look at my drawing too, is that right ?
http://www.flickr.com/photos/61469129@N07/5595214443/

Thanks.It will take few days before to read everything. It's close to be an encyclopaedia in 12 Vol !
Nothing would make me happier. Well, nothing I can imagine actually happening any time soon would make me happier.If you don't mind, maybe you will accept to answer some specific questions you surely did before.
Just for the record... I DESPISE the term "pro tow". There's NOTHING professional about it. It's a dangerous compromise of an ideal towing system and there's no amount of skill or experience that can compensate for it. I don't have much of a problem with people towing that way on appropriate (higher performance) gliders and have towed that way myself and would do so again - but I refer to it as one point.I'm convinced with your "protow" release...
Don't do the bridle yet....with straight pin and small and thick bridle. I will do one.
1. Your glider MUST BE weak link protected at all times no matter what happens.With it, do you use weaklinks on the both side too in a "1 point" and "2 points" use ?
If you don't have a weak link on the end of the towline and you have a bridle long enough to wrap you MUST have weak links above and below the tow ring.With it, do you use weaklinks on the both side too in a "1 point" and "2 points" use ?
Friction isn't an issue with respect to bridle material except that you NEVER want to have fabric moving on fabric. You need a smooth metal tow ring (carabiner) for your primary bridle and a thimble...Do you use a specific rope friction-proof as a bridle ? or is it useless ?
Yes. Just as confident as the sailplane manufacturers who designate specific weak link ratings for their birds.You seem to be really confident with weak link you selected.
GOOD! You should be. That's one of the scariest things I can think of in hang glider towing....I'm still scared to have weaklinks on my shoulders as it could blow with V-bridle...
And solo....in tandem...
Two solutions......(even if they are well calculate as they could be weakened by friction if you don't change them every flight).
No way. You'd need more than that to roll it on a paved runway at five miles an hour. Where did you get that number from?In the event of a snag I would be towed by the keel. And in this configuration I don't understand how a weak link there would instantly blow, as a normal tow tension is 15kg...
YOU CANNOT AFFORD TO RISK BEING TOWED BY THE KEEL FOR EVEN A SECOND. People have INSTANTLY had their keels broken, been tucked and had their gliders broken under negative loading, and tumbled....far lower than the strength of the wl, except maybe by the 'jerk' of re-tension ?
I towed my Wills Wing HPAT 158 - VG full on, flying weight 145 kg - behind a 914 Dragonfly and measured 57 kg tow tension - 70 with the turbocharger kicked in. And when you release without pulling in the glider decelerates very abruptly and the tug does just the opposite.Rohan Holtkamp - 2008/04/21
Once again history has shown us that this thread-through system can hook up and the hang glider remains being towed by the keel only, with the bridle well out of reach of even a hook knife. I know of just one pilot to survive this type of hook-up, took him some twelve months to walk again though.
That was right before I developed the Shear Links. Now I have a Ribbon Bridle so there's a primary Shear Link built into the top, a secondary built into the bottom, and a Bridle Link between my shoulder releases.So, in a "2 points" you use 4 wl, one on the apex, one on the primary release and 2 on shoulders at each end of the bridle. Is that right ?
If you're using a one G or better weak link at the top and not chewing it up with a spinnaker shackle you may not EVER need to change it. Inspect it every now and then to make sure it isn't getting fuzzed. And you'll never need to replace a Bridle Link unless it blows.Which one you will advise to change every flight?
You have a North Wing T2. Its maximum certified flying weight is 235 kg. Split that in half - 117.5. Multiply by 1.15. You want a 135 kg weak link at the top end of the bridle.May you give me the equation to calculate the 1G weaklink with a sixty degree angle, please ?
As discussed above, twenty percent is just an arbitrary minimum based upon my weak link tolerances with which I feel comfortable.Could you explain me that...
Ignore them. You're ONLY concerned with the MAXIMUM CERTIFIED FLYING WEIGHT of your glider. For example...How do you manage the different weight of passengers.
No. See above.Do I have to change the 4 wl every flights ?
I don't know what you're using for a tug or what its limitations are. Bobby Bailey doesn't have a clue what a weak link is and thus the back end of the Dragonfly is poorly and dangerously designed. The tow mast is designed to snap off when the tow tension gets to around 200 kg. If you can go to 1.5 without too much risk of getting the towline go to 1.5. If you can't get the tug capacity to over a G then there's not much point.Or which margin you would accept as you seem to accept some: you usually prefer 1.5G wl and tell me ok for 1G.
That's pretty light. Why were you using that rating?Actually (shame on us) we only use a 144kg tested wl on the apex...
Please find out for me. And please find out WHY they're using that rating....(and one more stronger on the tug side (maybe 50% stronger as I don't exactly remember (I know it's bad))...
They're junk. It's not that it's a bad idea to have the release there but unless you put a lot of cable crap in the air there's no way to actuate it with your hands on the basetube.What is your opinion on a release in the apex of a V-bridle rather than the 2 releases system ?
