Weak links

General discussion about the sport of hang gliding
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
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Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=26870
weak links
hangster - 2012/08/22 19:26:06 UTC

Sounds good ...Thanks!
You're welcome. Now maybe you can return the favor by helping to get my banishment from hang gliding rescinded. Or, failing that, helping to rip the crap out of these Flight Park Mafia shits who will continue to force everyone up on 130 pound Greenspot and fly Dragonflies incapable of holding enough tension to legally pull solos with midrange legal weak links.
Mike Lake - 2012/08/25 16:50:19 UTC

I didn't post this info when this thread was 'live' as at the time an accident report was pending.

On the 12th August a new(ish) pilot took off on tow, his weak-link snapped, the glider's nose dropped and with no height to recover he hit the ground.
Like this?

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYe3YmdIQTM
Now you can dress this incident up as much as you like but what put the guy in hospital was his 'safety device'.
http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC

At the 2008 Forbes Flatlands Greenspot for the first time was used as the standard weaklink material (thanks in large part to the efforts of Bobby Bailey). We applaud these efforts to improve the safety of aerotowing by using a better weaklink material.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Jim Rooney - 2011/09/02 23:09:12 UTC

Yeah, damn those pesky safety devices!
Remember kids, always blame the equipment.
If the weak-link had held he would have had a post flight briefing instead of a trip in a helicopter.

It is true the guy made some mistakes and was not a perfect pilot.
Like all the rest of us - who always fly perfectly and never put ourselves in position to get hit by imperfect air before we clear the kill zone.
The weak-link sure taught him a lesson, perhaps we should also have given him a good kicking while he was on the ground waiting for the air ambulance.
Jim Rooney - 2011/09/02 19:41:27 UTC

Please note that the weaklink *saved* her ass. She still piled into the earth despite the weaklink helping her... for the same reason it had to help... lack of towing ability. She sat on the cart, like so many people insist on doing, and took to the air at Mach 5.
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/31 09:25:57 UTC

Oh how many times I have to hear this stuff.
I've had these exact same arguments for years and years and years.
Nothing about them changes except the new faces spouting them.

It's the same as arguing with the rookie suffering from intermediate syndrome.
They've already made up their mind and only hear that which supports their opinion.

Only later, when we're visiting them in the hospital can they begin to hear what we've told them all along.
Have Rooney visit him in the hospital. After a minute or two he'll be praying for the kicking option.
A stronger weak-link, by that I mean one not teetering on the edge breaking under normal flight conditions...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlIGsgNFRWM
...would drastically reduce the above risk.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hhpa/message/11517
Question
Dave Susko - 2010/11/05 03:07:47 UTC

Does it bother you that you can't engineer away all sources of danger? It does? Then I suggest you sell your equipment and take up a safe activity like checkers.
This, the same risk we all (with current thinking) subject ourselves to on EVERY take off as we fly through the "Cone of Danger".
Just stay inside the Cone of Safety while you're flying through the Cone of Danger. You'll be fine.
(Smartarse comment acknowledged.)
(Smartarse comment acknowledged.)
Now, this same guy in all probability will go through his whole flying career without suffering a lockout, he may well experience the onset of a lockout and of course release, as we are all trained to do.
And, since he's using German - rather than American Industry Standard - equipment...
Joe Gregor - 2005/01
USHGA Accident Review Chairman

If you, as the pilot, feel that you are able to release from a bad situation while still maintaining aircraft control, you should do so. If you feel that a controlled release is unlikely--due to the control forces being experienced, and the release system being used--you should strive to maintain stability while gaining sufficient altitude to recover from any post-release unusual attitude that may be experienced.
...he may have a reasonably good shot at success.
At this onset why would the guy (with a stronger link) wait for his weak-link to break instead of releasing?
Lotsa times...

http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3107
I have a tandem rating!!!
Lauren Tjaden - 2008/03/23 22:20:15 UTC
Eminently Qualified Tandem Pilot

When Jim got me locked out to the right, I couldn't keep the pitch of the glider with one hand for more than a second (the pressure was a zillion pounds, more or less), but the F'ing release slid around when I tried to hit it. The barrel release wouldn't work because we had too much pressure on it.

Anyhow, the tandem can indeed perform big wingovers, as I demonstrated when I finally got separated from the tug.
...it really doesn't make a whole helluva lot of difference.
If he does wait he can be just as upside down with a weaker link than one that has given him the luxury of a reduced risk on every takeoff he has ever made.
Like this?
Bill Bryden - 2000/02

Dennis Pagen informed me several years ago about an aerotow lockout that he experienced. One moment he was correcting a bit of alignment with the tug and the next moment he was nearly upside down. He was stunned at the rapidity. I have heard similar stories from two other aerotow pilots.
Surely not.
Towing Aloft - 1998/01

Weak links very clearly will provide protection from excessive angles of attack, high bank turns and the like for this form of towing.
I've always heard that weak links very clearly will provide protection from excessive angles of attack, high bank turns and the like for this form of towing.

No, wait. That's for aerotowing. And you're talking about constant tension surface towing.
Towing Aloft - 1998/01

Caution: For tension controlled towing, a weak link cannot be counted on to break during a lockout, high bank angle, high angle of attack, etc.
So I guess there may be SOMETHING to what you're saying. But...

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=18868
Almost lockout
Ryan Voight - 2010/09/07 02:50:00 UTC

Weak link in truck towing WILL (read: should) still break in a lockout situation... but as everyone has already pointed out, it takes a lot longer because the glider can continue to pull line off the winch.

There is a limit to how fast line can come off the winch though... so the forces still build up, and the weaklink still fails.
...who's to say for sure? Seems to me this whole weak link issue is just a matter of opinion - and it probably pays to shop around for the opinion most in line with...
Dr. Trisa Tilletti - 2012/06

Actually, that is our expectation of performance for weak links on hang gliders here at Cloud 9, too. Primarily, we want the weak link to fail as needed to protect the equipment, and not fail inadvertently or inconsistently. We want our weak links to break as early as possible in lockout situations, but be strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent weak link breaks from turbulence. It is the same expectation of performance that we have for the weak links we use for towing sailplanes.
...your expectations.
One day we will look back and wonder why we endure this unnecessary risk at such a critical time, just like we now look back and wonder why we thought towing from the middle of the base bar was such a good idea, 'cos that's how everyone does it.
Maybe three or four people born within the past eighteen months or so will be able to look back at this Hewett inspired insanity and wonder how so many people could be so incredibly fucking stupid for so long. But I really doubt you and I will live to see the day.
(The guy is ok, recovering and hopefully will want to fly again.)
Sure would be nice if he sued BHPA's stupid, arrogant, corrupt ass off for forcing him up on that shit. That might help speed things up a wee bit.
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC

Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.026
Death on the flight line
Davis Straub - 2005/01/29

Death on the flight line
AGAIN!!! Yawn. So did the task get canceled or what?
Angelo says there is no option but to cancel the tasks.
FUCK!!! Between these fatalities and...

http://ozreport.com/12.080
No one makes it back - Santa Cruz Flats Race, day two
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 06:02:32 UTC

I was not the only one breaking weaklinks as it seemed for a while every third pilot was having this problem.
http://ozreport.com/13.238
Adam Parer on his tuck and tumble
Adam Parer - 2009/11/25

Due to the rough conditions weak links were breaking just about every other tow and the two tugs worked hard to eventually get everyone off the ground successfully.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Davis Straub - 2011/08/26 14:04:52 UTC

We had six weaklink breaks in a row at Zapata this year.
http://ozreport.com/9.011
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/13

Tom Lanning had four launches, and two broken weaklinks and a broken base tube. He made it just outside the start circle.
http://ozreport.com/16.078
The Rob Kells Meet
Davis Straub - 2012/04/18 15:02:09 UTC

Mitch Shipley (T2C 144) crashed at launch after a weak link break. He tried to stretch out the downwind leg and then drug a tip turning it around and took out his keel (at least).
...standard aerotow weak links it's getting to be something of a pain to get a valid round off the ground.
As I pointed out earlier, Worlds meet directors and CIVL officials are quite restricted in their authority to cancel or stop a task. Unsafe weather conditions are the only reason.

There were two deaths at the 2003 Flytec Championship.
Just two? Hardly seems worth mentioning.
As I recall launch was suspended to helicopter out one pilot who had crashed near the tow line.
Couldn't you have just loaded him up on a launch dolly and towed him with a golf cart to well downwind?
You can find the stories here:
http://OzReport.com/7.098#3
http://OzReport.com/7.099#1
http://OzReport.com/7.103#2

Apparently, under the circumstances, it was felt that it was not necessary to cancel the task. So apparently there are options. There was at no time any disrespect (quite the contrary) for the pilots who had been killed.
Of course not, Davis. Perish the thought that you should treat anyone - who's already dead - with any disrespect.
The safety consideration that brought about the second task cancellation at the Worlds was the lack of true weaklinks...
I'm sorry... What's a "TRUE" weak link? Is it something that...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24534
It's a wrap
Davis Straub - 2011/07/31 17:55:25 UTC

To break under load before the glider does.
...breaks under load (as opposed to breaking not under load) before the glider does?

Or is it something that does that AND...
Dr. Trisa Tilletti - 2012/06

Actually, that is our expectation of performance for weak links on hang gliders here at Cloud 9, too. Primarily, we want the weak link to fail as needed to protect the equipment, and not fail inadvertently or inconsistently. We want our weak links to break as early as possible in lockout situations, but be strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent weak link breaks from turbulence. It is the same expectation of performance that we have for the weak links we use for towing sailplanes.
...meets your expectation of breaking as early as possible in lockout situations but is strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent breaks from turbulence?

What's the G rating of a "TRUE" weak link? In the US there's an FAA regulation that mandates weak links in the range of 80 to 200 percent of the glider's maximum certified operating weight. What - if any - part of that range meets with your approval?
...that were in fact originally supposed to be supplied by the meet organization...
"Step right up, ladies and gentleman. Get your true weak links right here. Focal point of a safe towing system. Can't survive without one."
...(as hang glider pilots would most likely bring strong links).
Yeah, perish the thought that hang glider pilots should be allowed to make their own decisions within internationally recognized conventional aviation safe ranges.

So what's a "strong link"? If you stupid motherfuckers hand the same weak link to a 200 pound glider that you do to a 350 pound glider is it a strong link or is it still a TRUE weak link?
If they had been supplied as promised in the local rules, then Robin would have had a better chance to live...
Yeah. It's ALWAYS MUCH better to slam back into the paddock with a three quarter G TRUE weak link than a one and a half G STRONG link. Kinda like it's always better to have your head torn off by a five hundred pound Grizzly than by an eight hundred pound Grizzly.
...and the tasks would not have been canceled.
OH MY GOD!!! The TASKS!!! I forgot about the TASKS!!!

You stupid motherfuckers wouldn't have had to cancel your goddam tasks if fucking Bobby Bailey hadn't "DESIGNED" the crappiest pieces of shit ever to ever masquerade as aerotow releases and allowed Robin to get behind him with one of them.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8318769461/
Image Image
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8318781297/
It has also been stated that if Robin had been wearing an adequate helmet, he would have stood a better chance of surviving his crash.
Right. Just like he would've stood a better chance of surviving his crash with a TRUE weak link.
He died due to a crushed skull.
http://ozreport.com/9.008
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/10

He kept doing a wing over to the left and dove straight into the ground from about fifty feet. He was killed immediately.
'Cause he was half an inch shy on foam thickness.
I heard the infamous words - salad bowl with string.
Yeah. That way everybody gets to blame the dead guy who refused to get on one of your defective carts...
Davis Straub - 2005/01/10

There does seem to be an issue with the carts. I've been pushing hard on the ones I've used to get them rolling on the rough ground. The wheels do seem to caster, and I got the distinct feeling today that about twenty feet into it, the wheels went totally sideways. I pushed really hard and the cart kept going until I pulled it into the air.

