If your feet are still making contact with the ground - it's easier to move your body with your feet and legs into the position you want it to be and hold that position using your hands, as opposed to remaining in place and relying solely on torque to move the glider. A good technique, just being over sold.You "weight shift" control the glider running across the field no hands but you "cheat" a bit here and there as needed and dismiss that input as irrelevant and may not even remember doing it.
2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
Last edited by <BS> on 2016/04/15 18:59:21 UTC, edited 2 times in total.
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
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so we don't need to and shouldn't be talking about it - all of the pilot weight and tow tension is going to the hang point (anchor point for two point AT bridle - close enough) which is on the yaw axis or close fucking enough. I don't think you can yaw a swept wing hang glider enough to be worth talking about no matter what you do.
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This:
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look problematic?
Tell me when:
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...has them damn near all the time. Fly on the control tubes or take one of those hands off for a second at a critical phase of flight - launch, landing, tow misalignment - and your likelihood of having a bad day goes up by a factor of a hundred. And the hang gliding industry FORCES its participants to take their hands off the basetube at ALL the critical times and assures them that it's no problem at worst and actually way safer just about all the time. And this is the fundamental reason why Pat killed another student two Sundays ago. And everybody who tolerates these lunatic control tubes flying and easily reachable releases bastardizations of the sport has blood on his hands right along with Pat.
2. Concerned about what? The fact that we killed another student or ass covering and the ability to continue business as usual?
When somebody's got something wrong - instructor or recreational flyer - we need to piss all over him until he gets it right or learns to keep his stupid mouth shut and stop infecting others with his idiocy.
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
That's a bit generous.NMERider - 2016/04/14 20:40:18 UTC
Sorry good buddy but it's not the same things as weight shifting. It does work but only within certain limits.I'm telling you it works. I have done it, A LOT. For the same reasons that weight shifting works (it's the same damn thing)....
...or while standing in place in a breeze...Running side to side with hands off the control frame applies a moderate lateral force to the glider that is being flown like any other single-line kite. The force is lateral. LATERAL.
Weight shift control while flying the glider or while running during launch...
And transmitting the increases and reductions in the force through the respective flying wires to their attachment points at the leading edge / cross spar junctions...occurs when the hands are on the control frame and shifting weight from side to side via pressure on the control frame creates torque.
Minus the torque the lateral force rolls the glider the other way.TORQUE. It creates torque on the roll axis of then glider. Although there may be some degree of LATERAL force applied during the process, it is in fact the TORQUE that primarily causes the glider to roll and not the LATERAL force.
The main reason she's dead is cause she was never taught how to apply torque to the control bar.A stable single line kite will follow the lateral force transmitted through the kite string. An unstable single-line kite such and an Indonesian fighting kite is controlled by letting the line go slack and then pulling on the line at the precise moment that the wobbling kite is pointed in the desired direction. This same effect may apply to a hang glider that is being kited hands-off.
The full set of dynamics and parameters for single-line kites is extremely complex and far beyond any relevance to either this discussion or why this young lady is now dead.
Yeah it does. It may not be enough to prevent progression into a lockout but it's always gonna have an effect on what the glider does, even if it's just to mitigate the acceleration of the lockout - assuming the glider's flying anyway.When a hang glider is being towed and is at a very high angle of incidence the weight of the pilot no longer acts to create torque upon the roll axis during shifting the pilot from side to side.
I'm gonna say no. Unless things are so tits up that something's pinned against a tube or wire - which isn't a significant issue even HERE:The weight of the pilot now acts primarily upon the glider to create TORQUE upon the YAW AXIS and not on the ROLL AXIS.
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so we don't need to and shouldn't be talking about it - all of the pilot weight and tow tension is going to the hang point (anchor point for two point AT bridle - close enough) which is on the yaw axis or close fucking enough. I don't think you can yaw a swept wing hang glider enough to be worth talking about no matter what you do.
Is there any HGMA or DHV or other certification that covers gliders being flown like:There is no HGMA or DHV or other certification that I am aware of that regulates the control and stability of hang gliders while being ground towed.
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This:
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look problematic?
Tell me when:
is bad advice.Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974
"Never take your hands off the bar." - Tom Peghiny
Hang gliders are certified to perform with a pilot within a hook-in range prone and with both hands right where Ryan...If anyone knows of such a set of standards, tests and results, please chime in with facts.
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...has them damn near all the time. Fly on the control tubes or take one of those hands off for a second at a critical phase of flight - launch, landing, tow misalignment - and your likelihood of having a bad day goes up by a factor of a hundred. And the hang gliding industry FORCES its participants to take their hands off the basetube at ALL the critical times and assures them that it's no problem at worst and actually way safer just about all the time. And this is the fundamental reason why Pat killed another student two Sundays ago. And everybody who tolerates these lunatic control tubes flying and easily reachable releases bastardizations of the sport has blood on his hands right along with Pat.
Also undoubtedly a bunch of broken arms and other serious crashes and injuries we'll never hear about. This was an UGLY fatality at a big commercial operation and look how well they managed to keep the lid on things. It's a no brainer that there's at least ten times the number of lesser catastrophes.In any event it is my understanding that there have been tens of thousands of safe, students ground-based training tows in the history of this sport. Maybe the number is in the hundreds of thousands? I don't know. But I do know there have been at least two training disasters during the past year...
1. EVERYONE else?...and this has me and everyone else concerned.
2. Concerned about what? The fact that we killed another student or ass covering and the ability to continue business as usual?
No. We hafta get solid on aeronautical theory before we start teaching Nancies to fly and here we are 1.2 centuries after Otto Lilienthal with, institutionally, no fuckin' clue how hang glider control works. And we see one hundred percent of students being forced upright doing nothing but arrow-straight training flights and when they're finally permitted to touch the control bar the second year we see them all trying to turn the glider by twisting their bodies inside the control frame.Can we all please leave the pissing contests out of this discussion for the time being?
When somebody's got something wrong - instructor or recreational flyer - we need to piss all over him until he gets it right or learns to keep his stupid mouth shut and stop infecting others with his idiocy.
While keeping the originals to ourselves so's when Mitch releases one of his snake oil cover-up reports we can fuckin' demolish the sleazy piece o' shit and his fellow operatives.What needs to be addressed is getting all the relevant facts into Mitch Shipley's hands.
Duh.There appears to be more incidents going on than are being reported.
Name some schools and instructors who don't need to be shut down immediately and permanently.If there are complaints to be leveled at any school or instructor...
Kite Strings is the only place you can actually do it....there is a place to lodge complaints about unsafe practices that is separate from the AIRS database.
http://www.kitestrings.org/topic14.htmlIt is here:
http://www.ushpa.org/page/online-feedback-form
...decapitated and have their heads put up on pikes as warnings to others.Additionally, the RDs for the region in question need to be...
We got a war. We're starting to win. We need it expanded....contacted personally with the same information if it can be done without creating a war.
Hopefully they'll all kill each other off and make my job a lot easier.I am aware that there are battles being fought within certain regions among conflicting camps of instructors.
I can. They're all wrong. 'Specially in a sport that demands things be gotten 100.00 percent right.I cannot say who is right or who is wrong.
I'm seeing it as black or white - and it's damn near all black.It's seldom so black or white as we all know in our hearts.
That's what the initial purpose of Kite Strings was. Now after near five and a half years I realize that the disasters are inevitable under entities as fundamentally evil as u$hPa and commercial hang gliding so bring 'em on and let them become history lessons.So please focus on the task of preventing another disaster before it happens...
Or Kite Strings. Piss on the right people for the right reasons and you'll be welcomed with open arms....and leave the pissing contests for the campfire section.
My 2p Worth
JD
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
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Weak link question
An OK Day at Ridgely
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You're starting out prone on a cart with both hands on the basetube because you have all the extra skills to do those things?
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...you're totally sideways.
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I see a victim being degraded by putting him up on total shit "equipment", in a total shit "control" posture following total shit "instruction". Ask a Three or Four to go up like that. This is universal institutional HAZING. They got laws to punish motherfuckers from doing this kinda shit to new students in LEGITIMATE educational institutions. Hang gliding does nothing but shield itself from having to conform to laws of civilized society.
2. If he has no idea how to steer a hang glider...
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Lockout
And the only reason we know this incident ever happened is 'cause the victim posted a video. And this video was posted on 2014/08/18. So let's call the crash Saturday 2014/08/16 ('cause he went up AT tandem the next day). And on 2014/09/29 - 44 days later - Joe Julik was killed instantly because he went UPRIGHT for final in strong gusty conditions and got turned downwind...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=27086
Steve Pearson on landings
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=32681
Tandem crash in LV (speculation thread)
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Brian Scharp - 2016/04/14 20:43:55 UTC
It's obvious what you did in the video worked. It's just that it's not an example of steering a glider by running toward the lifting wing and never touching the downtubes.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/14 20:18:19 UTC
I'm telling you it works.
No. You've been purporting to do both.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/14 20:49:27 UTC
I think you don't understand the word TELLING, and mistook it for showing?
I'll bet that's your dad's take on it too. It's a no brainer that everything you're saying would also be what we'd be hearing from Paul if we could ever pin him down and force him to say anything. We notice he's not coming on to correct any misconceptions.I have never read anything I disagreed with more, than Jono's depiction of how weight shift rolls a hang glider. JEEZUS.
Sounds like another declare victory and leave post.But I'll leave it be, because he is absolutely correct in the last line of his post.
While you're talking to him ask him what an appropriate weak link is and why we're supposed to always use one.NMERider - 2016/04/14 20:58:28 UTC
I don't care whether you believe be or not. Talk to Steve Pearson or another qualified aeronautical engineer who understands the difference between torque and lateral force (both acting upon or very near the center of lift of a hang glider) and how these apply to control a weight-shift aircraft (hang glider).
Good freakin' luck.After you have been educated...
It's an opinion based sport. Mostly ya wanna go with the most popular opinions. Helps a lot in rubbing everybody the right way....between these two very distinct and different forces, come back and tell everyone what you learned versus what you currently believe.
Michael Grisham - 2016/04/14 21:33:50 UTC
Jeez, no wonder we have problems!
