http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3083
Analyze a blown launch
Bob Kuczewski - 2018/10/26 08:57:29 UTC
The "tight left / slack right" wires were a bad place to start. It might have been better to move further down the ramp. I also noticed the instant reaching for the base tube and trying to kick into the harness right away. I see a lot of pilots doing both, but the first job should always be flying the glider safely away from the hill. But I'm not sure if anything could have overcome launching with that much differential lift. It's very fortunate that he wasn't badly hurt or killed.
The "tight left / slack right" wires were a bad place to start.
Ya think?
It might have been better to move further down the ramp.
Ya think? You mean where he and Robin were intending to start before the u$hPa El Paso Region Safety Director ordered otherwise? Did you WATCH the video or just fast-forward to the ground loop part?
Or maybe fArther up the ramp. After all, Mitch and Robin DID move five feet down after Hadley advised them of the increasing danger in that direction. I think the RIGHT call would've been to back it up five feet. (Right...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=31052
Poll on weaklinks
Jim Rooney - 2013/03/05 21:40:02 UTC
You want MORE.
I want you to have less.
This is the fundamental disagreement.
You're afraid of breaking off with a high AOA? Good... tow with a WEAKER weaklink... you won't be able to achieve a high AOA. Problem solved.
I'm sorry that you don't like that the tug pilot has the last word... but tough titties.
Don't like it?
Don't ask me to tow you.
Go troll somewhere else buddy.
I'm over this.
...Jim?)
I also noticed the instant reaching for the base tube and trying to kick into the harness right away.
- Tell me how the fuck anything he did or didn't do after:
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mattered in the least.
- Right Bob. He should've kept his right hand on the starboard control tube.
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That way he'd have been able to fly smoothly out of the situation and have an enjoyable evening.
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I just shudder whenever I see assholes like this reaching for the control tubes stabilizer beam before they've even gotten a third of the way...
16-031309
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...out to the LZ. I think assholes like Mitch are always going to the control tubes stabilizer beam at the earliest possible moment 'cause they think it makes them look cool. Just like walking around in their harnesses...
65-40023
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66-42459
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67-43409
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68-43614
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...when they're not connected to their gliders. I have no freakin' clue how this:
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2-01320
moron managed to clear launch without getting killed three times over.
- Yeah Bob, he's trying to kick into the harness.
54-12945
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He's still thinking he's gonna be up for an hour or so in the evening glass-off and wants the get as comfortable as possible as soon as possible. What a total bozo. Lotsa idiots would've figured he was doing everything possible to get as much weight as possible to the port and forward. But you got this guy totally pegged.
I see a lot of pilots doing both, but the first job should always be flying the glider safely away from the hill.
- Since we've already done the hang check in the setup area.
- And we can ALWAYS fly gliders safely away from hills with our hands on the control tubes at shoulder or ear height where the designer of this particular glider...
91-61028
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...says he can't control it.
But I'm not sure if anything could have overcome launching with that much differential lift.
Then why bring up the moronic bullshit from your previous two sentences? 'Cause it's MAINSTREAMER moronic bullshit and you're not really running a hang gliding association, just a never-ending Bob Kuczewski popularity contest posing as a hang gliding association? So when Ryan Instant-Hands-Free-Release Voight says:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uvhzoVC1UqM
Simple Progression for Teaching Hang Gliding
you're gonna slather praise on all the participants in the "debate" and tell us that you have very little experience steering the glider through weight shift simply by running toward your target and that it's a very complex issue dependent upon many factors - such as density altitude, Coriolis effect, lunar cycle, sunspot activity - and it's really impossible to say one way or another with any reasonable degree of certainty.
Somebody find me a single example of Bob actually weighing in on such a discussion and NOT using that tactic.
It's very fortunate that he wasn't badly hurt or killed.
The way Terry was when he trusted the wrong assholes in your bullshit organization?
And then at 2018/10/27 00:39:03 UTC we get from Bob Show douchebag in good standing Rick Masters a pile of useless clueless abusive macho crap similar to the pile of useless clueless abusive macho crap we'd previously heard from Aaron. Funny dickheads like these never seem to have any issues with the instructors and programs that certified their products to operate in these environments.