This is the first day with light winds which would mean a longer roll out on the cart. If it was castering, then that would be a problem if I wasn't pushing hard on it.

Others have complained about the wheels going full on sideways. I wonder if we are in a Finger Lakes Aerosports National Fly-in type situation with the carts.
Image
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
Image

...refused to use one of your Davis Links...

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTKIAvqd7GI


...and made the mistake of slapping on...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=14221
Tad's release
John Fritsche - 2008/12/12 05:38:02 UTC

I haven't towed in several years. Do people still use those (IMO, stupid) releases that involve bicycle brakes?
...one of your stupid releases that involve bicycle brakes that the assholes at Wallaby and Quest have been perfecting for two decades.

- So how come the meet directors allowed him to go up with this salad bowl with a string that - astoundingly - didn't allow him to survive a locked out vertical headfirst dive into the ground?

- And how many salad bowl with a string critics said anything to him prior to that horrible meet disrupting crash?
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC

Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.008
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/10

Death in the paddock.

As pilots we take our lives in our hands.
And as aerotow pilots we place our lives in the hands of total douchebags like your buddy Rooney who forces everybody up on Industry Standard release equipment and standard aerotow weak links with huge track records and tells us that...

http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467
weak links
Jim Rooney - 2007/08/01 13:47:23 UTC

Whatever's going on back there, I can fix it by giving you the rope.
...whatever's going on back there, he can fix it by giving us the rope.
On Sunday, Robin Strid, a Norwegian pilot, chose to foot launch in light cross wind conditions in spite of the pleadings from the ground crew on line number two to use a cart. With the wind from the right and being light I wouldn't have chosen to foot launch if I liked the carts well enough to trust them not to caster.

As he took off his left wing was dragging. Bobby Bailey, the best tow pilot in the business...
The best tow pilot in the business - or even a halfway competent one - would never have let anybody hook up behind him with a defective dolly, a piece of shit two and/or one point release that Bobby "designed", a standard aerotow weak link, or an inability to differentiate the functions of the release and weak link. And he also wouldn't allow anyone to foot launch, fly without wheels or skids, "pro tow", or use a release which required a reach to actuate.
...moved to the right into get further into the wind, and Robin got his left wing up and flying as he lined up behind Bobby.
Robin GOT his left wing up? So it wasn't external forces outside of Robin's control acting on the glider at that point.
Then Robin shifted off to the left again getting his right, upwind wing, high again.
Gee. If only the Norwegian national champion had had some clue as to how to control a glider.
He was seen reaching for his release.
So if he had a release...
Steve Kinsley - 1996/05/09 15:50

Personal opinion. While I don't know the circumstances of Frank's death and I am not an awesome tow type dude, I think tow releases, all of them, stink on ice. Reason: You need two hands to drive a hang glider. You 'specially need two hands if it starts to turn on tow. If you let go to release, the glider can almost instantly assume a radical attitude. We need a release that is held in the mouth. A clothespin. Open your mouth and you're off.
...that didn't stink on ice he'd have been off at that point, right?
I understand that Bobby also released him.
Yep. Probably about a millisecond after impact. I hope someone thanked him on Robin's behalf for making a good decision in the interest of Robin's safety.
He kept doing a wing over to the left and dove straight into the ground from about fifty feet. He was killed immediately.
Bummer.
The day was called.
Bummer.
It was the best conditions of the new year.
So if Robin hadn't been allowed to hook up with a Bobby Bailey "designed" Industry Standard piece of shit "release" that stank on ice the day wouldn't have been called and 96 flyers - many of whom had come from halfway around the world for the event - would've been able to fly in the best conditions of the new year.

So what would be the difference in price from that piece of shit Bobby welded together and a proper built in release? If I could rewind the clock how much do you think people would have been willing to chip in?

Or, hell, maybe Robin would've just sold his parachute, paid for the installation, and still had four hundred bucks left over to put towards plane fare for the next meet.
I launched third in our line and at about eight hundred feet I suddenly was quite high behind the trike.
What would have happened if you had suddenly found yourself quite high behind the trike when the trike was eight feet off the deck and your Davis Link had blown?
Given my experience the day before I had really been pulling in hard, so I was quite surprised to suddenly find myself so high.
But you're a PRO, Davis. So you can just tow off your shoulders 'cause you're never really gonna need a two - sorry - three point bridle to help keep you at a good pitch trim and allow you the top third of your speed range.
This time I pinned off before things got out of hand and I didn't do a wing over, but kept flying straight.
Because your Davis Link held long enough to allow you to get your nose back down before a potential whipstall.
As I was quite a ways upwind up the paddock when I found lift I just behind me, which is why I got high behind the trike, I hung on and climbed to nine thousand feet.

Like Robin, yesterday I got out of control behind a trike and dove quickly to recover. Unlike Robin I was at four hundred feet and had plenty of time...
...and altitude...
...to recover.
Meaning that if you had been at fifty feet like Robin was you'd have been just as fucked as Robin was.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1143
Death at Tocumwal
Davis Straub - 2006/01/24 12:27:32 UTC

I'm willing to put the barrel release within a few inches of my hand.
Meaning that you're totally cool with rolling dice every time you aerotow launch.
There does seem to be an issue with the carts. I've been pushing hard on the ones I've used to get them rolling on the rough ground. The wheels do seem to caster, and I got the distinct feeling today that about twenty feet into it, the wheels went totally sideways. I pushed really hard and the cart kept going until I pulled it into the air.

This is the first day with light winds which would mean a longer roll out on the cart. If it was castering, then that would be a problem if I wasn't pushing hard on it.

Others have complained about the wheels going full on sideways. I wonder if we are in a Finger Lakes Aerosports National Fly-in type situation with the carts.
Image
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
Image

So if the dickheads running the meet had provided carts which didn't suck almost as much as the "releases" that were being used Robin would've had no problem getting on one and, even using as a release one of the shittiest pieces of hardware that anybody ever allowed to go into the air on anything, he'd have almost certainly gotten to an altitude at which it would've been an issue with no serious consequences.

Only in hang gliding do morons like these not get their asses sued off.
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
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Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://OzReport.com/9.009
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/11

Morose in the headquarters - an editorial (and editorial reconsidered).

First the news.

On Monday, it was announced that the day was canceled as the first and only business of the regular team leaders meeting at 10 AM. A safety review meeting for the team leaders was scheduled for 1 PM and a pilots' safety review for 4 PM.

I asked Paul Rundell why the day was canceled. He said that the primary reason was out of respect for the dead pilot and the secondary reason was to go over the safety issues, in particular pilots' use of non-weaklinks, as apparently was the case with Robin.
Yeah guys, whenever somebody slams in on a perfectly intact glider still on tow you should always form a committee to determine the cause of his weak link not breaking.

Hell, he was using a WALLABY release and if you check WALLABY's website they say:
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.
- He failed to maintain the correct tow position (centered, with the wheels of the tug on the horizon).
- The weak link DIDN'T break before he got into too much trouble.
- Therefore he was not using an appropriate weak link.

These fucking shitheads use such total crap for releases that they can't even conceive of one being successfully used for an emergency separation. The entire mindset is based on the strategy of maintaining a death grip on the basetube and praying for the weak link to blow before you run out of recovery room.

So why isn't the committee looking into the issue of the tug drivers using non weak links, as apparently was the case with Bobby?
Yesterday, before we launched, Paul had made sure that the team leaders knew that pilots should be using weaklinks.
Robin WAS using a weak link. It's what bound up on his piece of shit Wallaby Release:

http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8318769461/
Image Image
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8318781297/

If he HADN'T been using a fucking weak link and had just hooked up to the eye at the end of the bridle he'd have been off as soon as he got to the lever. Might well still have ended up dead but at least he'd have spared us having to listen to this totally moronic discussion.
He also instructed the ground support crews to check each pilot to make sure that they had a weak link. I was checked.
Yeah. And they didn't even give a rat's ass about that crap you have on your shoulders.
The editorial.

It appears to me that the organizers were aware of the problem of pilots making a tradeoff regarding their safety and perhaps ability to get into the air, and were, in addition to cautioning pilots, engaged in an active program of refusing to launch people who were not using weaklinks before Robin's accident.
WHAT *TRADEOFF* - SHITHEAD? You:
- use a:
-- release that lets you INSTANTLY release without loss of control when you want to release.
-- weak link to blow when the tension starts getting high enough to bend something and not a whole helluva lot before.
- don't EVER:
-- get into a situation in which you NEED it to blow
-- expect it to:
--- blow
--- save your useless stupid ass
Robin had a strong link...
Define "STRONG LINK".
- Was it in excess of the range mandated by the FAA?
- Do we get to hear anything about Gs?
...and apparently he was either not checked thoroughly enough (it is hard to tell how strong some weaklinks are) or allowed to launch with it.
- Yeah, it would've been perfectly OK to get into line with that piece of shit Wallaby "release" which has a massive and well documented failure rate even before you use the insane configuration that Robin - and, undoubtedly, others - were using, as long as he was using the approved altruistic loop of fishing line along with it.

- But you really don't have to worry about telling how heavy some gliders are 'cause we've got these really wonderful lockout preventers that work equally well for everybody.
As I stated yesterday, the launch crew repeatedly asked Robin to take a cart in the light wind and cross wind conditions. He refused to. He was making his own choices on the tradeoffs re weaklinks and carts. Those turned out to be bad choices.
He refused a dangerous cart and a weak link which would have been at or off the bottom end of the FAA's legal range. But what most got him killed was a piece of shit release which - by no reasonable interpretation of USHGA regulations - even if it were being used in a two point configuration passes muster. It jammed, and it's not even being mentioned yet.
I had spoken a few times with Robin at Deniliquin and I can well imagine that he would not have listened to others who were concerned about his safety.
Especially when the others are all totally incompetent bozos - as is being made QUITE apparent in this reporting.
I too have been known to be pig headed.
Just as there's a difference between two and three point there's a difference between shit and pig headed.
That said, he was a well respected pilot and well liked by his team mates.
Super. If he was such a well respected pilot why did he get into line with that Wallaby crap on his glider?
On Monday...
Day Three, which is gonna get cut short by Robin's death.
...I asked that launch monitors carefully examine the carts when they first begin rolling to catch any signs of castering and immediately pull any carts out of service that exhibit this behavior.
Yeah, it's always a great idea for these tests to be run with gliders on them during world competition rounds. You sure wouldn't wanna waste time doing simulations under controlled conditions to detect the sorts of problems that could get somebody's...

Image
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
Image

...freakin' neck broken.
Apparently, the cart I used yesterday has a bad reputation and without being aware of that I chose it from among four rather sad looking carts stationed at line four.
But not bad enough to get it pulled. Not even bad enough to get a red sticker on it. And there are supposed to be people concerned about anyone's safety - including their own - in this crowd?
I personally can't see a good reason to cancel today's task.
What's the maximum number of competitors you'd allow to be killed because of systemwide defects in the operation before you'd start seeing a reason to scrub and evaluate what you're doing?