Why are you asking? I thought you were such a great fucking expert on hang glider towing that you were qualified to dictate what everyone could and couldn't use as towing equipment on his glider.Davis Straub - 2016/04/14 21:50:35 UTC
So if the pilot is drifting off line during the low and slow scooter tow you don't try to pull them back on line by throttling up but throttle down and let them come softly and gently to earth, correct?
01-00001Davis Straub - 2016/04/14 21:53:11 UTC
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4pkB7GIxTUU
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Do you WANT somebody who fucks up a scooter tow to climb back up and resume?NMERider - 2016/04/14 22:33:52 UTC
Possibly. It depends upon many factors. Briefly, if line tension is reduced so the glider leaves towing (kiting) flight and transitions to gliding flight with enough altitude then I don't see why the pilot cannot get it leveled and straight with enough spare altitude to resume towing (kiting) ascent.
Two reasons plus the combination of the two for a tow to get out of control - can't fly, nasty conditions. Somebody who fucks up a scooter tow doesn't need to be setting up approaches and if the glider gets kicked out of alignment that's a pretty good indication that conditions aren't acceptable for scooter tow training.Of course this means they may be so far down field by this phase that they have to re-launch in order get towed up to an altitude to where they can release and practice setting up landing approaches, linked turns, etc.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3600This of course adds to the time spent by the school or instructor and therefore eats into the profit margin.
Weak link question
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=6326Janni Papakrivos - 2008/11/05 23:03:26 UTC
I probably witnessed fifty broken weak links this summer at Highland.
An OK Day at Ridgely
Matthew Graham - 2014/06/09 01:51:11 UTC
It was pretty quiet at Ridgely when we arrived at noon. Brian VH and Felix were there-- and Sammy (sp) and Bertrand... and Soraya Rios from the ECC. She was not flying.
Felix test flew Bertrand's T2C for about an hour and loved it. Brian had a short flight on a Falcon. I got on the flight line at a little after 1pm behind Sammi. She had a sledder. Then the tandem glider called rank and went ahead of me. The tandem broke a weak link and it took a while to sort out a new weak link. I finally towed around 1:30 and also broke a link at 450'. Back to the end of the line. Actually, my wife Karen let my cut in front of her. Bertrand and Sammi towed again. Each having sledder. The cirrus had moved in and things did not look good. Again I arrived at the front of the line only to have the tandem call dibs. And then the tug needed gas. I thought I would never get into the air...
You want harsh?Am I being harsh when I say this? Yes I am.
How do you know he's a pilot? What's he doing to indicate that he's not just some guy who walked up and plopped down fifty bucks for a glider ride?NMERider - 2016/04/14 22:37:50 UTC
Here's a classic example of a pilot...
Here's you tow launching, Jonathan:...whose control inputs are barely even detectable although I clearly heard him say several bad and blasphemous words.
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You're starting out prone on a cart with both hands on the basetube because you have all the extra skills to do those things?
You don't NEED much adverse from the effect of the towline when...I don't see much adverse from the effect of tow line.
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...you're totally sideways.
How effectively can someone pull in when "flying" like:Mostly I see a student pilot who is barely even shifting his weight or pulling in when he needs to be.
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I see a victim being degraded by putting him up on total shit "equipment", in a total shit "control" posture following total shit "instruction". Ask a Three or Four to go up like that. This is universal institutional HAZING. They got laws to punish motherfuckers from doing this kinda shit to new students in LEGITIMATE educational institutions. Hang gliding does nothing but shield itself from having to conform to laws of civilized society.
Yeah, we remember that. We reached out to try to help her but she wasn't interested. Warrior Spirit. She's gonna take on Mother Nature and win. Fuck her.What about Majo's two broken arms. Anyone remember that?
Tyler McKean.Mike Jefferson - 2016/04/14 22:55:46 UTC
I hope that guy...
1. Did it look like he was set up to be able to steer a hang glider? When you really need to steer a hang glider do you go bolt upright and put your hands on the control tubes? Do you know one single halfway competent pilot who flies like that?...was ok. Seemed to me he had no idea how to steer a hang glider.
2. If he has no idea how to steer a hang glider...
Garrett Speeter - 2016/04/14 00:11:26 UTC
I bet pilot would still be alive today if he/she decided to self-teach.
...whose fault is it?2016/04/14 02:10:18 UTC - Sink This! -- Paul Hurless
The first job of the fuckin' tow operator - who, by the way, has never identified himself or commented on this incident - is NOT TO TOW SOMEONE WHO HAS NO IDEA HOW TO STEER A HANG GLIDER - ASSHOLE.It looked like the tow operator did his job and did not tow him into the ground.
Careful who and what you endorse, Jonathan.NMERider - 2016/04/14 23:14:50 UTC
I'm guessing they'll get along famously.Christopher LeFay - 2016/04/14 23:55:47 UTC
I just had the pleasure of meeting Majo; I believe she should be down-your-way, Davis, in Florida, any day now.
I'd believe it.Her subsequent recovery and journey as a pilot is epic- if it were a film, no one would believe it was real.
Oh. So the tow operator should know something about the capacity of the person he has on the line. And here I was thinking that all he needed to know was that the person was using a standard loop of precision fishing line to ensure that nothing bad could happen to him.Christopher LeFay - 2016/04/15 00:04:13 UTC
...proficiency chief among those. Sure, if the pilot resumes course and signals that they want to be pulled more AND the tow operator deems it within their capacity to do so with safe margin.NMERider - 2016/04/14 22:33:52 UTC
Possibly. It depends upon many factors...
What are we doing towing them up into situations in which they can kill themselves?If we're talking about students without a demonstrated reliable capacity who haven't communicated- well then...
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That total shit excuse for a hang glider tow should've never come anywhere close to happening. What did Whitewater do with Tyler that was any better than what Pat did with Nancy? Luck with just a mildly banged up "student" rather than a fatality?..."possible" and "safe" are a dangerous distance apart.
And continue its proud tradition of being involved in perfecting aerotowing for over twenty years.Davis Straub - 2016/04/15 02:15:22 UTC
Majo will be here soon to take over the Quest Air office.
So let's make sure we fly upright any time we're within two hundred feet of anything hard so it's our legs we break rather than our faces, heads, necks.NMERider - 2016/04/15 02:30:22 UTC
We are engaged in an activity filled with uncertainties, impact trajectories and disaster possibilities.
And aeronautics.Why even use theoretical concepts like safety and risk management...
Incredibly close around the corner every moment some of us are engaged. But at least Rafi died doing what he loved without ever having ground a sidewire into any of the sharp rocks at Funston by doing a stomp test....when we can use words that are visceral, hit home and really get our attention?
Let's not forget the big one: tragedy. It's just around the corner every moment we are engaged.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=31747Davis Straub - 2016/04/15 02:30:32 UTC
This video discussed earlier:
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=31747
Lockout
Lockout
Davis Straub - 2014/09/01 15:22:41 UTC
I can tell you that I fly with a 200lb weaklink on one side of my 750lb pro tow bridle. I am happy with it.
What pilot?Ryan Voight - 2016/04/15 02:50:45 UTC
Slope Skimmer - 2016/04/14 22:55:46 UTC
I hope that guy was ok. Seemed to me he had no idea how to steer a hang glider. It looked like the tow operator did his job and did not tow him into the ground.NOOOONMERider - 2016/04/14 23:14:50 UTC
Yes, pilot...
His....had no idea. Not their...
He....fault if they...
Wasn't....weren't...
Wouldn't have been his fault if he HAD been taught and tested. If he had then the problem would've been the legitimacy of the teaching and testing. And we know any administered was or would've been total shit just by looking at any single frame from that near snuff film....taught and tested!
His.No, tow operator did not do their...
He....job- like Davis said, they...
Him....pretty obviously DID tow them...
And has made no comment on the incident or given any indication that Whitewater will abandon its tried and true strategy of continuing to do the same things over and over to get more and more perfected results....right into the ground!
And the only reason we know this incident ever happened is 'cause the victim posted a video. And this video was posted on 2014/08/18. So let's call the crash Saturday 2014/08/16 ('cause he went up AT tandem the next day). And on 2014/09/29 - 44 days later - Joe Julik was killed instantly because he went UPRIGHT for final in strong gusty conditions and got turned downwind...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=27086
Steve Pearson on landings
...big fuckin' surprise. And Whitewater gave us shit in the way of a report and told the mainstream press that he was hit by an invisible dust devil.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.
...or refuse to...If experienced pilots can't...
The same things over and over again....see the difference here, how can we expect students to?
Why?This just became very educational, in a very uninspiring, depressing kind of way...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=32681
Tandem crash in LV (speculation thread)
What part of that were you having so much trouble understanding?Mark G. Forbes - 2015/04/01 03:46:29 UTC
Among ourselves, we agree (via the waiver) that we understand we're engaged in a risky sport that can cause serious injury or death. We each agree that we are personally and individually responsible for our own safety. If we have an accident and get hurt, we agree in advance that it is solely our own fault, no matter what the circumstances might be. We sign at the bottom saying that we fully understand these things, that we accept them, and that we know we are giving up the right to sue anybody if an accident happens.
Those are fundamental tenets of our sport. We are all individually responsible for ourselves and our safety. We need to see and avoid all other pilots, avoid crashing into people or property and use good judgment when flying. If someone doesn't agree with those principles, then they don't need to be involved in our sport.
Who have we got to blame, Former Regional Director Ryan Voight? I heard you casting your vote to expel Bob for acting contrary to the interests of the Corporation but assholes like the one who slammed Tyler into the cornfield get free passes all the fuckin' time. Pat Denevan did the same thing two Sundays ago considerably harder and so far he's gotten a free pass. And don't tell me that Mitch is still hard at work collecting data and interviewing eyewitnesses to get as complete an understanding as possible of what went wrong on that one.Zack C - 2012/06/02 02:20:45 UTC
I just cannot fathom how our sport can be so screwed up.
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
32-03504
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3923/15064015812_fde0f7ec1a_o.png
That line is having a significant adverse effect on the glider trajectory.
- prone with his hands continuously on the basetube from start to finish
- equipped with a release that didn't stink on ice and would've allowed him to blow tow while maintaining maximum possible control of the glider
C'mon Mark. Now would be a really good opportunity to bolster u$hPa's position that all hang glider crashes are one hundred percent the fault and responsibility of the guy hooked into the glider.
Right...