Bob Kuczewski - 2018/11/01 17:50:59 UTC
FYI, Tad did a good frame by frame analysis of this launch on his site:
http://www.kitestrings.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=67&start=170#p11143
From the earliest moments of the launch, the pilot was fighting to keep the left wing down. That's a loaded spring ready to release. He should have backed off right there and started again.
The analogy to USHPA is striking.
If you read it then how come you allowed Dickhead Rick to get away with that pile of useless clueless abusive macho crap he posted just above?
From the earliest moments of the launch, the pilot was fighting to keep the left wing down.
From the earliest moments of launch the situation was nonrecoverable and the guy was a passenger.
That's a loaded spring ready to release.
Now there's a thought...
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Nah, too many parts.
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8318603266/
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8306300488/
Wouldn't work in reality. Besides... We have an Infallible Weak Link...
17-1821
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...that'll keep us from getting into too much trouble.
He should have backed off right there and started again.
- Sure Bob... He should've aborted the launch right here:
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and started again. But he obviously thought he could fix a bad thing didn't wanna start over.
- What should his nose man and the Launch Director have been doing? Pretty telling that you're aligning yourself with the hordes bending over backwards to totally ignore the contributions of Hadley Robinson and Robin Hastings to this one.
The analogy to USHPA is striking.
Wanna see another striking analogy in the u$hPa department?
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54-12945
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We got both of these u$hPa backed commercial operator motherfuckers ON TAPE clearly instructing their victims to take launch actions that they follow which set them up for potentially fatal disasters.
Rob Skinner is using the Standard Aerotow Weak Link that Malcolm told him (and untold tens of thousands over the decades) will...
http://www.wallaby.com/aerotow_primer.php
Aerotow Primer for Experienced Pilots
The Wallaby Ranch Aerotowing Primer for Experienced Pilots - 2018/11/05
A weak link connects the V-pull to the release, providing a safe limit on the tow force. If you fail to maintain the correct tow position (centered, with the wheels of the tug on the horizon), the weak link will break before you can get into too much trouble.
...keep him from getting into too much trouble and is also telling him not to build up safe airspeed before coming off the cart 'cause Malcolm doesn't wanna be inconvenienced by the longer retrieve. The consequences put Rob one safety enhancing inconvenience away from a likely fatal high speed cartwheel.
Hadley tells Mitch to stay back in the trash where only ONE of his wings has any airspeed and puts him into a launch ground loop which terminates in a straight downwind impact back into the slope both of the ground people fear is fatal before they get to him.
Shoot the two senior motherfuckers in these two incidents and both launches go off fine with tons of clean even airspeed to burn. And somebody find me - from anywhere in the history of u$hPa's Pilot Proficiency Program - an instance of a u$hPa certified instructor having disciplinary action taken against him for teaching total rot that's gotten a student under his supervision crashed, trashed, killed. (Anybody remember Nancy Tachibana on Pat Denevan's state-of-the-art equipment? If not then...)
What u$hPa does instead is delete the identities of the victim and his instructor from its records within thirty seconds of the loss of a detectable pulse.
The "tight left / slack right" wires were a bad place to start. It might have been better to move further down the ramp. I also noticed the instant reaching for the base tube and trying to kick into the harness right away. I see a lot of pilots doing both, but the first job should always be flying the glider safely away from the hill. But I'm not sure if anything could have overcome launching with that much differential lift. It's very fortunate that he wasn't badly hurt or killed.
FYI, Tad did a good frame by frame analysis of this launch on his site:
http://www.kitestrings.org/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=67&start=170#p11143
From the earliest moments of the launch, the pilot was fighting to keep the left wing down. That's a loaded spring ready to release. He should have backed off right there and started again.
The analogy to USHPA is striking.
Once he initiated from the point at which his instructor and the Pilot In Command of that operation ordered him to there was no option to abort and no possibility of flying out of the situation (given that he only had one wing that was flying). The only option he had was to mitigate the severity of the inevitable crash and he reacted INSTANTLY and PRECISELY as he should have. 54-12945 above illustrates that extremely well. And he walked away and was fully recovered within a week and his glider sustained incredibly minimal damage given the potential that situation afforded.
Pity we're not assigning blame and praise where it's called for. Me... I'd sign Mitch off for his next rating and an AWCL Special Skill (if he didn't already have it) and revoke Hadley's Hang Gliding Instructor appointment for a year or two - and demand that he publicly apologize to Mitch and generously reimburse him for the damages, injuries, losses, suffering he sustained.