Maybe you could use the downtime to do stability tests on the dollies, some research on the difference between a weak link and a release, and some looking into release technologies that don't totally suck. Just kidding.
There is nothing we can do for the dead pilot.
Or the next pilots that you motherfuckers are gonna mangle and kill by continuing to send them up on shit aerotow equipment: Holly Korzilius, Jeremiah Thompson, Roy Messing, Steve Elliot, and Lois Preston.
Since the safety information that we are all aware of could have been communicated directly to the team leaders at today's meeting and the launch monitor's could have very vigorously enforced the weaklink rules today (Monday)...
Yeah, the weak link rules. Still not a single mention of the release - let alone any release rules.
...there was no need to dwell unduly on the unpleasant nature of what had happened.
REAL pilots - and people who make real positive contributions to this sport - do little BUT dwell unduly on the unpleasant natures of these clusterfucks and strategies for preventing reruns.
It just makes the Worlds and other category 1 competitions less attractive and less likely to be attended if we get caught up in this downward spiral of bad feelings.
Yeah Davis. You really oughta get some good lipstick on those pigs of yours. You certainly wouldn't want any of your little bloodbaths to start looking unattractive.
There is nothing much worse than a bunch of hang glider pilots sitting around on a flyable day questioning the meaning of their lives.
Yeah Davis. You should probably teach them the techniques you used to totally eradicate any vestiges of introspection.
I don't wish to show any disrespect to the members of Robin's family, to his friends or to his team mates.
Of course not, Davis. You're always MUCH too busy showing disrespect to the people working on the equipment to prevent these incidents.
Robin is obviously a beloved member of the Norwegian team. I'm sure that they feel bad.
- They should. They did NOTHING to prevent him from going up on that crap.

- Fuck the Norwegian team.

- Name one goddam thing any of those assholes has done to try to prevent a rerun.

http://www.paraglidingforum.com/viewtopic.php?t=28697
Weak links why do we use them. in paragliding.
Fredrik Sandquist - 2010/01/18 18:31:29 UTC
Trondheim

The hg fatality at Hay. The to strong weak link was one of the reason for the fatality according to the official report if I remember correctly. I am sure that you don't see any problem with that "weak" link but I can definitely not see how anything could have been worse with a weaker weak link. There where obviously also other causes to the accident but this doesn't matter in regard to your question.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=13132
Unhooked Death Again - Change our Methods Now?
Fredrik Sandquist - 2009/01/30 08:52:40 UTC

The report I have is in Norwegian so I doubt you understand it. There are also an Australian report but I don't know if it is available (and the Norwegian report is neither freely available so I am not going to link to it).
- Allegedly according to their alleged report that no one's allowed to see (reminds me quite a bit of the Terry Mason fatality report) Robin died at least in part because his too strong weak link failed to recognize his plight in time to release him at a survivable altitude.
I've gone through this many times in previous competitions and I do have some feel for what people are feeling.
Not, of course, because you have any actual compassion for the person who slams in, but because you can recognize the emotional shifts in the people who do. VERY telling statement, Davis.
What really needs to be focused on is what can we do now to make it as safe as possible for other pilots who are still with us.
Just keep using the shit equipment you always have and blaming the crashes on strong links whenever you can and pilot incompetence when you can't. You'll be fine.
We need to be sure the carts aren't castering. We need to be sure that we are launching directly into the wind.
Davis Straub. Always thinking outside of the box.
We need to be sure that we are using adequate weak links, not too strong, not too weak.
Dr. Trisa Tilletti - 2012/06

We want our weak links to break as early as possible in lockout situations, but be strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent weak link breaks from turbulence. It is the same expectation of performance that we have for the weak links we use for towing sailplanes.
Great minds...
These are relatively easy fixes.
Of course they are, Davis. Just put everybody up on a loop of 130 pound Greenspot. Always dumps you off when you need to be dumped off, never dumps you off when you don't wanna be dumped off.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/26 08:24:31 UTC

Thought I already answered that one... instead of quoting myself (have a look back if you don't believe me), I'll just reiterate it.

I don't advocate anything.
I use what we use at the flight parks. It's time tested and proven... and works a hell of a lot better than all the other bullshit I've seen out there.

130lb greenspot (greenspun?) cortland fishing line.
In stock at Quest, Highland, Eastern Shore, Kitty Hawk Kites, Florida Ridge, and I'm pretty sure Wallaby, Lookout and Morningside.
Not sure what Tracy up at Cloud Nine uses, but I'll put bets on the same.

Did I miss any?
Is it clear what I mean by "We"?
I didn't make the system up.
And I'm not so arrogant to think that my precious little ideas are going to magically revolutionise the industry.
There are far smarter people than me working this out.
I know, I've worked with them.
(Bobby's a fucking genius when it comes to this shit... for example.)
I think that we can best respect Robin and his family best by making sure that other families don't have to suffer through the same feelings.
And with people of your caliber working on the issues, I think it's safe to say that aerotow launch crashes are now things of the past.
The meet organizers have previously stated that it is up to the pilots to provide their own weaklinks.
That's one issue I feel pretty confident in saying...

http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC

Here is the requirement from the 2007 Worlds local rules (which I wrote) for weaklinks:
Pilots must use weaklinks provided by the meet organizers and in a manner approved by the meet organizers. All weaklinks will be checked and use of inappropriate weaklinks will require the pilot to go to the end of the launch line to change the weaklink.

Weaklinks will consist of a single loop of Cortland 130 lb Greenspot braided Dacron Tolling line and should be placed at one end of a shoulder bridle.
At the 2008 Forbes Flatlands Greenspot for the first time was used as the standard weaklink material (thanks in large part to the efforts of Bobby Bailey). We applaud these efforts to improve the safety of aerotowing by using a better weaklink material.
... will soon be dealt with. (Bobby's a fucking genius when it comes to this shit.)
The launch monitors do have weaklinks (brick layers line - the standard in Oz that can be used with 3,4,5, or 6 lines) but they are instructed only to use this in a situation where the pilot is ready to go and has no weaklink.
It's really good to have standards...

http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC

From section 3.4 of the 1999 Hang Gliding Federation of Australia Towing Manual:
Recommended breaking load of a weak link is 1g. - i.e. the combined weight of pilot, harness and glider (dependent on pilot weight - usually approximately 90 to 100 kg for solo operations; or approximately 175 kg for tandem operations).
...and recommendations that everyone can agree on to keep us safe.
But, if it truly the case that pilots are responsible for their own weaklinks, then why are we canceling the day to deal with this issue?
To give the impression that you douchebags are actually doing something about this issue. If you were to do anything really useful you'd hafta scrub the release 'cause you'd never be able to get all the gliders outfitted with releases that didn't stink on ice in time.
It seems to mean that there is some shared responsibility. We are all affected because one pilot made some bad choices.
All you fucking assholes were making bad choices. Damn near all the time you get away with them, occasionally you don't.
This makes it a group responsibility, if we want to continue flying.
Fuck your group.
Editorial Reconsidered.

First, the cu's are beautiful and high today on this light wind day. Yesterday they were nice, but not as nice as today. These are the first cu's we've seen since the first day of the Deniliquin meet.

I have just participated in a two hour meetings with the team leaders and the meet officials.
The team leaders and meet officials on whose watch this idiot fatality got off the ground. Just the people you really want presiding over an overhaul.
I must say that the meet officials have used their time very very wisely this morning to make major changes in the running of the Worlds in order to enhance safety.
Very very wisely? Kinda like...

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=16384
Tow Release Malfunction
Jim Rooney - 2010/03/26 20:54:43 UTC

Bent pin releases are indeed very very reliable.
...very very reliable bent pin releases?
I have never seen this happen before and I applaud their efforts and the realization of those efforts.
Doesn't seem like you ever tire...
At the 2008 Forbes Flatlands Greenspot for the first time was used as the standard weaklink material (thanks in large part to the efforts of Bobby Bailey). We applaud these efforts to improve the safety of aerotowing by using a better weaklink material.
...of applauding people's efforts, Davis.

Funny, though, that I never hear you applauding anyone's actual ACCOMPLISHMENTS. Must be 'cause there aren't any that ever emerge from within your little mutual admiration society.
Realizing the problem with weaklinks, we will now all be required to fly with a weaklink system (perhaps in addition to our own) that will be supplied by the meet organizers. It will be set for 85 to 90 KG. It will be placed between our system and the tow line.
I applaud these efforts too, Davis.

Limit everybody's maximum tow tension to 198 pounds - plus or minus three percent. Knocks every glider with a maximum certified operating weight of over 247 pounds off the bottom of the FAA's legal weak link range BUT...

Small price to pay to be sure that we are using adequate weak links, not too strong, not too weak.
The weak link system with consist of a ring, the weaklink material and a snap hook to attach to the line. We will be given a fresh weaklink every time and release from the weaklink.
Pure genius.

So why don't you just use fucking Tost weak links - like sailplanes have been doing since the beginning of time?

http://ozreport.com/9.009
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/11

Rohan Holtkamp did an analysis of the accident, in particular the bridle and weaklink, which never broke.
How 'bout the release mechanism - which never released? Just kidding.
We already had a canceled day and a bunch of morose pilots hanging around the airport upset that someone had died towing.

The weaklink was caught on the release mechanism, a standard spinnaker release found on bridle systems used at Lookout Mountain, Moyes, Wallaby Ranch, and Quest Air.
Well, if Lockout, Moyes, Wallaby, and Quest are all using a standard spinnaker release it must be standard.

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/skysailingtowing/message/4049
Towing errata
Bill Bryden - 2004/04/01 16:20:18 UTC

Some aerotow releases, including a few models from prominent schools, have had problems releasing under high tensions. You must VERIFY through tests that a release will work for the tensions that could possibly be encountered. You better figure at least three hundred pounds to be modestly confident.

Maybe eight to ten years ago I got several comments from people saying a popular aerotow release (with a bicycle type brake lever) would fail to release at higher tensions. I called and talked to the producer sharing the people's experiences and concerns. I inquired to what tension their releases were tested but he refused to say, just aggressively stated they never had any problems with their releases, they were fine, goodbye, click. Another person tested one and found it started getting really hard to actuate in the range of only eighty to a hundred pounds as I vaguely recall. I noticed they did modify their design but I don't know if they ever really did any engineering tests on it. You should test the release yourself or have someone you trust do it. There is only one aerotow release manufacturer whose product I'd have reasonable confidence in without verifying it myself, the Wallaby release is not it.
And ya just can't argue against standards. Especially when you've got huge track records to back them up.
The release clamp has an arm that is thicker at the release point and this held onto the weaklink which consisted of multiple loops of thick line.
Well... What are ya gonna do? Standards are standards - and this one has a huge track record.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22308
Better mouse trap(release)?
Jim Rooney - 2010/12/16 18:47:05 UTC

A few years ago, I started refusing to tow people with home made gear.
I like the idea of improving gear, but the lack of appreciation for the world they were stepping into didn't sit with me.
For example... flying with the new gear in mid day conditions?
Are you kidding me????

Approach it for what it is... completely untested and very experimental gear which will likely fail in new and unforseen ways as it tries it's damndest to kill you... and then we can talk.
You always wanna use gear that will fail in old and easily foreseeable ways to kill you rather than risk flying with completely untested and very experimental gear virtually no track record whatsoever.
This type of release mechanism has been banned (at least for a short while)...
Yeah, a short while. Give it a couple of days until the danger of using a release mechanism with a reverse tapered gate will pass. And DO get that strong link situation under control.
...from the Worlds at Hay.
But everybody else... Don't worry - keep on using it. This thing only kills people at the Worlds at Hay. And just during a critical period of three or four days.
When the weaklink didn't break and after the release didn't work even though it was open, the 5 mm bridle line holding the release broke and going to the pilot's shoulders and then the 1.5 mil cable that opens the release broke.
This is so poorly written and nonsensical...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=25015
Zippy pounds in
Davis Straub - 2011/09/02 18:37:09 UTC

Concussions are in fact very serious and have life long effects. The last time I was knocked out what in 9th grade football. I have felt the effects of that ever since. It changes your wiring.
...that it's not worth trying to derive anything from it.