109-15221
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8615/16487544910_41f57852ac_o.png
...after launching Lin with a jammed release. The problem is that it doesn't take much in the way of substantially misaligned tow tension to overwhelm a pilot's control authority and crash the glider.
07-02116
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5555/15041418836_82f33eec66_o.png
And that would've been plenty of time and air to allow a safe recovery for someone who knew how to fly. But the reason Tyler was in that position in the first place was because he didn't know how to fly.
06-0911
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1598/25890755153_88a24e4671_o.png
...on the ground - and under the high wing to roll the glider back level.
http://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4778/39004826790_90f4fd60c9_o.jpg
...under the nose. Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney explains the dynamics of this to us muppets...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9230
Departing the launch cart
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
No.NMERider - 2016/04/15 03:01:49 UTC
It's easy to look at this either way very honestly.
It couldn't POSSIBLY be pulling enough to sustain a lockout. Whitewater is UNDOUBTEDLY using an Infallible Weak Link which will break before you can get into too much trouble.That line could be perceived as being slack with no effect on the glider or it could be perceived of as pulling enough to sustain a lock-out.
32-03504
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3923/15064015812_fde0f7ec1a_o.png
That line is having a significant adverse effect on the glider trajectory.
Correct.In either event it should never have happened.
So why are we going after Pat and Mission and letting these Whitewater assholes have a free ride?It was avoidable and preventable.
But no way in hell we're gonna all agree that the "student" should've been:It was a needless and unnecessary event no matter which angle we may come at it. I think we can all agree that there was no reason for this to happen.
- prone with his hands continuously on the basetube from start to finish
- equipped with a release that didn't stink on ice and would've allowed him to blow tow while maintaining maximum possible control of the glider
Shit happens, dude. We engage in a sport that has risk and that is part of the attraction.It was no act of God or twist of fate.
I sure can.It was a failure. On whose part I cannot be certain...
100.00 percent Whitewater. Same as Pat and Mission. If these tows had gone off textbook the motherfuckers would using them as further proof of the fantastic jobs they do in teaching and safety. They don't get to toss out the ones that end with crumples as the faults of inherently shitty students who should've stuck to checkers....but a failure on one more or individuals' parts, that is unmistakable.
C'mon Mark. Now would be a really good opportunity to bolster u$hPa's position that all hang glider crashes are one hundred percent the fault and responsibility of the guy hooked into the glider.
Yeah. Goes great with "line pressure".Mike Jefferson - 2016/04/15 03:34:45 UTC
Weather or not...
Which would have been at total violation of Blue Sky / Wills Wing Scooter Towing protocol......the tow operator cut the power...
Right...
...Ryan?Wills Wing / Blue Sky / Ryan Voight Productions - 2007/03
NEVER CUT THE POWER...
Reduce Gradually
Increase Gradually
Bullshit. He cut the power. Just like Harold did......only that operator knows for sure.
109-15221
http://farm9.staticflickr.com/8615/16487544910_41f57852ac_o.png
...after launching Lin with a jammed release. The problem is that it doesn't take much in the way of substantially misaligned tow tension to overwhelm a pilot's control authority and crash the glider.
And I hope Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney posts that he's actually a totally incompetent, stupid, lying, sleazy piece o' shit and apologizes for all the irreparable damage he's done to the sport and its participants.I hope he chimes in.
How relevant is that to a incident in which the "pilot" has no fuckin' clue how to fly a glider and either allowed to the glider to get or put the glider in a dangerous misaligned tow situation to begin with?The point I was trying to make is if you cut the power or cut the line with a knife the locked out pilot has a good chance of leveling the wings or flying out of the situation.
Idiot.This may result in landing down wind or off course but mostly in control of the glider.
Yeah. The line was very obviously pushing him into the ground on this one - idiot.I still maintain he would have hit harder if the line pressure was not released.
Fuck you, Davis.Davis Straub - 2016/04/15 12:08:02 UTC
As soon as the pilot went off line, the tow operator should have released the line pressure.
How do you know weather or not this was a beginning "student"? How do you know that he hadn't had twenty lessons before and scored his One? As was at least partially and likely totally the case with Nancy at Mission.Of course, once again, the beginning student should not have been towed this high at all.
Fuck you, Christopher.2016/04/15 21:15:19 UTC - 3 thumbs up - Christopher LeFay
Pressure. If you know the difference between tension and pressure and your goal is to educate and make the sport safer then why are you tolerating assholes like Slope and Davis referring to line pressure? Davis's agenda is to misinform hang gliding culture to the maximum extent possible in order to keep them confused, ignorant, stupid and thus more under the control of himself and his commercial hang gliding pigfucker buddies. If you're honestly trying to make anything better you're wasting your time if you're not starting by cutting Davis to absolute shreds.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/15 13:28:18 UTC
I'm not sure where the idea that the line tension...
Common sense? The dickhead on the winch was obviously stupid and irresponsible enough to tow an unqualified student up hard and high but I one hundred percent guarantee you that he had the winch freewheeled by:...was reduced or released is coming from...
07-02116
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5555/15041418836_82f33eec66_o.png
And that would've been plenty of time and air to allow a safe recovery for someone who knew how to fly. But the reason Tyler was in that position in the first place was because he didn't know how to fly.
Yeah. The towline is weight shifting him to the left - the same way you use lateral thrust from your feet...What I see is a glider that is gradually banking steeper and steeper, but does not seem to be allowed to "fly" in the new direction it should be heading.
06-0911
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1598/25890755153_88a24e4671_o.png
...on the ground - and under the high wing to roll the glider back level.
Yeah. Tyler must be doing something to override the autocorrecting effect of his center of mass bridle.Instead I see a banked glider that appears to enter a slipping situation towards the ground.
Yeah. It's also pulling glider down in by pulling Tyler with a forward vector...Since the pilot pretty clearly isn't pulling in heavily, the only reason I'm seeing for the glider to not be coordinating that turn and slipping toward the Earth is because the tow force was pulling down in pitch as the glider rolled steeper and steeper.
http://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4778/39004826790_90f4fd60c9_o.jpg
...under the nose. Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney explains the dynamics of this to us muppets...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9230
Departing the launch cart
...over on the Davis Show. (Pity he isn't helping out with the conversation over here - but that's what happens when you don't rub Jack the right way.)Jim Rooney - 2007/08/24 12:20:06 UTC
Bad habit #1, not flying the glider... just letting the tug drag you around by the nose, combines with the fact that pro towing REQUIRES the pilot to do something (not let that bar move). So instead of holding the bar where it is, bad habit pilot just lets the tug pull him. This pulls him through the control frame with the same effect as the pilot pulling in... a LOT.
I've seen gliders go negative while still on the cart this way.
The results are never pretty.
Oh. Right. I forgot. The terms are synonymous, interchangeable.After reading that description- do you guys see what I see, did I miss something that lead you to say the tow pressure...
You DO need to be taught, Ryan. The problem seems to be that......was released? Either I'm teaching you guys what to be looking for, or I'm missing something and need to be taught.
...you're really not all that teachable.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/14 03:41:18 UTC
Wager all you want, but I've done this a lot already. I'm not making s*** up here, or speaking of something I haven't thoroughly tried out (like you are!).
I could go out to a big field, set up a glider, put a harness on, set up some cameras, and thoroughly document how I can run long distances while still keeping the glider going exactly where I want it to go...
But frankly, that sounds exhausting. And I really don't have that kind of free time in my life- to chase down something I already know and have practiced quite a bit.
I've already spent more time than I should on the .org, and on this thread specifically, in effort to share education and improve safety. I just taught you something(s) you didn't know, and your blockhead response is that I should take more time out of my life to "show you".
Dude, I'm sorry... but unless you want to come here and PAY ME TO SHOW YOU... since instruction is my job and how I feed my family after all... I'm inclined to say piss off. Why don't you go set up a glider and run around with it and, when you realize you CAN steer by changing the direction you're running, you can buy me a beer for sharing a skill with you that just might save a launch some day...
Or... you can continue to disagree. Without trying it. Funny thing is, physics doesn't really care or rely on your agreement, it just is.
So... what say you... ready to take an afternoon and go have your mind blown? Or will you choose to stay behind the keyboard talking about things you don't seem to understand fully?
Bullshit. We're talking aeronautical theory and if we don't get that right before we leave the ground we can't understand what's happening and why and the sport keeps augering in the way it is now.Either way, this is a slightly constructive discussion (even thought it's only very remotely related to the thread topic)
Get fucked, Christopher.2016/04/15 21:16:21 UTC - 3 thumbs up - Christopher LeFay
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Here's a glider at Dunlap:
04-1409
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3903/14555125331_c930110666_o.png
being temporarily locked out by a thermal blast on his left wing. He's fully extended under the left wing resisting and still being turned away from his desired heading.
Here's the max extent of Tyler's resistance effort:
10-02226
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3906/14877769980_78ff2fbd6e_o.png
That is a decertified glider with him upright with his hands on the control tubes and he can only effect a small fraction of the roll authority he'd have configured the way a glider's designed to be flown.
Here's a reasonably good free flight example of Tyler:
09-23425
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3922/14877641499_b6912f1396_o.png
22-23625
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3900/15064336515_50d564c882_o.png
26-24801
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5595/15041335306_f413b84ff4_o.png
41-25511
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5564/15041323426_3de7430b07_o.png
49-25801
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3839/14877670410_089c641b5c_o.png
58-30111
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5580/14877665180_0994359f31_o.png
Career ender. Was that a lockout crash because his ability to control the glider was overwhelmed?
2. People have been quaded and killed after ground skim has begun - at which time launch altitude is totally irrelevant - in routine landing mode in Happy Acres putting greens.
2. Adding as much energy as possible to a flight is what one hundred percent of training hill students or told to do at launch.
3. Energy is what makes it possible for a wing to fly and lotsa energy translates to lotsa airspeed and control authority.
Same thing the way initial scooter tow training. You're burning gas to keep the glider skimming at a steady altitude and speed. And you can add or subtract as circumstances allow for or demand.
Weaklinks and aerotowing (ONLY)
Ridgely thought it could run an ugly-ass operation with shit personnel, shit attitudes, shit competence, and shit equipment. They're extinct - along with any practical tow options for a huge chunk of the Mid Atlantic area.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34229
AT release
And your post was TWO DAYS prior to Mission killing a student who locked out and slammed in still on tow. That's the equivalent of a new driver who lost the curve and slammed into a tree without ever applying her brakes - using the lever installed on the front passenger seat floor.
