http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=23368
Landing Clinic Ingredients
Davis Straub - 2011/04/05 12:50:50 UTC
Held during the Wills Wing Demo Days (Wallaby Ranch)
Ryan and Paul Voight
(The "ingredients list")
500-300 ft:
01) Identify L.Z., choose target
John Simon - 2009/01
As I approached the taxiway and signs, I decided to go upright. This is where things started going really bad really fast. I missed a downtube - not once, but twice. As expected, this sent me into a wag or two, leaving me low, left, and over a sign at about 26-29 mph. I thought if I could just get hold of the downtube, I'd push out and fly well over it. Alas, I did not and passed with two feet of clearance under my basetube. "Wow," I thought, "that was close. I hope my feet clear it too."
Got that, John?. Concentrate on what you want to HIT - not on what you want to MISS.
02) MAKE A PLAN! Decide pattern you intend to utilize
03) Monitor wind direction via multiple indicators
04) Scan for obstacles, hazards, slope, power lines, people, etc
05) Continuously check for other air-traffic
06) Altitude check continuously
07) Check distance from L.Z., Glide, L/D, air quality, (lifty/sinky), etc
Or maybe just get there with a couple of hundred feet to spare?
08) Deal with zippers, V.G. settings, strings, etc. (Ready for landing?)
Right. And if you have a problem with a zipper NEVER give up on it! Fight it all the way to the ground no matter what. Never even consider bellying in. Even if that doesn't kill you you might die on the next flight coming into in a narrow dry riverbed with large rocks strewn all over the place or a field filled with seven foot high corn because you didn't practice landing on your feet on this one.
1988/04/10 - Robert Porter - 40 - Intermediate - Lookout Mountain - Tennessee - Pacific Airwaves Magic - Fatal. Head and neck.
Forty-year-old Massachusetts Intermediate pilot on flying trip to Tennessee. Had a good launch and uneventful sled run to the landing area. Good set-up and approach; everything looked perfect. Opinions differ, but probably pilot was preoccupied with faulty harness zipper, was looking down at it, and flew into ground.
Doug Hildreth - 1990/01
Advanced - Extensive experience - High performance - Concussion
Experienced pilot enjoying his flight, came in on final and attempted to unzip his harness. Found zipper stuck in the closed position. After a couple of futile attempts to unzip using the usual method, it was too late to kick open the velcro. Pilot flared hard hoping to land upright (still in pod) but fell forward hitting his head. Knocked unconscious for a couple of minutes.
Doug Hildreth - 1990/01
Advanced - 10 years - High performance - Severe chest, vascular, and abdominal injuries.
Experienced pilot was observed from the landing area on final to be looking back at his harness boot and struggling with zipper cord. One wing suddenly went straight down and glider slid into the ground.
Luen Miller - 1995/05
Harness Problems
Four pilots had problems with harnesses, all of whom suffered moderate to serious injuries. One pilot was distracted while trying to open his harness late in his approach, and caught a wing tip on the ground in a high-speed run. He suffered a serious spinal injury.
Another pilot got his pant leg caught in the zipper, struggled with it until well into his final, and somehow stalled at 20 feet. Witnesses suspect that he either pushed out on the bar while tugging on the zipper or flew slowly through the wind gradient. He broke his wrist, dislocated another wrist bone, and suffered ligament damage.
Another had his harness open, but had trouble getting his feet out. He got distracted enough that he failed to maintain enough airspeed for the glider to respond to control input. Heading for a line of trees he managed to flare, but hit them anyway an dislocated one shoulder and broke the bone in his upper arm.
Another pilot on his first altitude flight waited until he was too close to the ground to try to exit his harness. He managed to avoid some trees as he frantically grasped for the release, failed to find it, and managed to kick the velcro out at the last minute. He was free and reaching for the uprights just as he impacted. He broke both arms and suffered serious facial injuries (no full-face helmet).
1995/07/03 - Robert Atwood - 41 - Advanced, 20 years in the sport - Large field near Springfield, Vermont - Fatal. Neck, other?
A very experienced pilot took off on a cross-country flight. He was found later by a passerby at the edge of a very large field.
The glider had come to rest about twelve feet from the line of trees around the field. The downtubes were badly bent, as were the steel plates at the nose. From the broken limbs on the ground and damage to the tops of the tree, obvious preliminary indications are that the pilot clipped the tops of the trees about 50 feet up, stalled and dove into the ground.
There is some speculation that the pilot might have been distracted by a stuck zipper on his new harness, based on an event from the previous day in which he had to kick out the velcro to free his feet.
09) If towed, check/stow tow bridal
Yeah, and maybe if you're gonna serve as a USHGA Towing Committee Chairman it would help a little if you learned to SPELL "bridal". Aw, what the fuck. If we can have a Commander In Chief for eight years who pronounces it NUKULER...
300-100 ft:
10) Formalize PLAN ("Figure 8"/ "S" approach, or Aircraft/Downwind, Base, Final.)?
11) Keep alternate plan (thinking), in case primary plan needs to change
12) Continue monitoring: wind, field, obstructions, AIR-TRAFFIC
13) Free feet from harness
And if you can't - keep fighting.
Below 100 ft: (14, 15 can be performed higher if desired)
14) Increase airspeed (if not already increased well above trim)
15) TRANSITION HANDS! (when...how) (higher altitude better than lower)
Doug Rice - 1995/07
Quaker Gap, North Carolina
I'd like to thank Erik Kaye (April "Air Mail") for describing landing techniques that I have used for many years. I have always felt that pilots rotating up to their downtubes early on final approach are at a tremendous disadvantage especially in turbulent air.