There's NO EXCUSE for having anything anywhere in a towing system that blows before a weak link and - regardless of how things were configured on Robin's end or the weak link Bobby was using we know that the tow line tension can never get much over four hundred pounds 'cause of idiot Bobby's idiot tow mast breakaway.
Bobby released the tow line approximately when the pilot's wing tip hit the ground, which is when Rohan felt the cable on the release mechanism broke.
Who gives a rat's ass? Robin's fate was sealed a long time before impact.
Most pilots here are towing off their shoulders. Those pilots who are also towing off the keel are now required to have a release at the keel if they have a bridle release at their shoulders requiring the bridle line to slip through the (tow ring) that connects to the rope connecting to the tug. If you don't have a release at the keel, then you will not be allowed to tow with this system.
In fucking credible. It's amazing these assholes hadn't killed a half dozen competitors by Day Three.
The tow paddock setup is being rearranged to allow for easier towing if the wind is off to the side of the originally forecast direction. The car towers will be moved further away from the aerotowing setup. The launch area will be moved up 200 meters in front of the setup area. Tugs will tow into the wind.
No more releasing from the bottom UNLESS you have a backup release at the top, launching gliders INTO the wind...

Lemme write these down so's I TOO will be able to run a safe tow meet.
They towed into the wind on the first two days because the winds were so strong that they had to. They were towing at ninety degrees to the wind yesterday, but the wind was quite light.
What the hell, it only proved to be an issue on one flight.
The dollies continue to be a big problem. They have been gathered up from all sorts of resources...
Resources. Right.
here in Australia and pilots are often not happy with their dollies. The meet organizers will be putting bungees on the wheels to hopefully reduce their castering. Gerolf is asking for tie rods.
Great time to be doing design and engineering work.
There are many other perceived or real problems with the dollies, including disagreements about proper launch technique (push out, lock elbows, or pull in). There will now be extra help at the initial roll out to keep the weaker...
Safer.
...weaklinks from breaking immediately.
Nah Davis. You don't want those things breaking until you get up to around thirty feet or so.
The ground is quite rough (something that isn't a problem in Florida or Texas).
(So they can use much safer weak links at those venues.)
The rope length will be increased from 60 meters to 90 meters and from spectra to poly to increase the stretch in the rope and help out with the new weaker weak links. This will also decrease the tow angles and decrease the forces on the pilot who's out of whack.
- I'm really liking this strategy, Davis. Use Lauren Links...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24534
It's a wrap
Lauren Tjaden - 2011/08/01 02:01:06 UTC
Eminently Qualified Tandem Pilot

For whomever asked about the function of a weak link, it is to release the glider and plane from each other when the tow forces become greater than desirable -- whether that is due to a lockout or a malfunction of equipment or whatever. This can save a glider, a tow pilot, or more often, a hang glider pilot who does not get off of tow when he or she gets too far out of whack.
...to keep the hang glider pilot from getting too far out of whack then use long stretchy towlines to keep the Lauren Links from blowing when the hang glider pilot gets too far out of whack.

- So you're saying that the short towline presents more danger to the glider. So why were you towing Robin (and everyone else) on short towlines?
Many team leaders wanted an ambulance in the tow paddock (which wouldn't have helped yesterday), but the Australian government will not allow this. I have suggested a refrigerator or cooler with liquid for transfusions and oxygen for the paramedic who is assigned to the field.
Have you suggested adopting technologies for tow equipment that doesn't stink on ice to minimize the need for ambulances, refrigerators, transfusions, oxygen, and paramedics? Just kidding.
These are just some of the many changes that have been made based on input from pilots, dolly masters, tug pilots, the safety committee, and CIVL officials. Rohan was very focused on the accident investigation and making specific changes.
Useless fucking douchebags.
Joerg took this photo of Steve Elkins over Hay on Sunday.
But nobody could be bothered to take any photos of Robin's wreckage so we'd have a fucking clue what was going on back there.
Many pilots were affected by Robin's death and expressed their sympathy on Monday evening to his friends, family and team members in a remembrance gathering where he perished in the tow paddock. Paul Rundell has asked us to incorporate the changes that we have made in our practices and look forward to a safe competition starting again tomorrow.
Bullshit.
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
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Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.010
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/12

The downward spiral.
Whoa, DUDE! You killed a competitor two days ago and things are getting WORSE? Whatever CAN the problem be?
The proposed weaklink has been strengthened to 115-129 kg using six strands of brick layer's string.
Well yeah, having stronger weak links WOULD tend to put a big damper on things. But surely there must be something else contributing to deterioration of the situation.
From now on there will be an ambulance will be on site in the paddock.
And that should be a HUGE plus. I know whenever I go up on total shit for equipment I always feel much better knowing that there's an ambulance RIGHT there for me. None of this waiting around bleeding to death that's been such a big factor in most of the competitions.
There has previously been a paramedic in the paddock with sufficient equipment, but numerous pilots wanted the reassurance of an ambulance.
Definitely. Just having a paramedic on site would make me feel REAL nervous getting in line - especially with all those wobbly carts around.
The day was called due to high winds.
OH!!! NOW I understand. First you kill somebody, then a day is scrubbed while everybody decides what weak link is best to use to compensate for defective releases, then a day is called because of winds. Things are just geting worse and worse and WORSE.

Are you SURE that upping the weak link strength to a target of 269 pounds is such a good idea? That's WAY over the max which was allowed - 200 - by the 1985/07 USHGA/FAA regulations. While that might be strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent breaks from turbulence it might not meet your expectation to break as early as possible in lockout situations.

Have you talked this over with and had it cleared by Bobby? (He's a fucking genius when it comes to this shit.)
This certainly isn't going to improve pilot morale.
Good.

http://ozreport.com/9.011
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/13

Things improve and the weaklinks are proven to be weak.
Win/Win!!!
I'm having a bit of a drama with harness as I stupidly did not bring my thin soled water shoes. Flying with boots changes everything about the fit of the harness and I'm having trouble zipping it up and getting my feet comfortable. Basically I'm in agony the whole time. I'm almost ready to go barefoot even in this extreme environment. My shoulders are just too painful.
DO go barefoot, Davis. You know how much it upsets me whenever you're in agony.
At this point I'm having a hard time concentrating because of the pain in my shoulder. I'm been flying with the harness open to allow my knees to come out and take the pressure off, but it's just too painful. I head for the turnpoint without stopping in the obvious lift and land three kilometers north of town.
Reminds me of that piece of shit Racer Betty put together for me during a drunken stupor.
Dean Funk didn't get out of the start circle. Tom Lanning had four launches, and two broken weaklinks and a broken base tube. He made it just outside the start circle.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/skysailingtowing/message/4593
Weaklinks
Peter Birren - 2005/02/08 19:22:49 UTC

What is the big issue? Re-launching? Oh, the wasted time! Oh, the hassle! Oh, the embarrassment! These are sure preferrable to Oh Shit!
Small price to pay for increasing the safety of the towing operation. And you've got a dedicated ambulance on site anyway. So really, what's the problem?

http://ozreport.com/9.012
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/14

The weaklink saga improves with new weaklink material from Tove - direct from Norway.
Yep, hard to beat Norway when it comes to precision lockout preventers. The BEST stuff, of course, comes from Iceland - but that's a LONG ways from New South Wales and the shipping gets to be something of an issue.
I get a cart without bungee material, so I'm happier. I get towed into the wind, which I appreciate.
Think Robin would've been a little happier if HE had been towed into the wind?
The hard working ground crews are making up the new weaklinks every morning.
My hat's REALLY off to these guys. Most people just don't appreciate how much effort it is to produce quality precision lockout preventers that are only good for about 0.5 launches before they need to be replaced, retired, or recovered from the wreckage so somebody can write up a really good accident report.
It is quite an effort and much appreciated.
Those guys are the best. If only they could figure out that they're using crap a quarter the strength they need to be and that if they put 0.01 percent of the effort they're using into tying loops of fishing line into producing releases that actually worked and didn't stink on ice...
Paul Rundell is doing a great job making sure everyone is organized.
Fuckin' douchebags.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.016
Making Weaklinks
Brent Harsh - 2005/01/18

A few years back Peter Birren shared his club's method for cutting tons of weaklinks with the CCTTSC (Central Carolina Tow to Soar Club (Durham)):

Use a paper cutter with a ruler as the knife edge to ensure uniformity of size and improve the speed. Set two sticks or poles in the ground or a jig however far apart you want cut, plus an inch or so extra and start wrapping weak link material around them. When you have a pile that looks like the max the cutter could get through, lift it off - now you have a thick oval of weak link material a bit longer than the correct length. Stick one end's U under the blade of the paper cutter, pull tight, and hack it off. Now, holding the other U, reverse the bunch, stretch and pull the ends tight (down to the measurement on the cutting board) you want the links to be and cut off the other end of the U. I think I have easily cut a hundred or so at once.
http://ozreport.com/9.017
More on making weaklinks
Bruce Rhymes - 2005/01/19

Here's a better method for making weaklinks, and we've gotta give G.W. Meadows credit for this one.

We use 205 leach line for our (platform launch) weaklinks, and it's best if the ends are melted, so as not to fray. Determine the desired length for your weaklinks, cut a piece of cardboard that length, and wrap as much weaklink material around it as you like. Then, with a hot knife/soldering iron, etc., cut and melt the ends of the weaklink material at the ends of the cardboard.

Works great, less filling!
And then we have:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_TDHqsXRtl0
David Glover - 2008/08/04

First we start off with Cortland Line Company Greenspot... This is what we use.
They're all about a third the strength they need to be, they create nothing but misery, chaos, and carnage on the runways, nobody's got a fuckin' clue as to what they're supposed to be used for - but, boy, are we good at mass producing them.
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
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Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.027
Helmets
Davis Straub - 2005/02/01

Counter evidence.

Despite the contentions that were generally expressed at the Worlds re helmets and head injuries, I have received a link to a web site that shows Robin wearing a Charly Insider helmet which is CE certified (certification E.N. 966) for hang gliding.
What's the CE Certification Number for the release he was using?

Oh, right. It's was a standard spinnaker release found on bridle systems used at Lookout Mountain, Moyes, Wallaby Ranch, and Quest Air. Standard aerotow equipment doesn't really need Certification Numbers - it IS standard, after all.
A Dutch pilot also wrote to me saying that he had seen a number of photos of Robin flying with a Charly Insider at Deniliquin. I've asked the meet organizer and accident inspector for any further comment on this issue. I assume that the rumors I reported as rumors were incorrect and unless otherwise corrected assume that he was indeed wearing his Charly Insider helmet.

A few years ago in Hay I was car towing next to Mike Nooy (Dutch pilot, also) when something similar happened, and he was wearing a regulation hang gliding helmet.
Did you have regulation ribbons along the runway? Or were you just assuming that one of those dust devils that was blowing through once every ten minutes or so wouldn't before he got through the kill zone?

http://ozreport.com/9.028
Robin's helmet
Davis Straub - 2005/02/02

Squash that rumor
I believe the word is "quash", Davis. Squashed is what Robin's head became at the conclusion of his fifty foot vertical dive back into the paddock.
Rohan Holtkamp at Dynamic Flight writes:
Robin was wearing a certified helmet with 40 to 50 millimeters of foam as the main crushable member. The Kevlar shell was disintegrated. No helmet could have prevented the head injuries received in an impact of this speed, not even an airbag.
Big surprise.