Lesson from an aerotow accident report
2. The instructor deserves shit. He hasn't identified himself, apologized for doing a crappy job and endangering his student's life, given us an open report of what was going on at his end, told us what he's planning on doing differently in the future to achieve different results. He's behaving like a criminal - same as Pat - and deserves to be treated as a criminal - same as Pat.
Stop the Stupids at the USHPA BOD meeting
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Is it? A tow lockout is a condition in which misaligned towline tension overwhelms the pilot's capacity to control the glider enough to sustain the tow.Timothy Ward - 2016/04/15 14:48:55 UTC
Well, the lockout is an issue...
Here's a glider at Dunlap:
04-1409
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3903/14555125331_c930110666_o.png
being temporarily locked out by a thermal blast on his left wing. He's fully extended under the left wing resisting and still being turned away from his desired heading.
Here's the max extent of Tyler's resistance effort:
10-02226
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3906/14877769980_78ff2fbd6e_o.png
That is a decertified glider with him upright with his hands on the control tubes and he can only effect a small fraction of the roll authority he'd have configured the way a glider's designed to be flown.
Here's a reasonably good free flight example of Tyler:
09-23425
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3922/14877641499_b6912f1396_o.png
22-23625
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3900/15064336515_50d564c882_o.png
26-24801
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5595/15041335306_f413b84ff4_o.png
41-25511
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5564/15041323426_3de7430b07_o.png
49-25801
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3839/14877670410_089c641b5c_o.png
58-30111
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5580/14877665180_0994359f31_o.png
Career ender. Was that a lockout crash because his ability to control the glider was overwhelmed?
The elephant that you Jack Show morons wouldn't be able to detect if he had a tusk three feet up your asses is that harness and that "control" position....but the elephant is: why the hell would you tow someone who apparently didn't know how to turn that high?
There isn't.The advantage, if there is one...
1. What about the wind? If you fly off a fifty foot hill is it possible to get turned back into it and hit with enough energy to kill yourself?...to a training hill, is that the energy involved in a crash is going to be limited by how high up the hill you start...
2. People have been quaded and killed after ground skim has begun - at which time launch altitude is totally irrelevant - in routine landing mode in Happy Acres putting greens.
1. Barring gusts....and it's unlikely that much more will get added during a training flight.
2. Adding as much energy as possible to a flight is what one hundred percent of training hill students or told to do at launch.
3. Energy is what makes it possible for a wing to fly and lotsa energy translates to lotsa airspeed and control authority.
Bullshit. That's like saying when you're driving across Kansas on cruise control you're constantly adding energy to the car. The car has the same amount of kinetic energy at the two hundred mile marker that it did at the one hundred mile marker (ignoring weight reduction due to fuel burning). You're burning gas to MAINTAIN the car's kinetic energy which would otherwise be dissipated mostly by wind resistance.In towing, the operator is constantly adding energy to the glider.
Same thing the way initial scooter tow training. You're burning gas to keep the glider skimming at a steady altitude and speed. And you can add or subtract as circumstances allow for or demand.
DOES. That's the whole idea. But you can't do it if you're not doing shit to teach the student to fly or allow him to learn to fly. And NOBODY can learn to fly a glider safely while upright on the control tubes - as was the case with both Tyler and Nancy.Done properly, this could result in more time aloft to learn.
Just enough to allow it to wallow around in mush mode and drop in harmless inconvenience mode when the Rooney Link increases the safety of the towing operation.But "properly" for training involves never having very much energy in the glider at any one time.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/skysailingtowing/message/4633NMERider - 2016/04/15 16:13:49 UTCYour observation here is spot on.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/15 13:28:18 UTC
I'm not sure where the idea that the line tension was reduced or released is coming from...
Weaklinks and aerotowing (ONLY)
Steve Kroop - 2005/02/10 04:50:59 UTC
Davis,
Your weak link comments are dead on.
That's a lot more of a pendulum than a 'lever arm'. A lever arm is what we had when the lower attachment was on the control bar.The glider remained in an increasing right-hand bank that was exacerbated by the remaining tension on the tow line pulling the 'lever arm' of the pilot attachment point...
His spot on observation there was that the glider should've rolled back level when the towline weight shifted Tyler back under the left wing....to the glider's left which rolled the glider even more to its right.
That towline pressure should never have been applied to anyone in that harness with that tow "equipment" in the first place.That tow line tension should have been fully slackened the moment it was clear the student's sub-minimal control inputs weren't having any effect on the glider's path.
If the wings were ALLOWED to do what they wanted he'd still have kept rolling to the right.Yes, this would have allowed the wings to level and the glider to fly straight.
An observation anyway.Good observation!
So shoddily run training programs reduce operating costs and make commercial hang gliding more profitable in the long run? It that what we're seeing happening out in the real world?NMERider - 2016/04/15 16:18:05 UTCProfit margin. The school's bottom line. Economic considerations. Money. These are the elephant as I perceive it. Call me a cynic all you like but I've been exposed to this 'elephant in the sport' and it's one ugly-ass mastodon that never became extinct.Timothy Ward - 2016/04/15 14:48:55 UTC
...but the elephant is: why the hell would you tow someone who apparently didn't know how to turn that high?
Ridgely thought it could run an ugly-ass operation with shit personnel, shit attitudes, shit competence, and shit equipment. They're extinct - along with any practical tow options for a huge chunk of the Mid Atlantic area.
Nope. There's no excuse for putting any human up like that. There's no way in hell I myself would go up like that and on crap like that.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/15 16:46:17 UTC
That's a popular theory, Jono.
To offer another, and the one I prefer to believe (however bias I may be, as I *hope* it's this one and not that one you said)
Instructor(s) are usually "good people", kind hearted and willing to heavily invest their lives toward helping others live their dreams of flight. Hang Gliding instruction is a career path steered by passion and love, not profit or self-centeredness. So, when I see something like this, I have to believe it's a mistake made by the instructor stemming from just not knowing any better. He probably did a series of tows that all ended well enough, and he took those positive outcomes as signs of the student's readiness to fly higher- rather than observing and evaluating the student's demonstration of specific skills. The instructor might also not have a mental "teaching toolbox" of tasks and skill building focus points to use to advance someone's learning experience WITHOUT adding any addition height (or energy, as it was well put above)
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34229
AT release
piano_man - 2016/04/01 15:16:53 UTC
Can anyone tell me how and if this thing works?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/sets/72057594141352219/
Ryan Voight - 2016/04/01 16:15:08 UTC
Which one? Looks like a collection of images of all different release types...
You Jack Show assholes can make all the smartass and abusive cracks about me and my equipment you want - but the fact that people are still looking at it is absolute proof that they realize the Industry options all suck. If I'd put up illustrations for the topless glider design I came up with a dozen years ago nobody would be looking at or talking about them 'cause there's nothing wrong with available gliders and they're as good as they're ever gonna get.piano_man - 2016/04/01 16:34:04 UTC
It's only part in jest as today is April Fool's Day, but seriously, I've tried to make sense of all those knots and pulleys but always give up. It seems with todays technology it would be easy to post a demo of how this or these releases work, e.g, youtube.
Just wondering if anyone here has ever seen one of these releases up close, tried 'em, etc.
And your post was TWO DAYS prior to Mission killing a student who locked out and slammed in still on tow. That's the equivalent of a new driver who lost the curve and slammed into a tree without ever applying her brakes - using the lever installed on the front passenger seat floor.
Needs proofreading, Ryan.Of course, as an instructor, it's his or her responsibility to know this stuff... so calling it an "honest mistake" is quite right either.
I know EXACTYL what to expect of "our"...The plain fact is that it shouldn't happen, EVER, and there ARE instructors that have taught long enough and often enough to prove it's not just theoretically possible, but very realistic to EXPECT it of "our" instructors.
http://www.ozreport.com/9.133Eric Hinrichs - 2016/04/08 00:38:45 UTC
As Ryan V, I'm feeling the need to speak up on this sad subject, especially because a lot of patently false information is being presented.
I'll address just a few.False, false, and false.Lin Lyons - 2016/04/07 03:29:57 UTC
They have been towing pilots there for decades, with a pretty good safety record. It is true that I had a parachute deployment, but it was my mistake, not theirs.
Not sure where you get your information or ideas.
I was working for Pat when he started his tow out there, and was his main guinea pig when setting it up. It wasn't decades ago.
The safety record is very questionable being that we hear about major problems fairly frequently. I can guarantee that there are many other issues and incidents that most of us never hear about.
You were under paid instruction when your accident occurred, why would it be all your fault? I was at the club meeting when Pat showed us what went wrong, and it made me sick hearing him put all the blame on you.Falsegluesniffer - 2016/04/07 23:26:27 UTC
I formulated my opinion based on observing mission's program. Obviously something wrong happened and we need to learn from this accident. So far nobody knows chit. But the school is run in a professional manner.
Is it professional to charge someone, then not deliver the product?
Is it optimal to pass students back and forth between lots of instructors?
Maybe you should talk with more of his former students and the general flying community. Or maybe with some of the instructors that have worked with him.
Yes, hgflyer, slopeskimmer, and I all have issues with how Pat does business and his "professionalism," but then again all of us have worked for him and have been frustrated with many of his approaches to business, teaching, and free flight in general.
Lesson from an aerotow accident report
...instructors.USHGA Accident Report Summary
Pilot: Holly Korzilius
Reporter: Steve Wendt, USHGA Instructor # 19528
Date : 5/29/05
Summary: I observed the accident from a few hundred yards away, but could clearly see launch and the aero tow was coming towards my area so that I had a full view of the flight. I was at the wreckage in a few seconds and afterwards gathered the information that helps understand the results of some unfortunate poor decisions of the injured pilot.
The pilot launched at 12:15 while conditions were just starting to become thermally, with just a slight crosswind of maybe 20 degrees with winds of 8 to 12 mph NNW. The pilot had flown here via AT more than 50 times.
