Crash survival wisdom
Sorry, fellow Dvorak typist, I'm not with you on this one.Chad May - 2011/02/10 06:59:19 UTC
Nashville
The Year With No Serious Injuries... Leatt Neck Brace
My passion for this topic eclipses my ability to type... Also I just banged my Dvorak typing finger in the front door of my apartment
The motocross guys are at risk of crashing pretty much for the entire duration of their activity. We're pretty much immune save for a few seconds at the beginning and end of ours.Leatt neck brace.
Watch the motocross guys crash, and walk away, and then ask why should we be dying given the comparative physics of both ??? Protective gear! !!!
If he's more interested in points than safety... Maybe.A respected comp pilot whom I admire told me he would never wear that thing.. my Leatt... God knows he's more likely to need it than my Falcon-Flying a$$
There's plenty of stuff this side of fatal that I want no part of.Dave said it... we don't go fast enough for crashes to be inescapably fatal.
I don't think we're seeing this as a real issue in hang gliding.We need something, maybe a hip/lower back plate that keeps our torso from bending in two. You know, you've seen this on youtube... chest stops, legs go flying forward with hips bending spine.
Which instructor is it who ties his students to a Dragonfly with a chintzy piece of fishing line so they can't get into too much trouble?Which instructor is it who ties his student to keel so they can't play bumper-pilot with the ground?
If you base your reality on what you read in Hang Gliding magazine you'd probably lived long enough several years ago.I hope to live to see the first year when January comes around and we all realize nobody lost any flying time or worse to injury...
I think the only discussions we had about luff lines were with respect to the people who took them off. Ron Higgs comes to mind.Someday in the future, we will look back at this topic the same way we might view a discussion of luff-lines in the 70's.
Great. But...BTW, my Leatt is transparent to me in flight.. I forget it's there.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=22176
Paragliding Collapses
The probability of it ever doing you any good is extremely remote. Neck injuries are fairly rare and lotsa times when they're an issue the glider's going down so fast and steeply that nothing's gonna make a difference.Jim Rooney - 2011/06/12 13:57:58 UTC
Most common HG injury... spiral fracture of the humerus.
We could get more bangs for our bucks with wheels and tow releases that don't stink on ice.
Fred Wilson - 2011/02/10 07:20:01 UTC
Vernon, British Columbia
Yeah Dave, but not about how to crash. There wasn't a goddam thing that Zack Marzec could've done to improve his situation once the focal point of his safe towing system kicked in to increase the safety of the towing operation.Dave Hopkins - 2011/02/10 14:02:51 UTC
I don't think we could wear alot of protective gear. Ive taken to wearing knee pads. Most of what we need is education .
This isn't your FEELING, Dave.I feel We shouldn't make our body too stiff.
Keeping the glider flying and under control is the best we can do.Just getting our heads up and lower bodies between our Brain and the ground Is the best we can do.
The way Bill Bennett's friend did as a consequence of reading your crash survival wisdom to limit his injuries to compound fractures of both his tibia and fibula?also DO NOT STICK OUR FEET DOWN TO HIT THE GROUND FIRST.
You're glad your advice helped but your advice is not to stick your feet down to hit the ground first? Pick one, Dave.Dave Hopkins - 2011/02/09 22:47:29 UTC
Wow, I'm glad my advice helped.
I can do a lot better than that, Dave - as can most people who've had something resembling proper instruction.Most sever impacts have enough force to break our pelvis or dislodge our organs. Pull our leg up . make our body as tight a ball as possible. Let he impact CRUMPLE as much of the glider as possible before our bodies hit the ground. Hitting on the side of our legs is the best shock absorbing part of our body. Sort of like the parachute landing technique. Every crash situation will be different. We have to make it up as we go but not panicking and using the shock absorbing characteristics of the glider to the best of our ability is the best we can do.
I think until we've started making a half-assed effort to address the issues that are causing the crashes that this discussion is pretty much a waste of time and a distraction.I think if this attitude were more common knowledge we would see a big reduction in fatal and sever injuries in this sport.
Speaking of distractions.Even practicing getting in the right crash position would help. Like practicing deploying our chute.
Yeah, and seeing as how the figuring you were doing to get yourself into this situation to begin with totally sucked, there probably wouldn't be much point in starting now.When split seconds count we don't have time for lots of figuring.
Yep.just act!