Amazing how much interest in and focus on equipment we use for after we've screwed pooches - weak links, hook knives, helmets, parachutes, ambulances - and how little there is in the equipment to allow us to keep things under control.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.032
The Worlds - weaklinks
Davis Straub - 2005/02/07

Weaklinks? We don't need no stinking weaklinks.
Sure we do, Davis. A weak link is the focal point of a safe towing system.
Rohan Holtkamp (in blue text below) at Dynamic Flight responds to my response (in black) to Angelo re Robin's death.
Assisted suicide.
http://ozreport.com/9.026#2

The safety consideration...
Fuck you. There's not a one of you douchebags who would recognize or give a rat's ass about a safety consideration if it swam up and bit you in the ass. Never has been, never will be. And you keep proving it comp after comp after comp and locked down thread after locked down thread after locked down thread.
...that brought about the second task cancellation at the Worlds was the lack of true weaklinks that were in fact originally supposed to be supplied by the meet organization (as hang glider pilots would most likely bring strong links).
I one hundred percent guarantee you that if rank and file hang glider pilots didn't have a bunch of arrogant total shitheads making sure they were safe all the time using proven equipment with huge track records this sport would IMMEDIATELY start reversing its course and evolving FORWARDS.
Over two hundred weaklinks were made for the practice days and each of the comp days.
By the way you're stating that it sounds like you mean over two hundred weak links per day of activity. You've got 96 gliders (95 after you kill Robin on Day Three). So you're figuring over two weak links per day per glider. Yeah, that sounds about right.

If you had a fuckin' clue what the hell you were doing you could do one weak link per glider per flying career.
Each dolly marshal had weaklinks in a pouch with them from when the window opened.
A big pouch.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Davis Straub - 2011/08/26 14:04:52 UTC

We had six weaklink breaks in a row at Zapata this year.
Right?
Every dolly marshal was a tow endorsed hang glider pilot and had received written job descriptions, attended several briefings prior to the first practice day and also each morning of the comp.
- Well yeah, of course. Dolly marshals wouldn't have the slightest clue how to hand out precision true weak links to everyone in line if they weren't tow endorsed hang glider pilots with written job descriptions and several briefings prior to the first practice day and each morning of the comp.

- Was there anything in the written job descriptions or anything mentioned in the several briefings prior to the first practice day and each morning of the comp that the tow endorsed hang glider pilot dolly marshals received about not letting anybody get in line with piece of shit releases configured for hundred percent kill probabilities?

- Just kidding. I know their mental capacities would've been pretty maxed out by all that intensive handing out precision true weak link training.
The supplied weaklinks and each roll of material was selected (one week before the comp) after testing proved that the breaking strain to be plus or minus 5% from 118kg, as promised in the local rules.
- So, obviously, the Local Rules also specified a target flying weight for competition gliders and allowed no more than five percent deviation. What was it? I'd like to know so I can fit my glider with an equally safe and precise lockout protector.

- If you put this precise plus or minus five percent lockout protector on a two point bridle it sees fifteen percent more load that when you're flying one point - you fucking morons.

- 118 kilograms. 260 pounds. That's not the weak link - that's the towline tension. That means you're using 130 pound test line - probably Greenspot.

- That means...

http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC

From section 3.4 of the 1999 Hang Gliding Federation of Australia Towing Manual:
Recommended breaking load of a weak link is 1g. - i.e. the combined weight of pilot, harness and glider (dependent on pilot weight - usually approximately 90 to 100 kg for solo operations; or approximately 175 kg for tandem operations).
...your target glider is 260 pounds. (How convenient.) And you're only allowing glider weights between 247 and 273 pounds.

- So why are there LOCAL Rules for weak links? Do gliders fail at different G loadings or lock out to different extents based on geography or local custom? Name some other piece of equipment whose requirements vary from here to there.

- Idiots.
(editor's note: None the less the launch marshals were extremely reluctant to give out any weaklinks even when specifically asked to do so by pilots.
Sounds like they didn't have detailed enough job descriptions and intensive and frequent enough briefings.
Or maybe:
- it was a case of them having too much weed
- they just needed bigger pouches with more Bobby Links
They stated in no uncertain terms that weaklinks were the responsibility of the pilot...
MY GOD!!! EVERYBODY knows they're...

http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3600
Weak link question
Jim Rooney - 2008/11/24 05:18:15 UTC

I've personally refused to tow a flight park owner over this very issue. I didn't want to clash, but I wasn't towing him. Yup, he wanted to tow with a doubled up weaklink. He eventually towed (behind me) with a single and sorry to disappoint any drama mongers, we're still friends. And lone gun crazy Rooney? Ten other tow pilots turned him down that day for the same reason.
...the responsibility and sole call of the tug driver.
...and that the pilot would only get a weaklink from them if they didn't have one of their own and couldn't get one together right then at the last minute.)
Did the dolly marshals also have big pouches of Bailey Releases?

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=21033
barrels release without any tension except weight of rope..
Bart Weghorst - 2011/02/25 19:06:26 UTC

But I've had it once where the pin had bent inside the barrel from excessive tow force. My weaklink was still intact. The tug pilot's weaklink broke so I had the rope. I had to use two hands to get the pin out of the barrel.
No stress because I was high.
Sometimes they turn from crap to scrap even before the Local Rules precision weak links.
If they had been supplied as promised in the local rules, (they were, as explained above) then Robin would have had a better chance to live, and the tasks would not have been cancelled.
Robin's own release failed to release...
Whoa! Who coulda seen THAT coming!
...plus he refused our weaklink...
- Are we flying the same glider as Robin?
- What's your Local Rules precision weak link supposed to do that Robin's wasn't?
- Did Robin also refuse your Local Rules precision release?
- Or did Robin die BECAUSE he was using your Local Rules precision release?
...even to the point of yelling and physical threat.
Sounds like a real wack job.
Dr. Trisa Tilletti 1

Unlike the FAA's relatively clear-cut legal rules, the practical aspects of weak link technology and application are not so clear-cut. For some people, talking about weak links is more like talking about religion, politics, or global warming--they can get very emotional about it and have difficulty discussing it logically, rationally, or with civility.
For some people, talking about weak links is more like talking about religion, politics, or global warming--they can get very emotional about it and have difficulty discussing it logically, rationally, or with civility.
Dr. Trisa Tilletti 2

So let's try to talk about it rationally, logically, and practically here.
If only they could learn to talk about it rationally, logically, and practically.
Maybe he was perceiving your fucking Local Rules precision weak link as a physical threat.
Mike Lake - 2012/08/10 12:39:56 UTC

Yesterday I had a weak-link break. At a few hundred feet it was a non event, an inconvenience only.
When I launch I never worry too much about lockouts, face plants, my glider falling apart or the fact that I don't carry a hook knife.
What I DO worry about is my weak-link failing at thirty feet with perhaps a wing popping up a bit at the same time.
I endure (and risk) this on every takeoff. That's nearly thirty times in just the last couple of weeks or so.
On EVERY takeoff, by design and all for the want of an extra thirty pounds or so on my weak-link.

One of the legacies of Skyting.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=26870
weak links
Mike Lake - 2012/08/25 16:50:19 UTC

I didn't post this info when this thread was 'live' as at the time an accident report was pending.
On the 12th August a new(ish) pilot took off on tow, his weak-link snapped, the glider's nose dropped and with no height to recover he hit the ground.
Now you can dress this incident up as much as you like but what put the guy in hospital was his 'safety device'.
YOUR weak link...
http://www.dynamicflight.com.au/WeakLinks.html

Given that a certified glider will take 6-10G positive a 1.5G weak link as opposed to a standard 1G weak link should not significantly increase the risk of structural failure. It will however significantly decrease the probability of an unwanted weak link break.
...is one and a half Gs - same as anybody else at least a molecule's worth of instinct for self preservation uses. One strategy for keeping the administrators from piling in, something else half to two thirds of that the rabble.
After viewing video evidence of the entire flight...
Which was removed from public access 'cause it's a:

- record of somebody getting killed by the Industry Standard equipment upon which Quallaby Flight Park has been working so hard to perfect for all these years; and

- graphic illustration of just how little tow tension is required to lock out a glider and kill it and a major undermining of the claims of Pagen, Tilletti, Rooney, and all the other Industry douchebags that light weak links increase the safety of the towing operation.
...even a 80kg weaklink would have made little difference.
Right, Rohan. It would have made LITTLE difference. He'd have slammed in at precisely the same speed and angle and would have been as precisely killed from precisely the same injuries but he'd have died a little happier knowing that he was in compliance with the Local Rules for equipment.
His actual weaklink did test to be stronger than 180kg...
- So what did it test to? 181 kilograms? 1800 kilograms?

- Do we get to hear about Robin's flying weight and/or glider model and size? Oh, right. We've already established that it was 260 pounds - plus or minus five percent - to provide a perfect match for your Local Rules precision weak links. Never mind.

- OBVIOUSLY Bobby - who's a fucking genius when it comes to this shit - was using something at his end which would be in compliance with the FAA regulations under which he flies in the US. Anything over that would put him at EXTREME risk...

http://ozreport.com/3.066
Weaklinks
Davis Straub - 1999/06/06

During the US Nationals I wrote a bit about weaklinks and the gag weaklinks that someone tied at Quest Air. A few days after I wrote about them, Bobby Bailey, designer and builder of the Bailey-Moyes Dragon Fly tug, approached me visibly upset about what I and James Freeman had written about weaklinks. He was especially upset that I had written that I had doubled my weaklink after three weaklinks in a row had broken on me.
...unless he's towing a tandem.

- His weak link thus would have been greater than the 260 pounds to which Local Rules limited the glider but no more than 25 percent over that - 325 pounds / 147 kilograms.

- So why are we talking about what Robin's weak link tested to over?
...but that was not the primary cause of his accident.
Just a contributing factor - along with his failure to have flown with a readily accessible hook knife - with which he'd have undoubtedly been able come out smelling like a rose.
Release failure was, same as Mike Nooy's accident.
So what you're saying is that Local Rules precision weak links can't really compensate for shitrigged Industry Standard releases. And all this time I've been thinking that they were the focal points of safe towing systems. Damn!
A full lockout can be propagated with less than forty kg of tension.
So what you're saying is that a full lockout can be propagated:
- with less than seventy percent of normal 914 Dragonfly tow tension
- at a third or less of normal 914 Dragonfly tow tension

So then what was the thinking behind your Local Rules precision weak links? What is it that happens or is prevented from happening at 118 kilograms - plus or minus five percent?

So what you're saying is that in order to minimize your probability of getting killed at launch it might be a good idea to pretty much forget about the fucking Local Rules precision weak link and get the most effective and highest quality release that money can buy or, failing that, you can engineer and fabricate yourself instead of trying to use shit weak links to compensate for shit releases.
Read Taming the beast on our website...
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/28 08:34:12 UTC

Yeah, I've read that drivel before.
It's a load of shit.
Yeah, I've read that drivel before. It's a load of shit.
...and/or come have a look at the video if you doubt this in any way.
We CAN'T have a look at the video because Davis has decided that we shouldn't be allowed to see it.

But we CAN have a look at THIS video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_n5B3-MIC4


to see just how well Local Rules precision weak links prevent low level lockouts and have a look at THIS video:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTKIAvqd7GI


...to see some of the cost of trying to use Local Rules precision weak links as lockout preventers.
(editor's note: So if weaklinks don't do much to save us from lockouts, an argument heard repeatedly at the Worlds...
This is an ARGUMENT? You morons can't read the fatality reports or experience standard aerotow weak link lockouts at altitude?
...then why are we using them after Robin's lockout (and not before)?
Why not, Davis? For the past quarter century there's never been a problem on tow...
Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974

"The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release." - Richard Johnson
...that couldn't be solved by using a lighter rope or having an earlier premature release.
Shouldn't we have all gone to the Pro-tow...
Yes, Davis, you should have all gone protow.

- 'Cause you're all real pros. I can tell by the really professional manner in which this meet is being run. Hell, y'all didn't kill anybody until Day Three. Compare/Contrast with the 2005 Tennessee Tree Toppers Team Challenge. They didn't make it beyond five seconds beyond the launch of the first wind dummy on Day One before they had to scrub for the day and recover the body.