Holly immediately had control problems right off the dolly and completed 3 oscilations before it took her 90 degrees from the tow vehicle upon when the tug pilot hit the release and Holly continued turning away from the tow in a fairly violent exchange of force . Holly pulled in to have control speed and then began rounding out , but there was not enough altitude and she hit the ground before she could do so. She was barely 100 feet when she was locked out in a left hand turn. At that time, she was banked up over 60 degrees.
The basebar hit the ground first, nose wires failed from the impact, and at the same time she was hitting face first. She had a full face helmet, which helped reduce her facial injuries but could not totallly prevent them. The gliders wings were level with the ground when it made contact with the ground.
First aid was available quickly and EMT response was appropriate .
Now, why did Holly not have control? Holly has two gliders, a Moyes Sonic, and the Moyes Litesport that she was flying during the accident. She has flown here in much stronger conditions before. and has always flown safely , on both of her gliders, but usually chooses her Sonic if air is questionable, or if she hasn't flown in a while.
Holly for some reason chose to fly her Litesport, she has always towed it with proper releases and weak links and usually seeked advice from me when unsure of something.
This time she couldn't find her v-bridle top line with her weak link installed for her priimary keel release. She chose to tow anyway, and just go from the shoulders, which to my knowledge she had never done before, nor had she been trained to understand potential problems. This could have been done with a short clinic and if we thought it a possibility, been done under supervised conditions in the evening air. Our dollys have check lists for many things, one is that you have a proper weak link installed. She had no weak link as it was normally on the upper line that she couldn't find, and we can only assume that she didn't even consider the fact that she now didn't have a weak link.
These mistakes caused her to have too much bar pressure, farther in bar position, she was cross controlling, and had no weak link. She hadn't flown that glider in a while and changed these towing aspects that I believe all combined to make a violant combination. The pilot also stayed on tow too long. She should have released after the first, or even the second oscilation when she realized that things were not correct. Failing to do so put the glider in a locked out situation that she could no longer control.
1. The student's SUPPOSED TO BE steering poorly. If he wasn't steering poorly he wouldn't be a student. The instructor's getting paid to teach him to steer not poorly and keep him from getting into serious trouble while he's doing that other part of his job.But- since no one seems to be angry with the student for steering poorly... I'd like to suggest we also shouldn't get too angry with the instructor for appearantly teaching poorly- for the same reason.
2. The instructor deserves shit. He hasn't identified himself, apologized for doing a crappy job and endangering his student's life, given us an open report of what was going on at his end, told us what he's planning on doing differently in the future to achieve different results. He's behaving like a criminal - same as Pat - and deserves to be treated as a criminal - same as Pat.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=25321Maybe we need to face it that the Instructor Training Program (ITP) is deficient in adequately preparing individuals for the overwhelming challenges in teaching humans to aviate.
Stop the Stupids at the USHPA BOD meeting
So what do we expect?Mark G. Forbes - 2011/09/29 02:26:23 UTC
We can establish rules which we think will improve pilot safety, but our attorney is right. USHPA is not in the business of keeping pilots "safe" and it can't be. Stepping into that morass is a recipe for extinction of our association. I wish it were not so, but it is. We don't sell equipment, we don't offer instruction, and we don't assure pilots that they'll be safe.
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
...with TWO Industry Standard releases within extremely easy reach - and he's been at an around all this plenty long enough to understand what's what and who's who. Those are Bobby Fucking-Genius Bailey designed releases and Davis is very happy with them so what's the problem?
You think Tyler would've had as much reluctance to release if he'd been equipped like:
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2925/14120899757_3f3e59d05c_o.png
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5530/14120804830_2aabd74d25_o.png
What's the reason he WASN'T equipped like that? That training flight undoubtedly cost more than one of those - and that's without an injury requiring treatment.
46-45901
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2937/14081080220_373f64f01d_o.png
Just needs to work on his flare timing a bit more. Wanna see the video of the entire flight?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3nnTrBJEdI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3nnTrBJEdI
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Towline the most prominent amongst them.NMERider - 2016/04/15 17:29:00 UTC
I indicated that it was a cynical viewpoint and added the roll-eyes smiley but bills arrive in the mail and they come due and financial pressures can mount on instructors. Pressure from sources other than the pressure to place safety above all else is a problem.
Students feel pressure to catch up to their expectations of where they want to be or think they should be and may push themselves too far. I've seen it and I've seen the X-Rays, MRIs, casts, pins and so forth. Hang 4 pilots feel pressure from inside to have a flight that meets their expectations or desires and meet with the same or worse fate as the H1 student.
Hang gliding is recreation. It's the antithesis of pressure yet there are all these pressures...
Then they weren't accidents....that enter into the sport from the ground up and the ionosphere down and we have accidents that were avoidable.
STUDENT.The pilot...
What do you figure Nancy was doing in the video we're never gonna get to see?...who drifted off to his right under tow and piled-in was cursing all the way.
If he didn't know how to stay in position on tow what makes you think he knew how to get back into position after departing from it. He wasn't qualified for Hang One towing skills but we should expect him to be able to compensate by executing Hang Two towing skills? He overshot the primary Happy Acres putting green so he should be able to park safely in the secondary narrow dry riverbed with large rocks strewn all over the place?I never heard him mutter anything constructive to himself like, "Get that nose down!" or "Pull to the left!"...
Here's Davis Dead-On Straub not releasing......or "Release!!".
...with TWO Industry Standard releases within extremely easy reach - and he's been at an around all this plenty long enough to understand what's what and who's who. Those are Bobby Fucking-Genius Bailey designed releases and Davis is very happy with them so what's the problem?
You think Tyler would've had as much reluctance to release if he'd been equipped like:
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2925/14120899757_3f3e59d05c_o.png
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5530/14120804830_2aabd74d25_o.png
What's the reason he WASN'T equipped like that? That training flight undoubtedly cost more than one of those - and that's without an injury requiring treatment.
But the "instructor" did fine. No reason to consider dismissing him from selling lessons and advising him to teach checkers instead.Now there's a student who maybe should have been dismissed from his lessons and advised to seek recreation in some other form.
How do you know he's one of "THESE" cases? We don't know anything about his background. All we know for sure is that he had no clue how to turn a glider and that his instructor totally sucked. We can know to an absolute certainty just by looking at any single frame from that video that his instructor totally sucked. And Tyler here is showing considerable character in comparison to most of the dregs who infest this sport just by virtue of having posted this video - which is no advertisement of his aviation prowess - and leaving it up for this past year and two thirds.We have dealt with a few of these cases at Crestline.
Who signed him off for the environments and conditions in which he was breaking many bones? When an instructor puts his signature on a card isn't he saying that his student can safely operate in more advanced and hazardous environments and situations?One student pilot drove chase for me and DbyD on an epic Sport 2 155 X/C race we did eons ago. I'm not sure how many bones he went on to break but it took some convincing to talk him out of free-flight as a form of recreation.
Definitely not for any of the thirteen US individuals who've been snuffed since Kelly Harrison's driver started rolling at Jean Lake last spring - one of them a Navy fighter pilot instructor. But there don't seem to be any records of people advising them to pursue other recreational activities before the option was taken off the table. And nobody's even saying anything along those lines after the fact.Hang gliding may not be for everyone.
Yeah ya do. All of us who post on flying issues are serving in instructional capacities. And a lot of us are posting to help compensate for the shit jobs that the paid instructors are doing.I don't instruct...
The ones who don't really need instructors....but I sure do observe and I see people who get it and catch on quick...
The ones who do really need instructors....and I see people who just don't ever seem to get it.
Yeah. Let's cut Tyler loose based upon that one video he posted of one 39 second flight. Mel Torres on the other hand...There comes a point at which people may need to be cut loose.
46-45901
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2937/14081080220_373f64f01d_o.png
Just needs to work on his flare timing a bit more. Wanna see the video of the entire flight?
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3nnTrBJEdI
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=T3nnTrBJEdI
No shame in much of anything for the participants in this sport.There's no shame in that.
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1483/26207707785_6ae87e9ddd_o.jpg
...or having emergency low altitude parachute deployments.
1. Pat Denevan wasn't using a scooter tow system when he killed Nancy and almost killed Lin.
2. Pat's pulled about a billion gliders up on his stationary winch system. Are you saying that Nancy was needlessly killed because he was missing a couple of letters on his card and/or was violating some u$hPa SOPs covering equipment and operations?
10-02226
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3906/14877769980_78ff2fbd6e_o.png
34-03715
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5594/14877659539_4d1333c6a3_o.png
...save himself. He walked away and was up on tandem instruction the next day. Wanna talk about someone who did nothing to save himself talk about Kelly Harrison who was killed instantly along with his eleven year old tandem "student" after a four hundred foot plummet with his parachute neatly stowed in his container the whole time.
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-bRrpHNa68iY/UQ6Pv9gRZyI/AAAAAAAAjTg/Hc22bx5122Q/s2048/20943781_BG1.jpg
Where's your data on that Davis? Who says there's more skill involved in putting someone on a rope and pulling him off a Happy Acres putting green in sled conditions and setting him back down if he starts getting in trouble? Isn't it just because it's a lot harder to blame a training crash all on the student on a tow flight than it is to blame everything on a free flying training hill student?
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Seems to ALL instructors that keeping student back are bigger money makers. How else would you explain upright only harnesses, spot landing, requirements, Stephan being restarted at Hang Zero level on Steve Exceptionally-Knowledgeable Wendt's scooter tow after hundreds of aerotows?Davis Straub - 2016/04/15 17:59:07 UTC
Seems to me that keeping a student back would be a bigger money maker.
Don't most of these instructors also sell downtubes?Wouldn't have to pay for a broken down tube at least.
Yeah, let's ask Pat Denevan - owner of the school that all the Jack Show douchebags were recommending for Bay Area prospective students right after Lin's little Tres Pinos adventure.Perhaps we should ask successful instructors what makes more economic sense.
Get fucked, Christopher.2016/04/15 21:25:24 UTC - 3 thumbs up - Christopher LeFay
Oh. That's the big loophole we need to close right now. Don't really need to worry about universal flagrant violations of existing hook-in check, release, weak link regulations.Brad Barkley - 2016/04/15 18:18:23 UTC
I think one gaping loophole that needs to be closed immediately is the fact that someone can get a Basic Instructor appointment by learning to teach on the training hill, then run out and buy a scooter and start yanking people into the air.
