackson
You didn't do much of anything wrong. I'm just a student myself, but my advice is that no matter how experienced you are you should never fly without wheels. That was your biggest mistake. You definitely should have changed your weak link before, but no big deal. The problem I had was my weak link wasn't weak enough. When the primary release failed, and I forgot how to use the secondary, I was trapped on a scooter tow track to disaster. It never broke and when I was above the pulley on the other side, the cable yanked me to a stop and I dropped out of the sky.
There IS something to this "Pilot In Command" bullshit that Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney made the mistake of publicly proclaiming. The Pilot In Command is primarily the guy on the glider paying the guy with the engine to power him up to workable altitude - just like in surface towing. It's his life that's most at risk and what he's doing virtually ALWAYS requires more competency, precision, judgment than what's required from and delivered by the other end. But the driver is ALWAYS functioning at least as a copilot and he can be in a position in which the life of a glider doing everything right is totally dependent upon his actions.
Also as a copilot he's responsible for not participating in a flight if the Pilot In Command is unqualified, intoxicated, sleep deprived and/or if the plane isn't airworthy. And if any of that is the case - as it was so obviously the case in spades on this one - then, yeah, he bloody well WAS the Pilot In Command and he's totally responsible for this outcome.
And in cases like this his responsibility doesn't end until that glider's safely parked on the ground. And that includes a broken arm from an imperfectly timed flare even if that happens a hundred miles and two hours later at the end of an XC. Think Yoko Isomoto, Ron Keinan, Emma Martin... That may sound like / be a bit of a stretch but one shouldn't be towing people who don't know how to set up RLF approaches and/or aren't equipped and mentally prepared to land their gliders in certified configuration.
And let's look at Mark Frutiger and Zack Marzec as an example... The survivor of that flight made the mistake of blabbing out an accurate account of that inconvenience fatality incident. He wasn't the least bit surprised watching:
- Pro Toad Zack rocketing up behind him in the monster thermal blast he himself had entered seconds before
- the whipstall, tailslide, tumble after the safety device kicked in when everybody and his dog knew it would
And shortly afterwards in the Davis Show damage control discussion during which many of us will suddenly become happy with a Tad-O-Link he doesn't want to engage in speculation about what happened and why.
He knows he could've aborted that tow and everything would've been good for a relight five or ten minutes later and he's gotta live with that for the rest of his life. Also can't engage in speculation about how much worse things would've gone with a two point bridle and/or Tad-O-Link 'cause of what the repercussions to and from the Flight Park Mafia would be.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467
weak links
Yeah Jim... I'll bet that made you real popular with all your "friends" and colleagues and a million comp pilots right after:Jim Rooney - 2007/07/22 22:30:28 UTC
I've heard it a million times before from comp pilots insisting on towing with even doubled up weaklinks (some want no weaklink). I tell them the same thing I'm telling you... suck it up. You're not the only one on the line. I didn't ask to be a test pilot. I can live with your inconvenience.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Davis Straub - 2011/08/26 14:04:52 UTC
We had six weaklink breaks in a row at Zapata this year. Russell Brown (tug pilot, tug owner, Quest Air owner) said go ahead and double up (four strands of Cortland Greenspot). He knows I used his Zapata weaklink in Big Spring (pilots were asked to tell the tug pilot if they were doing that).