- And, of course, it always makes tow operations safer when you put everybody up with a configuration which deprives him of the top third of his speed range.
...or other type of bridle instead, as it was not the weaklink that was at fault in Robin's accident...
The fault of Robin's "accident" was that of every motherfucker who attended that meet who saw the crap that he was using for a release system and allowed him to get in line with it. He'd have been better off staggering to launch drunk with Paul Farina's Mosquito throttle control actuated one point foot launch aerotow assembly.
...but the bridle (as your investigation discovered)?
It wasn't the BRIDLE - shithead. He wasn't USING a BRIDLE. He connected directly to a weak link on the end of the TOWLINE.
What exactly is the point of weaklinks?
What the fuck do you think, Davis? It's a *WEAK* *LINK*. It breaks before something really expensive does - IF, generally through massive incompetence on BOTH ends of the towline, a situation is allowed to go so totally to hell that it can't be handled any more.
Why should we be using them?
Tost Flugzeuggerätebau

Weak links protect your aircraft against overloading.
Memorize those seven words and try not to think too much. Whenever you do things start going south fast and people get killed - generally speaking, people other than you (unfortunately).
What is the tradeoff in safety between breaking a weaklink and thereby having a problem, and not breaking a weaklink and thereby having a problem?
Hey Davis, what if you used a:
- RELEASE to RELEASE when you had a problem requiring one?
- weak link to protect your aircraft against overloading?
Oh, right.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=1143
Death at Tocumwal
Davis Straub - 2006/01/24 12:27:32 UTC

I'm willing to put the barrel release within a few inches of my hand.
Image
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
Image

You're willing to put the actuators where you can't get to them when you need to. So you're probably a lot better off using a Local Rules precision weak link which blows at random and hoping that the fatal lockout into which you're heading will have been propogated at a tension much higher than the forty kilograms or less that it takes to do it.
Davis Straub - 2006/01/24 12:27:32 UTC

Bill Moyes argues that you should not have to move your hand from the base bar to release. That is because your natural inclination is to continue to hold onto the base bar in tough conditions and to try to fly the glider when you should be releasing.
Too bad you can't seem to overcome your natural inclination to continue to hold onto the base bar when you should be releasing.

Hey! Here's a thought!

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=14230
pro tow set-up
Jim Rooney - 2009/11/03 06:16:56 UTC

As for being in a situation where you can't or don't want to let go, Ryan's got the right idea. They're called "weak" links for a reason. Overload that puppy and you bet your ass it's going to break.
If your lockout is being propagated by tension at forty kilograms or less just increase the roll and pitch until the tension increases by a factor of three or so, overload that Local Rules precision puppy, and you fly away!

Just goes to show what you can come up with when you have a really keen intellect!
By the way, the article linked to above does not address the issue of why weaklinks, other than an offhand comment about lockout and aerotowing.
Maybe you shoulda taken ten seconds and read the first sentence...
The purpose of a weak link is solely to prevent the tow force from increasing to a point that the glider can be stressed close to or beyond its structural limits.
..in their weak links article.

http://www.dynamicflight.com.au/WeakLinks.html

(Try to focus on the word "SOLELY".
Of course, I realize that there are some circumstances where weaklinks are useful.
And the shittier your releases the more likely those circumstances are to occur. The problem is that when you dumb them down to try to use them as releases, for every blow that happens at a useful time there are gonna be about ten thousand that are - at an absolute minimum - royal and expensive pains in the ass. And you're gonna get a good percentage that WILL crash you and a few that will render a survivable situation un.
It is just that weaklinks suddenly became THE issue after Robin's death, when in fact, as you argue here, and as you laid out then, it was not the lack of a reasonable weaklink...
Robin HAD a REASONABLE weak link - asshole. His was about 1.4 - smack in the middle of the legal/safety range.

Compare/Contrast with a Davis Link:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TaVg_bzK3Aw
...that killed Robin, but the failure of the release mechanism, the bridle.
Do try to learn the differences between release mechanisms and bridles, releases and weak links, and one point and two point before you babble any further and start telling people what they can, should, can't, must fly with.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=25015
Zippy pounds in
Davis Straub - 2011/09/02 18:37:09 UTC

Concussions are in fact very serious and have life long effects. The last time I was knocked out what in 9th grade football. I have felt the effects of that ever since. It changes your wiring.
Asshole.
Perhaps if you laid out the case re the tradeoffs involving weaklinks, we could make a better decision about them.
Why bother?

http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC

From section 3.4 of the 1999 Hang Gliding Federation of Australia Towing Manual:
Recommended breaking load of a weak link is 1g. - i.e. the combined weight of pilot, harness and glider (dependent on pilot weight - usually approximately 90 to 100 kg for solo operations; or approximately 175 kg for tandem operations).
Here is the requirement from the 2007 Worlds local rules (which I wrote) for weaklinks:
Pilots must use weaklinks provided by the meet organizers and in a manner approved by the meet organizers. All weaklinks will be checked and use of inappropriate weaklinks will require the pilot to go to the end of the launch line to change the weaklink.

Weaklinks will consist of a single loop of Cortland 130 lb Greenspot braided Dacron Tolling line and should be placed at one end of a shoulder bridle.
At the 2008 Forbes Flatlands Greenspot for the first time was used as the standard weaklink material (thanks in large part to the efforts of Bobby Bailey). We applaud these efforts to improve the safety of aerotowing by using a better weaklink material.
You're just gonna use numbers and materials total morons before you have pulled out of their asses and mandate them as universal international standards anyway.
For a couple of years I have flown with a doubled weaklink because, flying with a rigid wing glider, I have found that there is little reason to expect trouble on tow, except from a weaklink break.
Really? So you're saying that...
Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974

"The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release." - Richard Johnson
...the greatest dangers rope breaks / premature releases?

So how long did it take you to figure that out?
Am I wrong in this?
NO!!! OF COURSE NOT!!! But that's just for RIGID wings. Flexies are a lot more difficult to control so you wanna use something really light that'll dump people on their ears every time they get bumped out of line a little bit and...

http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=242
VOX
Steve Kinsley - 2005/03/11 15:54:07 UTC

I also understand the reason why some comp pilots would choose to fly without a weak link. I have been in situations where I am thinking "please don't break, please". The glider's coming back, things are under control and "pop". #$%^$.
...are torqueing the bar to get back on track.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=14221
Tad's release
William Olive - 2008/12/24 23:46:36 UTC

I've seen a few given the rope by alert tug pilots, early on when things were going wrong, but way before it got really ugly. Invariably the HG pilot thinks "What the hell, I would have got that back. Now I've got a bent upright."

The next one to come up to the tuggie and say "Thanks for saving my life." will be the first.
Not everybody has the benefit of an alert tug pilot to make a good decision in the interest of his safety to crash him and thereby probably save him from a worse crash.
BTW, I was happy to fly with your weaklinks at the Worlds, and did so.)
I'm SURE you were, Davis. Every time you locked out because you couldn't control your Atos and couldn't get to your Bailey Release or had it lock up your weak link blew before your glider buckled - or even before the lockout progressed to the point at which there was much of a control or altitude loss involved in the recovery. And yet it met your expectation to be strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent breaks from turbulence.

So what was your opinion of the airbags in your rental car? Did they always go off at just the right amount of impact and with just the right amount of power and speed?

How did they compare with the double loop you like because it doesn't ever break?

Asshole.
User avatar
Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC

Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.022
Worlds organization critique - a response
Davis Straub - 2005/01/25

Angelo had some good points, but not all of them were good.

Weaklinks are a big issue. The problem is that pilots "learn" to make stronger and stronger weaklinks because they do not want to have a weaklink break when it is dangerous (they are low and out of control) and they are penalized by the meet rules which put them to the back of the launch line after they land. Bill Moyes lost eleven spectra ropes the first two days of the Worlds because the pilots' weaklinks were a lot stronger than the ones at the tug end.

Weaklinks are normally seen as a pilot responsibility (although sometimes the meet organizers have taken over that function - search the Oz Report for "joke weaklinks"). But, weaklinks really are a collective issue, because they affect the safety of tug pilots and other competitors. As Robin's death showed, one pilot's mistakes can affect everyone.

First, the rules should allow pilots who break weaklink under five hundred feet to come back and launch again at the front of the line. This may seem unfair, but we need this to discourage pilots from eliminating weaklinks.

Second, for the good of the meets, the meet organization should include their weaklink (adjusted for pilot and glider weight) in the tow line at the pilot end. They did this here after Robin's death, by putting a weaklink between two rings, hooking one ring to the pilot's tow bridle and the other to the tow rope. The pilot can have any weaklink that they want, but the meet organizers have their weaklinks also, on both ends of the tow line.
Weaklinks are a big issue.
NO!!! REALLY? I'da thunk that after several decades of experience and hundreds of thousands of tows conducted by numerous aerotow operators across the county that weak links would be a total NON issue.
The problem is that pilots "learn"...
Really? I've always found the precise opposite to be the case.
...to make stronger and stronger weaklinks because they do not want to have a weaklink break when it is dangerous (they are low and out of control)...
So they were starting to get the drift...
Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974

"The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release." - Richard Johnson
...of some of the obvious common sense stuff that was standard operating procedure back in the days before...
Donnell Hewett - 1980/12

Now I've heard the argument that "Weak links always break at the worst possible time, when the glider is climbing hard in a near stall situation," and that "More people have been injured because of a weak link than saved by one."
...Donnell Hewett came up with his brilliant strategy of putting everybody up on a loop of fishing line about five pounds heavier than normal tow tension.

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Cragin Shelton - 2011/09/03 23:57:33 UTC

Nice Reference Citation
Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974

"A bad flyer won't hurt a pin man but a bad pin man can kill a flyer." - Bill Bennett
"The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release." - Richard Johnson
Do you REALLY think that there has been no progress in knowledge about the practical applied physics and engineering of hang gliding in 37 years? OR that an early, 3+ decade old, information book written by a non-pilot is a solid reference when you have multiple high experience current instructors involved in the discussion?
Fuck you, Cragin.
...and they are penalized by the meet rules which put them to the back of the launch line after they land.
That's OUTRAGEOUS!!! They should use the rules under which Ridgely has been run so smoothly for fourteen seasons now.

Reward the people who want to have a standard aerotow weak link break when it is dangerous (they are low and out of control):
- by letting them cut back into the head of the line; and
- giving them "free" relights - paid for by the people who use stronglinks which don't break when it is dangerous (they are low and out of control).
Bill Moyes lost eleven spectra ropes the first two days of the Worlds because the pilots' weaklinks were a lot stronger than the ones at the tug end.
In other words the stupid motherfucker was using weak links on his end which were not only lighter than what the gliders had on their end but lighter than what was needed to handle normal solo tow tensions.

And don't tell me that there were eleven lockouts behind Bill in two days worth of competition launches.

And even if there were ELEVEN lockouts behind Bill in two days worth of competition launches don't tell me that they couldn't have been dealt with by a release that didn't stink on ice well before even one of those crappy little loops of 130 pound Greenspot with which Steve Seibel is so enamored would've disintegrated.