A lot luckier than Pat was two Sundays ago. Also a lot luckier than Pat's been in recent times in not demolishing anyone...We had just such a case in Pennsylvania last year, with an instructor who was very lucky not to kill someone.
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1483/26207707785_6ae87e9ddd_o.jpg
...or having emergency low altitude parachute deployments.
http://c2.staticflickr.com/6/5788/23461251751_e98b9c7500_o.pngIf Tandem Instruction is a separate and distinct appointment...
Fuck yeah. We only want the best of the best doing this shit....then Scooter Tow Instructor should be too.
1. Pat Denevan wasn't using a scooter tow system when he killed Nancy and almost killed Lin.
2. Pat's pulled about a billion gliders up on his stationary winch system. Are you saying that Nancy was needlessly killed because he was missing a couple of letters on his card and/or was violating some u$hPa SOPs covering equipment and operations?
Get fucked, Christopher.2016/04/15 21:25:48 UTC - 3 thumbs up Christopher LeFay
Ya think? Ya think that's why he was making multiple stabs at:Dave Pendzick - 2016/04/15 18:52:36 UTC
He obviously had sense enough to recognize something was wrong...
10-02226
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3906/14877769980_78ff2fbd6e_o.png
Fuck you. He DID......yet did nothing to save himself.
34-03715
http://farm6.staticflickr.com/5594/14877659539_4d1333c6a3_o.png
...save himself. He walked away and was up on tandem instruction the next day. Wanna talk about someone who did nothing to save himself talk about Kelly Harrison who was killed instantly along with his eleven year old tandem "student" after a four hundred foot plummet with his parachute neatly stowed in his container the whole time.
Doesn't beg any question from me. He very obviously didn't slam in 'cause he knew what to do and how to do it but chose not to because risk was part of his attraction to the sport.This begs the question did he know what to do & was it practiced or just explained?
What indication do you have that this was a new H1 student?Even if it was explained & practiced I feel this is too much for a new H1 student to be expected to manage...
Who gives a rat's ass about your standpoint? You're a total moron. I've got a shitload of towing under my belt and I can tell you that it's got zilch in the way of "SKILL" requirement. A ten year old kid sinking a basketball layup is exercising a hundred times the skill it takes to fly a stupid hang glider up/down/left/right. I had the skill to do that on Day One on the fuckin' dunes....which further bolsters my standpoint that towing, in any form, is an advanced skill.
How deep up your ass did you need to reach before pulling that statement out?Even low & slow scooter towing, which really does not accomplish much from a learning standpoint.
I got news for ya, dickhead. Human flight is completely artificial. It's something that we've only been able to do within the last blink of an eye of human evolution.It is completely artificial...
'Cause flying a glider for three hours after you've towed up in Texas is NOTHING like flying a glider for three hours after you've run off the cliff at Torrey or the ramp at Kagel. That's because it's an ADVANCED SKILL and thus requires masterful rudimentary skill to do really right....& resembles nothing close to launching or flying the hang glider.
Multiplying him on the process.Its exciting for the student & gets them in the air...
Everything they needs to know - as long as it's conducted in a narrow dry riverbed with large rocks strewn all over the place....but what does it actually teach?
Definitely. They very obviously aren't using it for turning repetition.Landing repetition maybe???
Much more efficient - since it's so much easier to carry a glider up a steep hundred foot slope than it is to carry it on flat ground or plop it on a cart and get a shuttle ride back to launch position.How much more or less efficient would landing repetition be a the training hill or sand dune?
Really? Me neither. 'Specially when California is so conveniently located to all the population centers that don't have dunes, hills, mountains within half hour drives.I just don't get why we are having new students learn to tow...
Fuckin' lunatics.2016/04/15 20:11:44 UTC - 3 thumbs up - Michael Grisham
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3713/9655904048_89cce6423a_o.pngDavis Straub - 2016/04/15 18:57:42 UTC
On the part of the instructor, for sure....towing, in any form, is an advanced skill...
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-bRrpHNa68iY/UQ6Pv9gRZyI/AAAAAAAAjTg/Hc22bx5122Q/s2048/20943781_BG1.jpg
Where's your data on that Davis? Who says there's more skill involved in putting someone on a rope and pulling him off a Happy Acres putting green in sled conditions and setting him back down if he starts getting in trouble? Isn't it just because it's a lot harder to blame a training crash all on the student on a tow flight than it is to blame everything on a free flying training hill student?
It has been very amply illustrated that this is not true for the student.
So we're saying that Dave is totally full o' shit?2016/04/15 20:49:43 UTC - 3 thumbs up - Don Arsenault
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Fuckin' Naval Aviator about to land very firmly with himself as the landing gear:
http://forum.hanggliding.org/download/file.php?id=18967
You can spot 'em a mile away.
And, of course, on The Jack Show this anti tow lunacy is perfectly OK. What gets you attacked and banned is saying that towing could be done better than it is under Flight Park Mafia control.
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Michael Grisham - 2016/04/15 19:28:57 UTC
Fundamentals of Instruction (FOI)
Aviation Instructor's Handbook
What is imperative is the new student (H0,H1,H2) establishes a base line of the fundamental skills first and foremost before moving to more advanced tasks. Those basic fundamental skills are takeoff, landing, and controlled flight in the simplest form, the training hill.Introduction
This chapter discusses human behavior and how it affects the learning process. Learning is the acquisition of knowledge or understanding of a subject or skill through education, experience, practice, or study. A change of behavior results from learning. To successfully bring about learning, the instructor must know why people act the way they do, how people learn, and then use this understanding to teach. The study of applied educational psychology underlies the information and theories that are discussed. To be an effective instructor, knowledge of human behavior, basic human needs, the defense mechanisms humans use that prevent learning, as well as how adults learn is essential for organizing student activities and promoting a productive learning experience for student.
The problem with scooter towing for the new student is the repetitious nose high attitude takeoff practice becomes an ingrained habit. Ten years later the student will be on a cliff launch and the nose high attitude will be so ingrained it will take continuous conscious effort to keep the nose down, an un-natural act.Davis Straub - 2016/04/14 11:56:54 UTC
One of the coolest aspects of low and slow scooter towing is all the practice that you get landing. Over and over again without tiring yourself out.
I have seen this in the best trained pilots in the world, Naval Aviators. When they are fatigued, tired, stressed, or in an emergency, they land as if they are landing on the boat, because that is what they were trained to do, which means it will be a firm landing, repetition and intensity. And a firm landing is not always appropriate especially if you the pilot are also the landing gear.
It is truly about the Fundamentals of Instruction shared by your friendly FAA.
And we've already established that towing is a highly advanced task by saying it over and over and over and going nuts on the three Blood Bath period tow fatal crashes - all of which were precipitated by massive and deliberate negligence and incompetence - while totally ignoring the seven fatals that resulted from the hazards of mountain flying. Also totally ignoring the fact that the convenience of tow launching allows us to get twenty tow flights off in the time and for the expenditure it takes to do one mountain.What is imperative is the new student (H0,H1,H2) establishes a base line of the fundamental skills first and foremost before moving to more advanced tasks.
So much SIMPLER it is to balance the glider on your shoulders; check the wind; walk, jog, run; maintain balance; adjust pitch; shift from grapevine to bottle to basetube; prone out than it is to lie down on a cart and say "Go."Those basic fundamental skills are takeoff, landing, and controlled flight in the simplest form, the training hill.
Fuck yeah! This is a well documented problem. When scooter tow graduates start showing up on the slopes they're always pointing their noses way the fuck up and groundlooping back into the hillside. Absolute carnage. Oughta be a crime.The problem with scooter towing for the new student is the repetitious nose high attitude takeoff practice becomes an ingrained habit.
Or sometimes ten years later.Ten years later...
And he'll still be a student. The kinds a people who choose the scooter route are GLACIALLY slow learners....the student...
I have no fuckin' clue why they even allow these scooter tow students NEAR cliff launches. I wouldn't even want one on crew. That's how stupid they are....will be on a cliff launch...
...and, to them, perverted......and the nose high attitude will be so ingrained it will take continuous conscious effort to keep the nose down, an un-natural...
You can always tell the scooter people at cliff launches. They're the ones with their noses up an extra ten degrees. The hill people are the ones who do all their cliff launches flawlessly. (Which makes ya wonder a bit about Karen Carra 'cause when she got into the sport scooter didn't really exist and it was all training hill and dune for students.)...act.
Best trained by trainers like Trey Higgins - who died ten months ago scratching too close to the slope.I have seen this in the best trained pilots in the world, Naval Aviators.
FUCK THAT! Everybody knows that when you're fatigued, tired, stressed, or in an emergency you wanna aim for the old Frisbee in the middle of the runway. You wanna land with as much runway behind you as possible to minimize the danger of clipping the fence off the downwind end.When they are fatigued, tired, stressed, or in an emergency, they land as if they are landing on the boat...
I really hate those firm landings. They all tend to be really firm....because that is what they were trained to do, which means it will be a firm landing...
Keep saying the same moronic crap often and loud enough and people will believe ANYTHING....repetition and intensity.
I toldya I hated firm landings. They're not always appropriate - especially when I'm the pilot are also the landing gear. We need to get some of these Naval Aviators into twelve step programs to get them to stop doing firm landings they're fatigued, tired, stressed, or in emergencies. 'Specially when they're in hang gliders aiming for old Frisbees in the middles of LZs and using their legs to stop.And a firm landing is not always appropriate especially if you the pilot are also the landing gear.
Fuckin' Naval Aviator about to land very firmly with himself as the landing gear:
http://forum.hanggliding.org/download/file.php?id=18967
You can spot 'em a mile away.
Notice how all the experts on why towing is dangerous are total lunatic assholes who've never towed or been anywhere around towing and have no fuckin' clues what they're talking about?It is truly about the Fundamentals of Instruction shared by your friendly FAA.
And, of course, on The Jack Show this anti tow lunacy is perfectly OK. What gets you attacked and banned is saying that towing could be done better than it is under Flight Park Mafia control.
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9230
Departing the launch cart
2. But foot landing, of course...
2. Yeah. ANY crosswind OUT THERE is a beast much different from the ones one encounters elsewhere so it requires the forethought to compensate for that during tow OUT THERE. NOT during tow the crosswind is less of an issue.