First of all, the upright position limits the glider's usable speed range by not allowing the control bar to be pulled all the way in if necessary. If a thermal is breaking off while you're crossing a tree line, you don't want to be slipping a turn to lose altitude. The best way to get down is to stay on a selected straight heading and bring the glider's nose down by pulling in. If the LZ is small, stay on the basetube, and as soon as you enter the back of the field, pull in to just a few feet off the ground. Although you will be flying low and fast, the speed will give you the authority to deal with the turbulence near the ground, and by making your forward glide level, your flying speed will smoothly drop off through ground effect. The longer you stay on the basetube, the longer you will have maximum speed and stability control. There is no need to be on the downtubes until you are ready to push all the way out.
Dennis Pagen's advice for downhill landings (May issue) can also benefit pilots on flat ground. The closer you are to the ground when you flare, the less you will fall after you stall. As long as you are flying straight and level and make a smooth transition to the downtubes at the last moment, and aggressive flare (no wind) held all the way up and out, will settle you on your feet even if you flare a moment too early. Ground skimming near the end of your glide lengthens your usable flare window, which will not only improve your landings but will give target shooters more room to hit the bull's-eye. So long as you use a quick, full flare, you never need to be holding downtubes more than halfway up. The danger of flying fast, close to the ground can be controlled with quick and decisive adjustments in pitch.
Yeah, it's not like there's ANY OTHER thinking on that issue.
- AVOID allowing "Pitch bobble", or accidental roll input!
Which you wouldn't need to be avoiding if you were flying on the basetube?
- Hands END UP at shoulder height.
Yeah, where they'll be nice and high and SAFE in a minor or major crash.
(in turbulence, can use one hand up/one on base, or remain on base longer, or too low on D.T.s - to be slid up later)
Permission to forget the fucking D.T.s altogether, sir?
16) ROUND OUT, INTO GROUND EFFECT, (not too high), recognizing GRADIENT
17) Remain level. Look ahead. Recognize speed loss as you ground effect
18) FLARE! (Timing/when)- (just before glider "settles")... how much?... feet back... (think) push UP not out) - Flaring correctly is a combination of technique and timing.
How much should you Flare in a given situation? (Flare only the amount needed... to stop your forward motion across the ground)
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3695
good day until the wreck
Lauren Tjaden - 2008/12/31 04:29:12 UTC
very light conditions at quest. me, paul, dustin, carl and jamie were going to fly out and back but not high enough so we flew around the patch. i worked small lift using carl's tips...he is english where conditions are weak, and is 2nd in world.
came in with no wind after an hour and had right wing drop. instead of wrestling gilder straight i tried to flare while desperately trying to straighten.
bad bad whack. horrible pain, i could not move. screaming with pain, literally. took a very long time to get me out and to the hospital. got very good drugs.
turned out to be badly dislocated shoulder. they had to knock me out to put it back in but it was so bad i kept waking up and screaming. finally they got it done but then they had a hard time waking me back up. drugs were so wierd by the end i could not leave for hours, i'd just start bawling for no reason.
Christian Thoreson - 2004/10
Thus wheel landings, the safest and easiest way to consistently land a hang glider...
Common denominators in bad landings: Poor planning, Poor alternate planning, Low transitions, Low turns, Low airspeed, High round-outs, Throwing feet forward, Arms extended (elbows not back) prior to when flare is called for (can't flare), Pulling back in after an early flare, Late flare, Wimpy or no flare.
Oops, left out a few...
- world class pilots
- testosterone
- low IQ
- aiming for middles of fields
- plowed fields
- tall grass
- narrow dry riverbeds with large rocks strewn all over the place
- fields filled with seven foot high corn
- comfortable clearances from downwind obstacles
- obsessions with zippers
- placebo wheels
- long finals
- high transitions
- inability to do low turns
- entering ground effect at high speed with limited runway
- hands at shoulder height
- flares
- spot landing practice
- spot landing contests
- USHGA instructors
- USHGA instructors observing spot landings for USHGA rating requirements
* ANY combination of these denominators GREATLY increases chance of poor landing!!!
Ryan Voight - 2011/04/06 15:09:37 UTC
Just to clarify...
The "ingredients list" is generated at each clinic by the participants. At the Wallaby clinic, there were 33 participants, several of "world class" stature (pilot skill wise).
So... this particular list that resulted was quite thorough.
The Ledger - 2009/11/17
Jeremy Maready
Vermont Man Dies in Davenport Hang Glider Crash - Volunteer firefighter was gliding near Davenport Sunday (2009/11/15) when he hit tree, police say.
Anthony Ameo, 59, of Sheffield, Vermont was trying to land when he struck a pine tree and fell nearly 25 feet, according to the Polk County Sheriff's Office and officials at Wallaby Ranch, a facility that caters to hang gliders.
Ameo was flown to Lakeland Regional Medical Center where he died during surgery.
A friend said Ameo began hang gliding about three years ago and was practicing for his intermediate rating. He had passed a written test and was practicing for his flying test, which would measure his ability to set up a proper approach and flare the glider at the appropriate time to land on his feet.
"The transition (from flaring the glider to landing) takes a lot of eye-to-hand coordination," said Eugene Pettinato, Ameo's friend and flying partner. "That was his weakest area, I think."
You conduct a LANDING CLINIC at a wide open mowed flight park - the very same one where this guy died a bit over sixteen months prior 'cause he was twenty times more focused on a spot, transition, hand position, flare timing, and his goddam feet than on a safe landing - and there's not A SINGLE SOLITARY MENTION of the word "WHEELS"? You know - little round things that spin around that some people put on basetubes?
And you have the unmitigated GALL to refer to this list as "QUITE THOROUGH"?