Bill... You may be one the major pioneers of this sport but you're an asshole, you've done a huge amount of nothing to move the sport forward enough to stop it from killing large numbers of people for no reasons other than cultural stupidity and ignorance - and I've got ZERO respect for you.
Weaklinks are normally seen as a pilot responsibility (although sometimes the meet organizers have taken over that function...
Thank God!!! You can't have a bunch pilots who've "learned" to make stronger and stronger weak links because they do not want to have a weak link break when it is dangerous (they are low and out of control) making their own decisions. You need MEET-HEADS taking responsibility...

http://ozreport.com/13.238
Adam Parer on his tuck and tumble
Adam Parer - 2009/11/25

Due to the rough conditions weak links were breaking just about every other tow and the two tugs worked hard to eventually get everyone off the ground successfully.
http://ozreport.com/16.078
The Rob Kells Meet
Davis Straub - 2012/04/18 15:02:09 UTC

Mitch Shipley (T2C 144) crashed at launch after a weak link break. He tried to stretch out the downwind leg and then drug a tip turning it around and took out his keel (at least).
http://ozreport.com/9.011
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/13

Dean Funk didn't get out of the start circle. Tom Lanning had four launches, and two broken weaklinks and a broken base tube. He made it just outside the start circle.
...to make sure everyone's using Local Rules precision weak links and run an efficient, safe competition.
- search the Oz Report for "joke weaklinks").
THESE:
Donnell Hewett - 1985/08

The system must include a weak link which will infallibly and automatically release the glider from tow whenever the tow line tension exceeds the limit for safe operation.
Dr. Trisa Tilletti - 2012/06

We want our weak links to break as early as possible in lockout situations, but be strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent weak link breaks from turbulence. It is the same expectation of performance that we have for the weak links we use for towing sailplanes.
http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC
Pilots must use weaklinks provided by the meet organizers and in a manner approved by the meet organizers. All weaklinks will be checked and use of inappropriate weaklinks will require the pilot to go to the end of the launch line to change the weaklink.

Weaklinks will consist of a single loop of Cortland 130 lb Greenspot braided Dacron Tolling line and should be placed at one end of a shoulder bridle.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Davis Straub - 2011/08/26 14:04:52 UTC

We had six weaklink breaks in a row at Zapata this year.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MlIGsgNFRWM


...are joke weak links - you stupid piece of shit.
But, weaklinks really are a collective issue, because they affect the safety of tug pilots...
Right Davis. If a glider flies at four hundred pounds towline and the tug also has a weak link that blows at four hundred towline...

- While the towline tension required to blow a tandem glider loose will be four hundred pounds the tension required to blow a solo will double to eight hundred.

- The tug will be incapable of releasing the solo glider if it gets dangerously out of position.

- A solo glider will be capable of stalling a tug - which is impossible when using a standard aerotow weak link.
...and other competitors. As Robin's death showed, one pilot's mistakes can affect everyone.
- Yeah, Davis. It's critically important to pair a Bobby Bailey piece of shit release with a Bobby Bailey piece of shit weak link.

- That wasn't ONE PILOT'S mistake. That was the mistake of everyone present at that meet. And if there had been any ACTUAL pilots present at that meet that death would never have happened. As it was NOT ONE of you assholes even said anything about the release system "equipment" he was using.
First, the rules should allow pilots who break weaklink under five hundred feet to come back and launch again at the front of the line.
First, the rules should mandate weak links between 1.3 and 2.0 times the maximum certified operating weight of the glider.

Next the rules should mandate that shitheads like Bill Moyes have weak links a hundred pounds over the heaviest weak link in the competition.

Then the rules should mandate:
- both hands on the control at all times releases like ALL the goddam Russians use
- that any glider who breaks a weak link is out of that day's competition and any tug who breaks a weak link is fined a thousand dollars
This may seem unfair...
Goddam right it SEEMS unfair. It SEEMS unfair because it IS unfair. It's unfair to any pilot who has his shit together - despite the best efforts of all you total assholes.
...but we...
Who's "WE", Davis? You and bunch of shitheaded Rooney caliber tug drivers who couldn't make it through fifth grade math and science with guns to your heads and cheat sheets in your desks?
...need this to discourage pilots from eliminating weaklinks.
Yeah Davis. If it ain't a Local Rules precision weak link...

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=26870
weak links
michael170 - 2012/08/17 17:01:40 UTC

Zack, let me see if I understand your logic.

You had a thing and it broke needlessly.
You didn't want the thing to break needlessly.
You replaced the thing with a stronger thing.
Now the thing doesn't break needlessly.
...it just ain't a weak link.
The problem is that pilots "learn" to make stronger and stronger weaklinks because they do not want to have a weaklink break when it is dangerous (they are low and out of control).
Make sure that you tireless safety enforcers get on top of that pilot "learning" situation and nip it in the bud.

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=26870
weak links
Davis Straub - 2012/08/13 18:08:42 UTC

Used to do 130 lbs. Now do 200 lbs.
Fuckin' assholes.
Second, for the good of the meets, the meet organization should include their weaklink (adjusted for pilot and glider weight) in the tow line at the pilot end.
- Any chance you can get subjects and pronouns to agree with each other? Just kidding.
- You don't adjust weak links for pilot and glider weight. You adjust weak links for GLIDER CAPACITY.
- Are we gonna get to hear anything about Gs? Just kidding.
- Last I heard the allowable weak link range was 115 to 129 kilograms / 254 to 284 pounds towline. What's the "thinking" behind those figures?
- Is fuckin' Bill Moyes gonna adjust his - sorry, THEIR - weak link so he doesn't keep dumping the towline on the glider?
The pilot can have any weaklink that they want, but the meet organizers have their weaklinks also, on both ends of the tow line.
- Yes, Davis. The PILOT can have any weak link that THEY WANT.

- Meaning:
-- the pilot can have any weak link that he wants under the 254 to 284 pounds that the meet-head's weak link is gonna cap
-- that some gliders can be forced to fly under the FAA legal minimum and a 300 pound glider that wants to fly at one G can go fuck himself
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Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9161
Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC

Re: Weak links

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ozreport.com/9.021
Worlds - a critique of the meet organization
Davis Straub - 2005/01/24

Angelo Crapanzano and other Italian team members were not happy with how the Worlds were organized and run.

At the CIVL Plenary that decided which country would host the Worlds the Italian team had the deciding vote and flipped a coin. Australia won.
http://ozreport.com/9.025
Worlds - the stain
Angelo Crapanzano - 2005/01/28
Metamorfosi

In my opinion...
Oh good. An opinion.
...weaklinks should be a responsibility of the organizers (as it was written in the local rules).
Yep. Local Rules precision weak links. Hard to go wrong.
Any OPINION on how many pounds or kilograms they should be?
This is possibly the only way to avoid too many pilots using inadequate weaklinks.
By which you mean anyone using ADEQUATE weak links - seeing as how - thanks to Bailey "releases" - inadequate weak links are the only thing we have between us and certain death by lockout each and every tow.

http://ozreport.com/9.030
The Worlds - Rohan replies to Angelo
Davis Straub - 2005/02/04

Rohan Holtkamp (comments below in blue) at Dynamic Flight responds to Angelo's critique (in black) of the Worlds organization:
There were at least six pilot lockouts on aerotow, but nothing was done about this safety issue until a pilot died.
Disagree.

Reliable releases were available from day one at the HQ.

Robin was killed because he was unable to release. He chose to provide his own release, and refused our weaklink.

Lockouts are induced by not flying in the same direction as the tug and will happen every time when direction is not controlled or the tow forced ceased soon enough. A fifty percent longer ropes gives the pilot a hundred percent more time to react, but Bill Moyes refused to tow with our ninety meter ropes from day one and even after Robin was killed behind a tug with a sixty meter rope. You would have had some long waits in the paddock without Bill's Tugs.

For your information the weaklinks used for the last half of the meet broke at up to 135 kg when twisted and 95 kg when not! Weaklinks do not prevent lockouts, pilots' choices do.
The task was cancelled by John Aldridge, the Jury foreman, on the day that Robin was killed, not the meet director.
You need to discuss this with Paul and John before accusing anyone.
If a day is called invalid, then by the same logic, the meet should be considered invalid.
True to some extent of logic?
At the CIVL Plenary discussion the meet organizers indicated that aerotowing would cost about $15/day AUD. The actual cost was $75/day. If this would have been known, the coin would not have been flipped by the Italian team.
Sure, remember what it did cost when you caught or brought your own tug back in 2003 and piled on twelve or more pilots to share the costs? Had James known we had to provide the aerotowing, marshals, dolly fetchers, tie down ropes, ordered launch, weaklinks, one tug for every eight pilots, the exchange rate, the rise of the Euro and the decline of the USD then sure, James could have given a more accurate estimation.

The above requirements were imposed by CIVL less than twelve months prior to the event, James could not have foreseen this when the bid was submitted.
Towing was three times the cost of the towing at Deniliquin for twice the amount of towing time.
Possibly, but the Italian team did not fly at Deni. At Deni there was no limit to the number of pilots towed by each tug, no dolly fetchers, no marshals, no weaklinks, and no tie down ropes or ordered launch.
For a meet that costs each pilot $1,800 AUD, they received no T-shirts.
T-shirts were available but optional, if you were slow you missed out. The meet actually cost each pilot $700AUD, which was cheaper than the Brazil Worlds for pilots and team leaders, plus we got a decent welcome and presentation meal at the Hay Worlds. Last year the meet only cost $380 without all the CIVL stipulations. You shift the goalposts you change the price.
The car towers and the aerotowers were squeezed together. There was plenty of room in the paddock for both.
There was actually 350 meters of separation.
There was no need for a trike pilot to hit a car tow line.
I believe he hit an aerotow line dropped from above.
There should have been aerotow only and then just put the whole crew together in the middle of the paddock and then tow in whatever direct the wind in blowing.
That would be ideal, we may as well set up in an air conditioned hangar and call it Big Spring.
The meet organizer never apologized for the errors.
The organising is done prior to the meet commencing. The running is done by the comp director and marshals, ask the right person for the apologies and you might get some.
The worst World's organization since he started attending the Worlds in 1978.
He obviously has not been to them all then.
(editor's note: Angelo wrote back to say that he agrees with Rohan and his original critique also. Two different perspectives.)
There were at least six pilot lockouts on aerotow, but nothing was done about this safety issue until a pilot died.
- There weren't six lockouts at takeoff. If there had been there'd have been at least three fatalities - instead of just the usual one.

- A lockout at altitude - virtually the only place they occur - isn't EVER a safety issue. It's an inevitable byproduct of aerotowing hang gliders in thermal conditions.

- Guess:
-- they were all using using insanely overstrength weak links - just like Robin was. Otherwise they wouldn't have locked out.
-- their drivers were all using insanely overstrength weak links too - just like Bobby was when he towed Robin into his fatal lockout.

- Davis says Bill Moyes lost eleven towlines in the first two days of towing. So it's pretty fuckin' obvious that he didn't lose them all in lockouts. It's pretty fuckin' obvious that he was losing front end weak links while the gliders were under control at normal, predictable thermal towing tensions.

- It's pretty fuckin' obvious that Bill's totally fuckin' clueless.
Disagree.

Reliable releases were available from day one at the HQ.
Define "RELIABLE".

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22660
What can be learned from this "scooter" towing accident?
Jim Rooney - 2011/02/06 18:35:13 UTC

The minute someone starts telling me about their "perfect"system, I start walking away.
The minute someone starts telling me about his "reliable" system, I start walking away. If it's not a perfect release and system it's stupid to fly it.

Amongst the elements of Donnell's Skyting Criteria are "RELIABLE" releases and "INFALLIBLE" weak links. Both were/are total fucking disasters.

A "reliable" release is something something that will probably open if and when you can get to it and totally...
Steve Kinsley - 1996/05/09 15:50

Personal opinion. While I don't know the circumstances of Frank's death and I am not an awesome tow type dude, I think tow releases, all of them, stink on ice. Reason: You need two hands to drive a hang glider. You 'specially need two hands if it starts to turn on tow. If you let go to release, the glider can almost instantly assume a radical attitude. We need a release that is held in the mouth. A clothespin. Open your mouth and you're off.
...stinks on ice.

When somebody's got a release that DOESN'T stink on ice...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?p=70921
Mouth Release . . . Here we go again
Craig Stanley - 2009/06/02 01:24:59 UTC

Sorry to stir this up again, but I wanted to give a quick update on the mouth release. I added another loop into the release and I have to say, I love this thing.
Antoine Saraf - 2012/02/08 11:13:07 UTC

I made 4-strings (ratio 60) AND remote barrel (ratio 16.8), I love them.
...he doesn't refer to it as "reliable".
Robin was killed because he was unable to release.
Bullshit. Robin was killed because of several issues related to the shoddy operation that was being run at that event.