3. On hill, mountain, cliff launches, of course, crosswinds are total nonissues.
4. You don't compensate for a crosswind DURING a tow OUT THERE - asshole. You compensate for a crosswind either by adjusting your launch point relative to what's pulling you or, if the runway's too constrained, executing a crosswind launch - which means getting airborne with speed and keeping your wings level. Once you're safely airborne a crosswind becomes a nonissue. You just keep the glider level and allow it to drift to straight downwind of whatever's pulling you.
What you're actually saying in your semiliterate deranged fashion is that these total fucking morons OUT THERE are telling people to crab into the crosswind to stay lined up with the runway. Like what John Woiwode did 2005/07/07 just before he was ninety percent killed and permanently horribly mangled. And Mission punishes the students who are doing it right by chopping their power and forcing landings. Big fuckin' surprise.
http://www.hang-gliding.com
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Glenn Zapien - 2016/04/15 19:54:37 UTC
No two students are exactly the same, results will always vary by student. I have towed on underpowered scooters, and scooters that felt like I left my shoes behind pitch up powerful. It is not a beginner skillset. I also towed at MSC, any crosswind out there requires the forethought to compensate for that during tow out there. Like a car with bad alignment if you don't stay on course they would cut power and you would have to start over. I think remaining vigilant and reducing complacency especially for the larger schools with lots of students towing in a day can easily and unintentionally get lost in the repetition. I helped MSC with the towing rig knock out 87 tows in one day. Couple pilots did get the release set up wrong. It was my job to make sure it was right that day. Stay at attention. Ever see a security guard sleeping before?
How unfortunate. 'Cause the issues of physics involved in flying are all EXACTLY the same and require exactly the same understandings and executions.No two students are exactly the same, results will always vary by student.
Why? Isn't underpowered...I have towed on underpowered scooters...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=9230
Departing the launch cart
..a synonym for unsafe/dangerous? Wouldn't an underpowered scooter leave you wallowing around in the kill zone an inordinate length of time?Jim Rooney - 2007/09/01 02:39:53 UTC
Which brings us to the reason to have a 914 in the first place... you need one.
Something made you get a 914 instead of a 582. 914s are horribly expensive to own and maintain. If you own one, you need it... it's a safety thing.
I thought the whole idea of scooter towing was that you could make fine adjustments in power as required to adjust to what was going on with the student and his glider. Are you saying that if a scooter is capable of delivering a lot of power you've gotta use it?...and scooters that felt like I left my shoes behind pitch up powerful.
1. Of course it's not. You just told us it isn't. And you've cited the proof that you've towed on underpowered scooters and scooters that felt like I left my shoes behind pitch up powerful. What more proof could we possibly need? Totally undermines any evidence provided by the tens of thousands of beginner tows that Steve Wendt has done at Manquin.It is not a beginner skillset.
2. But foot landing, of course...
...is. Nothing else really matters until that flare timing is perfected.Gil Dodgen - 1995/01
All of this reminds me of a comment Mike Meier made when he was learning to fly sailplanes. He mentioned how easy it was to land a sailplane (with spoilers for glide-path control and wheels), and then said, "If other aircraft were as difficult to land as hang gliders no one would fly them."
1. Oh. You hafta think about what you're gonna be doing before you get airborne. Bummer.I also towed at MSC, any crosswind out there requires the forethought to compensate for that during tow out there.
2. Yeah. ANY crosswind OUT THERE is a beast much different from the ones one encounters elsewhere so it requires the forethought to compensate for that during tow OUT THERE. NOT during tow the crosswind is less of an issue.
3. On hill, mountain, cliff launches, of course, crosswinds are total nonissues.
4. You don't compensate for a crosswind DURING a tow OUT THERE - asshole. You compensate for a crosswind either by adjusting your launch point relative to what's pulling you or, if the runway's too constrained, executing a crosswind launch - which means getting airborne with speed and keeping your wings level. Once you're safely airborne a crosswind becomes a nonissue. You just keep the glider level and allow it to drift to straight downwind of whatever's pulling you.
Yes. That sentence makes perfect sense.Like a car with bad alignment if you don't stay on course they would cut power and you would have to start over.
Ya know what's like a car with bad alignment? A glider with a turn that hasn't been or can't be tuned out of it. So why is Mission towing students on gliders with turns?Like a car with bad alignment...
...if you don't stay on course they would cut power...
Wills Wing / Blue Sky / Ryan Voight Productions - 2007/03
NEVER CUT THE POWER...
Reduce Gradually
Increase Gradually
Oh. So you're saying that a student on a glider with such a bad turn in it that the student is unable to stay lined up properly downwind of the pulley is dumped so that he has to start over and that fixes the problem.....and you would have to start over.
What you're actually saying in your semiliterate deranged fashion is that these total fucking morons OUT THERE are telling people to crab into the crosswind to stay lined up with the runway. Like what John Woiwode did 2005/07/07 just before he was ninety percent killed and permanently horribly mangled. And Mission punishes the students who are doing it right by chopping their power and forcing landings. Big fuckin' surprise.
And here I was thinking that you get BETTER at doing what you're doing with practice, repetition.I think remaining vigilant and reducing complacency especially for the larger schools with lots of students towing in a day can easily and unintentionally get lost in the repetition.
http://www.hang-gliding.com
Why Mission
Pat Denevan and his instructors at Mission Soaring Center have been teaching hang gliding for more than 40 years. Pat is a leader in the hang gliding community - he has been instrumental in developing the teaching standards for the USHPA.
Neither Pat Denevan nor any of his instructors at Mission Soaring Center has been teaching hang gliding for more than six months. Virtually no one in the hang gliding community has ever heard of Pat and he's totally unaware of any teaching standards of the USHPA. Consequently he's the most vigilant and least complacent instructor of anyone currently qualified.
Did that include relights for students dumped at 150 feet for not crabbing into the crosswind?I helped MSC with the towing rig knock out 87 tows in one day.
Thank you so very much for telling us that Mission knew there was a problem with students connecting three-strings before 2013/06/15. Adds a whole new dimension to:Couple pilots did get the release set up wrong.
Eric Hinrichs - 2016/04/08 00:38:45 UTC
You were under paid instruction when your accident occurred, why would it be all your fault? I was at the club meeting when Pat showed us what went wrong, and it made me sick hearing him put all the blame on you.
Whose job was it on 2013/06/15?It was my job to make sure it was right that day.
Thanks for the advice, Glenn. I have a really strong tendency to dope off whenever I'm doing foot launched winch tows - 'specially below two hundred feet. I'll try to remember to be careful out there out there as well. 'Specially with that special crosswind they've got out there - and the special tow operators out there telling people to Woiwode into it.Stay at attention. Ever see a security guard sleeping before?
- Tad Eareckson
- Posts: 9161
- Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC
Re: 2016/04/03 Tres Pinos fatality
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
AT dolly launch the glider is set on the cart with the nose a bit high. As it gets up to speed the glider trims nose down. You come off the cart at a low angle of attack then climb with a low angle of attack but high pitch attitude until the Rooney Link increase the safety of the towing operation and you benefit from an inconvenience stall.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=14608
Another HG death.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuSHh0nmKkQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuSHh0nmKkQ
07-1412
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11-1513
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2926/14374222698_ed4d1c396d_o.png
It was a totally fucked up launch and Chris's crew doesn't get any awards for keeping things under control either.
Mountain foot launches are complex, demanding, and DANGEROUS and it's total rot to suggest that learning to fly through towing is a factor making them more so. Angle of attack is angle of attack no matter where you are or...
28-04208
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...what you're doing. This pitch attitude:
04-0628
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1506/26333182002_015c4ab16c_o.png
is just fine for the training hill or a scooter tow launch. But it's gonna get you killed at a ramp with a steep drop-off and the wind blasting UP.
10-30301
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Steve Exceptionally-Knowledgeable Wendt is supposed to be the greatest thing in hang gliding since sliced bread and to say otherwise is heresy. So how come he isn't reporting incidents arising from this alleged issue and it isn't addressed in the Blue Sky / Wills Wing scooter tow video?
If this bullshit about scooter tow trained pilots instinctively setting their noses too high at mountain launches has any legitimacy then shouldn't we be seeing hill trained pilots diving into the ground when they go to foot launch tow?
If you can't figure out where the fuck to point your nose at launch based on what the air is doing then either don't fly or stick to towing - preferably dolly or platform launch.
It doesn't just drive people who were there out of the sport. It also drives people who knew and liked them out of the sport. And we can't measure the effect 'cause what happens is that flying becomes less fun for them so they don't do it as much and then just quietly disappear from the sport without anybody really noticing. When Chad got killed down at Quest flying for me for a long time afterwards went from being fun to something I needed to make myself do.
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=2437
Letter of Resignation
2. Name one:
- foot launch instructor who makes any pretense of adhering to u$hPa's hook-in check SOP
- AT instructor who makes any pretense of adhering u$hPa AT SOPs
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=31052
Poll on weaklinks
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Chris Thale - On 2009/11/27.NMERider - 2016/04/15 20:41:34 UTC
This phenomenon resulted in the death of an acquaintance of mine who mainly did scooter towing in Ohio.Michael Grisham - 2016/04/15 19:28:57 UTC
The problem with scooter towing for the new student is the repetitious nose high attitude takeoff practice becomes an ingrained habit...
Not the same thing at all.He was out at Crestline while in the area on business and walked up to the ramp with his nose up in the scooter tow position and got lifted sideways off the ramp. He got lucky and flew away. The same thing...
Read Eastern. One of the many troubles with hang gliding is that the power base is in California which is where the launches are all mountain and tend to be forgiving and the airtime in general and thermal time in particular is a lot easier to rack up....happened again at a much less forgiving place.
It was. 'Cept the place is Henson Gap.It may have been Henson's Gap.
This is rubbish. There is no scooter tow nose position. Assuming no wind you start with the same pitch you would for any no wind foot launch. It's only when tension is ramped up and airspeed is attained that the glider will adjust/trim/pitch up. You don't stand there (assuming you're hooked in) holding your nose up.It was fatal.
AT dolly launch the glider is set on the cart with the nose a bit high. As it gets up to speed the glider trims nose down. You come off the cart at a low angle of attack then climb with a low angle of attack but high pitch attitude until the Rooney Link increase the safety of the towing operation and you benefit from an inconvenience stall.
