I have one I'll sell you cheap.
He sells them pretty damn cheap as it is - I'd guess at about cost. He never embarked on that project to make a buck - just to get a decent piece of equipment into circulation. Pretty good case to be made that it's already reduced the number of fatalities in a tandem crash from two to one.
I heard of a failure to release malfunction regarding the Joe Street device.
Tell us about these things as soon as possible. If we've got problems we need to put out advisories immediately and deal with things.
John Alden of WesMar Aerodrome reported that he quit using his after the "fishing pole thread wrap" used to secure the cable housing to the quick link failed.
And thank you so very much John Alden of WesMar Aerodrome for properly reporting that on a known public venue where people interested in what's going on are gonna be able to see it and do something about it. Shows us just how much you really care about people who aren't either you or people riding with you.
This allowed the housing to slip toward the barrel release and prevent activation.
Which is a potential fatal - a problem that's killed a pretty substantial number of people before.
Questions... Was this unit abused to precipitate the failure and, regardless of whether or not it was, was it preflighted on the day of the failure? I'm having a hard time believing that the wrap was in fine shape that morning and failed in flight that afternoon.
On the afternoon of 2015/08/23 Rafi Lavin died right after launching when a 3/32 inch sidewire failed. But we didn't all suddenly swap out for eighth inch on all our gliders.
I DO see this as a serious issue. Release designs should be robust enough to not require careful inspections more than once or twice a season. That's why I consider Peter Birren's award winning and universally praised Linknife a mostly useless piece o' junk. It can be and has been neutralized by a few stems of grass. But Joe's design concept is solid and if this is a legitimate problem - and it probably is - it can be addressed. Use a wire wrap instead of Dacron thread or whatever he's using.
At this point I'll continue saying they're both good solutions for two point aero - the best by far off the shelf - and they both have minor noncritical relative pluses and minuses. And if you go with an existing release of Joe's preflight it like you're supposed to preflight critical components at appropriate intervals.
And if the fuckin' useless goddam manufacturers would do their jobs and build these things into their planes the way sailplane manufacturers do...
Imposter!!!...Untie Tad and give him back his MacBook.
Nah, I don't have a dog in this fight. I'm just recommending what would be my choice between the two options. And I'm saying the differences ain't big fuckin' deals.
I'm also an auto racer and as auto racers do, we spend many hours in the garage looking for very, very small edges.
Comp is different from utility/recreational. If I were flying in a comp and there were no rule mandating two point releases I'd pull my two point components out of the airflow and fly one point - knowing and accepting the additional but fairly microscopic risk for the first twenty seconds of the tow for the advantage of better performance for the rest of the flight. For recreational flying - no thanks, the tradeoff isn't worth it. Grade school arithmetic shows us very clearly that fairly microscopic risks taken hundreds or thousands of times start progressing to near certainties.
And if you're gonna spend many hours on THIS particular two point AT issue looking for edges that are pretty substantial you're gonna reinvent my built-in two point release system. And it's gonna look a lot like ALL VG systems 'cause damn near all the time we reach natural and obvious design plateaus.
If you've been watching the glider's themselves you'll have noticed that they got the performance/handling plateau maxed out a decade and a half ago and the gliders that they sell and people wanna buy and fly are just about all stepped a good bit down from that level.