- He was foot launching because the available carts were known to suck. If he hadn't been - crosswind or not - the chances of his life depending on a low level release and recovery would've been ZERO. He wasn't put out of control by the air doing anything - he got out of control 'cause he didn't have his wing locked down level on cart until he had more airspeed than he knew what to do with.

- As the tow progressed Robin wasn't trying to release Robin and Bobby wasn't trying to release Robin.

- When he started locking out to the left...
He was seen reaching for his release.
...he was seen REACHING FOR his release.

- In the time he was REACHING FOR his piece of shit release he was no longer RESISTING the lockout and the towline was ACCELERATING the lockout.

- If he'd been using a release that didn't stink on ice he'd have been off tow and in pretty good shape before the period in which he was seen REACHING FOR his release.

- By the time he gets to the lever - even if the piece of shit release DOESN'T jam - he's probably gonna stall and crash...
Doug Hildreth - 1991/06
USHGA Accident Review Committee Chairman - 1981-1994

Pilot with some tow experience was towing on a new glider which was a little small for him. Good launch, but at about fifty feet the glider nosed up, stalled, and the pilot released by letting go of the basetube with right hand. Glider did a wingover to the left and crashed into a field next to the tow road. Amazingly, there were minimal injuries.

Comment: This scenario has been reported numerous times. Obviously, the primary problem is the lack of pilot skill and experience in avoiding low-level, post-launch, nose-high stalls. The emphasis by countless reporters that the pilot lets go of the glider with his right hand to activate the release seems to indicate that we need a better hands-on way to release.

I know, I know, "If they would just do it right. Our current system is really okay." I'm just telling you what's going on in the real world. They are not doing it right and it's up to us to fix the problem. Think about it.
...just like everybody else does in that situation.

- Roy Messing was using a Lockout Mountain Flight Park Release which DOES allow you to keep both hands on the basetube while you're delivering the three to five pulls usually required to blow it, he was probably in better shape than Robin when he finally pried himself loose and even though he didn't hit as hard as Robin, he still hit hard enough to end up just as dead as Robin - after lingering for four days.
He chose to provide his own release...
- NO! REALLY! Such bizarre behavior!

- What percentage of the competitors DIDN'T choose to to use their own releases?

- You mean the...

http://ozreport.com/9.009
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/11

The weaklink was caught on the release mechanism, a standard spinnaker release found on bridle systems used at Lookout Mountain, Moyes, Wallaby Ranch, and Quest Air.
...standard spinnaker release found on bridle systems used at Lookout Mountain, MOYES, Wallaby Ranch, and QUEST AIR? All these fine establishment constantly striving to perfect aerotowing equipment?

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24534
It's a wrap
Davis Straub - 2011/07/30 19:51:54 UTC

I'm very happy with the way Quest Air (Bobby Bailey designed) does it now.
The Bobby Bailey "designed" one with which Davis Straub...

Image
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
Image

...is very happy?

- So you're saying that the (Bobby Bailey designed) standard spinnaker release found on bridle systems used at Lookout Mountain, Moyes, Wallaby Ranch, and Quest Air with which Davis Straub is very happy is a piece of junk?

- So do we get to hear ANY kind of description of these wonderful "RELIABLE" releases that were available from day one at the HQ? If they were so vastly superior to what Robin was using I'm amazed that there weren't fistfights over who was gonna get one 'cause the Bailey two and one point stuff everybody's been using for the last couple of decades sucks and lotsa people know it.

- Funny, I don't recall hearing that following the crash that:
-- the meet-heads:
--- grounded all Wallaby releases and made the vastly superior RELIABLE releases available from day one at the HQ mandatory
--- recommended swapping out Wallabies for HQs
-- one single competitor opted to swap his Wallaby for an HQ
...and refused our weaklink.
The implication being that he was a real asshole for not using a weak link that was lighter than Bill's front end weak link which was regularly failing at normal tow tensions with everything under control and that he'd have come out smelling like a rose if he had.

So what would YOUR weak link have done for Robin that his didn't or would have in ANY situation?

Lemme tell ya sumpin'...

If you stupid motherfuckers had made up a batch of Fisherman's Knot / Double Lark's Head single loop weak links out of 250 pound test such that the seated protrusion length was 20 millimeters...

http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8305428629/
Image

...made them mandatory on ALL gliders, and made all the fuckin' douchebag drivers like Bobby and Bill use six hundreds then you wouldn't have had ANY structural failures, one more lockout than you did as it was, any lockouts appreciably more severe than what you had, ANY non lockout weak link failures, or ANY dumped and/or lost towlines and Robin would've AT LEAST been off of tow the instant his hand hit the stupid lever.
Lockouts are induced by not flying in the same direction as the tug...
And by getting the shit kicked out of you while you ARE flying in the same direction as the tug.
...and will happen every time when direction is not controlled...
- Hell, just take a couple of tandem Cone of Safety training flights with Dr. Trisa Tilletti. You'll be fine.
- How many hands does it take to control a glider?
- What tends to happen with the progression of a lockout during the period when people are seeing someone REACHING FOR his release?
...or the tow forced ceased soon enough.
Oh. So the sooner the tow force is ceased the less severe the lockout will be.
- So ya got any ideas for minimizing the time required to terminate tow tension?
- No, besides using one of YOUR weak links and waiting for it to blow.
A fifty percent longer ropes gives the pilot a hundred percent more time to react, but Bill Moyes refused to tow with our ninety meter ropes from day one and even after Robin was killed behind a tug with a sixty meter rope.
- Yeah well, when you're using three quarter G weak links on the tug end and losing towlines at a rate of eleven per two days you want them as short as possible to cut down on your Spectra expenses.

- Oh. So Bobby Bender Bailey...

- designer of...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24534
It's a wrap
Davis Straub - 2011/07/30 19:51:54 UTC

I'm very happy with the way Quest Air (Bobby Bailey designed) does it now.
http://ozreport.com/9.032
The Worlds - weaklinks
Rohan Holtkamp - 2005/02/07

Robin's own release failed to release.
- the Industry Standard two point release with a track record longer than that of any other and, in accordance with its long track record, became totally inoperable at the most critical moment of this flyer's life...

- tireless advocate of...

http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC

At the 2008 Forbes Flatlands Greenspot for the first time was used as the standard weaklink material (thanks in large part to the efforts of Bobby Bailey). We applaud these efforts to improve the safety of aerotowing by using a better weaklink material.
http://ozreport.com/9.022
Worlds organization critique - a response
Davis Straub - 2005/01/25

Bill Moyes lost eleven spectra ropes the first two days of the Worlds because the pilots' weaklinks were a lot stronger than the ones at the tug end.
...standard aerotow weak link lockout preventers for both ends of the rope...

- the best tow pilot...

http://ozreport.com/9.008
2005 Worlds
Davis Straub - 2005/01/10

Bobby Bailey, the best tow pilot in the business...
...in the business, and...

- a fucking genius...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/26 08:24:31 UTC

Bobby's a fucking genius when it comes to this shit.
...when it comes to this shit figured that Robin would need a little more of the deck stacked against him on this one.

- So now it's a pretty safe assumption that Bobby was flying as a part of Bill's fleet and using the same idiot weak link up front - the same idiot weak link that nobody's bothered to document anywhere in the course of this idiot postmortem.
You would have had some long waits in the paddock without Bill's Tugs.
- Yeah, amazing how much power these Dragonfly assholes have managed to attain to control this sport.

- What effect did the...

http://ozreport.com/9.022
Worlds organization critique - a response
Davis Straub - 2005/01/25

Bill Moyes lost eleven spectra ropes the first two days of the Worlds because the pilots' weaklinks were a lot stronger than the ones at the tug end.
...lockout preventers everyone was using to increase the safety of the towing operation...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/28 19:39:17 UTC

Weak links break for all kinds of reasons.
Some obvious, some not.

The general consensus is the age old adage... "err on the side of caution".

The frustration of a weaklink break is just that, frustration.
And it can be very frustrating for sure. Especially on a good day, which they tend to be. It seems to be a Murphy favourite. You'll be in a long tug line on a stellar day just itching to fly. The stars are all lining up when *bam*, out of nowhere your trip to happy XC land goes up in a flash. Now you've got to hike it all the way back to the back of the line and wait as the "perfect" window drifts on by.

I get it.
It can be a pisser.

But the "other side"... the not cautions one... is not one of frustration, it's one of very real danger.
Better to be frustrated than in a hospital, or worse.
No exaggeration... this is the fire that the "other side" is made of. Best not to play with it.
...have on wait time in the paddock?
For your information the weaklinks used for the last half of the meet broke at up to 135 kg when twisted and 95 kg when not!
297 pounds twisted, 209 pounds un.

Whoa, DUDE!

- That has the potential for getting some gliders all the way up to a full G! I personally would be in no danger of exceeding the point at which unimaginable rates of death and destruction become possible and likely, but I'm just sayin'...

- Seems like a little twisting could really fuck up the precision that the meet-heads were going for to eliminate the possibility of a Robin rerun.
Weaklinks do not prevent lockouts...
Then PLEASE tell me the "THINKING" behind these moronic numbers everybody's playing with in this clusterfuck of an event.
...pilots' choices do.
Oh good. It's so reassuring to know that if we just make good choices...
Bill Bryden - 2000/02

Dennis Pagen informed me several years ago about an aerotow lockout that he experienced. One moment he was correcting a bit of alignment with the tug and the next moment he was nearly upside down. He was stunned at the rapidity. I have heard similar stories from two other aerotow pilots.
...we'll be immune from lockouts.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=27yFcEMpfMk


Good choices like only flying in sled conditions.
At the CIVL Plenary discussion the meet organizers indicated that aerotowing would cost about $15/day AUD. The actual cost was $75/day. If this would have been known, the coin would not have been flipped by the Italian team.
Sure, remember what it did cost when you caught or brought your own tug back in 2003 and piled on twelve or more pilots to share the costs? Had James known we had to provide the aerotowing, marshals, dolly fetchers, tie down ropes, ordered launch, weaklinks, one tug for every eight pilots, the exchange rate, the rise of the Euro and the decline of the USD then sure, James could have given a more accurate estimation.

The above requirements were imposed by CIVL less than twelve months prior to the event, James could not have foreseen this when the bid was submitted.
Hey Rohan, I couldn't help but notice the mention of weak links on your little list there. And:
- from the idiot numbers we've been seeing most gliders are flying under half of the middle and off the bottom of the FAA safety range.
- a huge chunk of the tug fleet is using tea bag strings up front such that towlines are raining out of the sky.

So when you're including weak link in the list of expenses are you just talking about the cost of the fishing line and time and labor involved in cutting and tying them or are you looking at the cost of relights and raining towlines?

http://ozreport.com/13.238
Adam Parer on his tuck and tumble
Adam Parer - 2009/11/25

Due to the rough conditions weak links were breaking just about every other tow and the two tugs worked hard to eventually get everyone off the ground successfully.
Maybe if y'all had a clue what the fuck you were doing and doubled your weak link strengths you could the ratio of gliders to tugs.
Towing was three times the cost of the towing at Deniliquin for twice the amount of towing time.
Possibly, but the Italian team did not fly at Deni. At Deni there was no limit to the number of pilots towed by each tug, no dolly fetchers, no marshals, no weaklinks, and no tie down ropes or ordered launch.
Oh, look at that. No weak links, lower towing costs.
There was no need for a trike pilot to hit a car tow line.
I believe he hit an aerotow line dropped from above.
Hey Rohan... Maybe you should be using glider end weak links capable of surviving normal tows all the way up to release altitude and something a hundred pounds heavier up front.
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