Here's the account of his last attempt to aviate:A formerly active Org member was not only a first responder but was requested by the sheriff to review the keel-mounted video of the grizzly event.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=14608
Another HG death.
Wanna see a reasonable facsimile on a similar ramp not too far away?Nibs - 2009/11/28 14:41:46 UTC
Atlanta
I did not see Chris Thale launch but talked to almost everyone who did. I was told his nose was too high and that he was six feet behind the red line when he yelled clear and began his launch. I was also told he was instructed to lower his nose several times. Immediately after clearing his wire crew, his left wing began to drop and right wing raised, this continued as he went down the ramp. When he hit the vertical airflow at the edge of the ramp where the red line is, his nose popped up even higher and the glider entered into a 180 degree turn to the left back toward the cliff face. He impacted the rock cliff face straight on, then the glider dropped nose-down to the ledge about 75 feet below.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuSHh0nmKkQ
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CuSHh0nmKkQ
07-1412
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11-1513
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2926/14374222698_ed4d1c396d_o.png
It was a totally fucked up launch and Chris's crew doesn't get any awards for keeping things under control either.
Mountain foot launches are complex, demanding, and DANGEROUS and it's total rot to suggest that learning to fly through towing is a factor making them more so. Angle of attack is angle of attack no matter where you are or...
28-04208
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1551/25962165725_29efd47b80_o.png
...what you're doing. This pitch attitude:
04-0628
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1506/26333182002_015c4ab16c_o.png
is just fine for the training hill or a scooter tow launch. But it's gonna get you killed at a ramp with a steep drop-off and the wind blasting UP.
10-30301
http://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8045/29317212532_45d7f2e054_o.png
As opposed to being taken to a hillside to learn to land on a hill.Davis Straub - 2016/04/12 00:23:34 UTC
All students at Blue Sky learn first using the low and slow method with the small scooter tow. Later students are taken to a hill side to learn to launch on a hill.
Steve Exceptionally-Knowledgeable Wendt is supposed to be the greatest thing in hang gliding since sliced bread and to say otherwise is heresy. So how come he isn't reporting incidents arising from this alleged issue and it isn't addressed in the Blue Sky / Wills Wing scooter tow video?
If this bullshit about scooter tow trained pilots instinctively setting their noses too high at mountain launches has any legitimacy then shouldn't we be seeing hill trained pilots diving into the ground when they go to foot launch tow?
If you can't figure out where the fuck to point your nose at launch based on what the air is doing then either don't fly or stick to towing - preferably dolly or platform launch.
Why? They die doing what they love and this is the way all of us wanna check outta this world and reunite with our previously departed friends in that endless thermal beyond.Nothing drives an active pilot out of the sport like being there when pilots get killed.
It doesn't just drive people who were there out of the sport. It also drives people who knew and liked them out of the sport. And we can't measure the effect 'cause what happens is that flying becomes less fun for them so they don't do it as much and then just quietly disappear from the sport without anybody really noticing. When Chad got killed down at Quest flying for me for a long time afterwards went from being fun to something I needed to make myself do.
Remind me to keep him off my crew.I know one pilot who was present during the deaths of three different pilots he knew all in the space of a year or so.
Ugly looking hang gliding accidents are different. It makes the sport more attractive to us by highlighting the risk.I know several pilots who were first responders for some ugly looking fatal accidents and it really takes a toll.
Not many fatal accidents more ugly looking than the bear attack jobs. Stay the hell away from those cubs no matter how cute they are.Enough grizzly talk.
Four. Hang gliding will never be fixable...This is National Individual Tax Deadline Day in the U.S. And we all know there are three certainties in life:
Death, Taxes and The Speed of Light
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=42&t=2437
Letter of Resignation
...because of the kinds of dregs it attracts and puts in control.Rodger Hoyt - 2016/04/15 07:43:26 UTC
In what is probably the shortest tenure of any office holder in any realm, I herewith resign from the US Hawks Board of Directors. Please delete me from future correspondence. This may be beneficial for voting purposes as it provides an odd number of BOD members to preclude possible tie votes. Thanks guys, it's not you, it's me. I have come to despise what hang gliding has become and I don't think it's possible to change it. I want to retire from the sport with a few pleasant memories remaining. Good luck in your endeavors.
Not until we actually address the actual issues that got Nancy killed two weeks ago.Let's talk about the something light.
I find your sufficient self-possession to be truly awe inspiring. If only there were many more like you we'd have many fewer new AT students pulling in just off the cart and flying into the ground.Christopher LeFay - 2016/04/15 21:30:27 UTC
New to solo airtowing, I have experienced the inverse- habitually pulling in when coming off of the cart. Unlike a new student, I'm sufficiently self-possessed to consciously correct the reflex after receiving corrective instruction.
I wouldn't be the least bit surprised. After all, the operator in your club tolerates having you in your club.Christopher LeFay - 2016/04/15 21:38:16 UTC
The level of focus required to safely operate a scooter is only periodically sustainable. While some have much greater capacity, I reckon that high number is beyond the limits of the operator in our club.
Yes. It's only as you get to 88 that things start becoming a bit unreasonable.What do you say, Glenn- is 87 a reasonable number?
We've noticed.I really can't say, as I would just be speaking from my own limitations.
1. How would you know? Where's the data or anecdotal evidence to support that statement? Hang gliding ain't rocket science and most of the people who belong in it don't need instructors for much of anything.Christopher LeFay - 2016/04/15 21:41:18 UTC
Sounds familiar.Ryan Voight - 2016/04/15 16:46:17 UTC
But- since no one seems to be angry with the student for steering poorly... I'd like to suggest we also shouldn't get too angry with the instructor for appearantly teaching poorly- for the same reason. Maybe we need to face it that the Instructor Training Program (ITP) is deficient in adequately preparing individuals for the overwhelming challenges in teaching humans to aviate.
Christopher LeFay - 2016/04/13 17:26:10 UTC
A very caring-yet-less-than-competent instructor recently impressed on me that SOP's and ethos are like down tubes without a base bar. Authoritative education of instructors is that missing element. A conscientious instructor closely adhering to SOP's is a danger without the comprehensive knowledge and experience provided by expert training.
2. Name one:
- foot launch instructor who makes any pretense of adhering to u$hPa's hook-in check SOP
- AT instructor who makes any pretense of adhering u$hPa AT SOPs
Having listened to your incoherent babbling on hang gliding and other issues over the years I wouldn't want you to.Glenn Zapien - 2016/04/15 22:02:22 UTC
It was continuous, conditions were very good, pretty sure the number wasn't intentional. Do I think that is a high number for one rig? Yes... that being said, everything flowed, everyone worked together. Having seen and done it over the years, I would not want to repeat that.
Get fucked, Christopher.2016/04/15 22:19:00 UTC - 3 thumbs up - Christopher LeFay
But you were still OK launching singe surface.Takeo77 - 2016/04/15 23:12:42 UTC
My experience there as well. On a good day it was like launching jets off an Aircraft carrier. ALSO as others have said it wrecked my hill launch technique which bit me hard when I moved from a single to double surface.
Like Nancy was two weeks ago. So let's focus all of our blame on her and ease off on Pat.I don't blame my instructors as PIC I am ultimately responsible...
Great! I'll be sure to refer people looking for instruction in the Bay Area to instructors such as JS, RB, EH and friends such as CC to help them identify and solve their problems....however recurring training and mutual support in terms of maintaining good technique is something that would be good for everyone (to be fair, in the Bay Area community I have had this support given to me freely by instructors such as JS, RB, EH and friends such as CC that have gone a long way towards help me identify and solve my problems).
Wow. That's very profound. Somebody please give that three thumbs up.Glenn Zapien - 2016/04/16 01:33:00 UTC
It takes a village...
Thanks Christopher. I knew we could count on you.2016/04/16 03:02:19 UTC -3 thumbs up - Glenn Zapien
You mean the lack of negative outcome for Davis flying the Davis Link...Ryan Voight - 2016/04/16 04:15:49 UTC
It almost sounds like the lack of negative outcome here is excusing the behavior?
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=31052
Poll on weaklinks
...negates all the ungodly carnage it's caused over the decades it's had establishing its looooong track record?Davis Straub - 2013/03/06 18:29:05 UTC
You know, after all this discussion I'm now convinced that it is a very good idea to treat the weaklink as a release, that that is exactly what we do when we have a weaklink on one side of a pro tow bridle. That that is exactly what has happened to me in a number of situations and that the whole business about a weaklink only for the glider not breaking isn't really the case nor a good idea for hang gliding.
I'm happy to have a relatively weak weaklink, and have never had a serious problem with the Greenspot 130, just an inconvenience now and then.
How many tows do you think Pat ran two weeks ago before killing Nancy with his standard junk procedures and equipment?I know you said you wouldn't want to do it again... but that's different than saying it was wrong, and should not happen like that, right?
Who gives a flying fuck? It was a smoking gun statement proving that Mission knew it had a potentially deadly problem with its releases and clients that it did nothing to address before almost killing Lin and addressed by swapping in known deadly crap after. And for all we know - and quite possibly for all anyone will ever know - Nancy was killed by this very same issue.When you say a couple pilots did get the release set up wrong... and it was your job to check it... does that mean you caught the problems, or that a couple pilots with release problems slipped past you?
Thanks bigtime for giving us vague ideas what the release they were using at the time WASN'T, Glenn.Glenn Zapien - 2016/04/16 04:44:35 UTC
There was a mixed bag of pilots at different levels of skill. The release they used at the time was not a barrel or trigger release.
Name some STYLES being used that DON'T work fine - just as long as you're not in a situation in which you NEED them to work fine.The style being used worked fine...
Note the conspicuous dodging of reference to the Lin Lyons incident. He's realized the strategic blunder he's made....but hooking the line to the release had a possibility of attaching it wrong and being unable to release.
And the dodging of the question.Towing would be stressful for me to be at the controls.
And the way his writing gets even worse than usual.Bad enough on the training hill.I want them to have fun, and I try to keep it simple approach .
Thank you, Glenn. You've helped us tremendously.Doing that many tows was efficiency and teamwork. I was happy to just chase the line and bring it to the next Pilot to launch. Learned alot about towing. It's not something of a one instructor activity. I'm sure it has its purpose, but not a must for me.