The ONLY good way to do a two point aero configuration is to have the release mechanism on the keel and the actuator in hand on the basetube.Peter Birren - 2008/10/27 23:41:49 UTC
Imagine if you will, just coming off the cart and center punching a thermal which takes you instantly straight up while the tug is still on the ground. Know what happens? VERY high towline forces and an over-the-top lockout. You'll have both hands on the basetube pulling it well past your knees but the glider doesn't come down and still the weaklink doesn't break (.8 G). So you pull whatever release you have but the one hand still on the basetube isn't enough to hold the nose down and you pop up and over into an unplanned semi-loop. Been there, done that... at maybe 200 feet agl.
Not in the least. They DO introduce a possibility for snagging something but I'd guess the hazard is about a billionth of a typical standup landing.I understood you are against carabiners.
I actually don't see any difference 'cause all I've ever towed with was a standard aluminum nonlocking oval carabiner. But I think all this business about special carabiners, round rings, and homemade teardrop rings is a bunch of crap - none of these idiots are looking at the bridle design and I know for sure that's the big issue. And with a good weak link system and emergency secondary release the big issue is a total non issue anyway (except if your bridle separates from the tow ring before the tug lands and you lose it).About snagging event, which difference you see with a small carabiner and a standard ring ?
I doubt it has any bearing one way or the other on the snag issue but I might be worried about it chewing up the bridle a little upon release. (Are you operating off of grass or pavement (or both)?) If I were using a weak link which stayed on the back end of the towline I'd go with Tost.Does the 'top of a bottle' cut (the one which protect the wl on the apex below the ring) protect against a snag ?
This business about wires, bridles, releases, carabiners, and wires is bunch of totally imaginary bullshit invented by idiots who've never been around aerotowing and/or can't read, think, or look at pictures....and front wires against carabiner ?
Use a carabiner and only fly pilots with enough common sense to avoid flying into thunderstorms.I have to organize a comp in my flatland and we need a quick system to catch bridle of each pilot..
No problem. We're moving fast in the right direction and I'm very happy. Just do me and yourself a big favor and don't ever talk to any of those assholes again. (And I can give you a really long list of other assholes never to talk to as well.)...(sorry for the win-win consideration).
Keep looking at my photos and forget the stuff inside the basetube - that's a lot of work and isn't really important. The rest is pretty easy.I'd like to accept your help to work on setting an easy primary release as VG system but I need more time than actually..
Yeah, all those numbers are fine. BUT......look at my drawing too, is that right ?
Ha...I love having a wide angle lens but it has its drawbacks. Besides the fisheye distortion, it makes everything look small.Tad Eareckson wrote:Rather nasty bend in your starboard nose wire.
It was too rowdy for my first time trying out one point, and I was too busy trying to find lift to do any wangs. But why are you interested in me towing one point anyway? I'm not crazy about the idea and only considering it because I don't have a suitable two point release for foot launching.Tad Eareckson wrote:Where are the videos of the one point tow and wangs?
Hey, you're the Photoshop expert.Tad Eareckson wrote:Is there any way you can Photoshop out the hook knife?
Yes, but maybe I spoke too soon...Tad Eareckson wrote:Which is another way of saying that Matt's release worked OK and my weak links held and my bridle didn't wrap.Zack C wrote:...three flights, no issues.
Not as far as I could tell. No one mentioned anything to me either on site or in response to the video of the day's flying I posted.Tad Eareckson wrote:Were any of the other kids the least bit interested?
Yes, I forgot I reduced the image because it looked too big embedded. Unlike Flickr, Photobucket doesn't let you embed any size other than the original. I've emailed the original to you. By the way, I uploaded it to Flickr just to see what it would do and it reduced it to 1024x768, which isn't bad. Maybe you should try re-uploading some of your images to see if they'll be bigger.Tad Eareckson wrote:I couldn't get ahold of anything better than the 800x600 you embedded.
So why is Joe's release better than Lookout's? So far I've been pretty happy with the Lookout release. Releasing is effortless and instantaneous but I've never had an issue with triggering it prematurely. Here are my releases from Saturday (password = 'red'):Tad Eareckson wrote:I'm not crazy about it [LMFP release] but you could do a lot worse. (That's what Zack's using.) You could also do a lot better and much cheaper from Joe Street in Ontario[...]
Is that right? I thought it was more like 400 lbs.Tad Eareckson wrote:The tow mast is designed to snap off when the tow tension gets to around 400 kg.
Yeah, I was pretty impressed by how high you'd gotten with all that runway left over.Besides the fisheye distortion, it makes everything look small.
Oh. Between the T-shirt and the boring looking clouds I was figuring it was pretty smooth.It was too rowdy for my first time trying out one point...
'Tis nobler to thermal than to wang and I'm a fan of keeping up the fight down to a hundred feet but sometimes it's obvious that there's no hope and you oughta have a little fun....and I was too busy trying to find lift to do any wangs.
1. You wanna have lotsa different stuff in your logbook. It's like merit badges. You can say, "Yeah, I have that skill." - and actually have that skill.But why are you interested in me towing one point anyway?
No, don't panic, everything's fine.Yes, but maybe I spoke too soon...
Shit. Not looking good for a forming a Columbus Pigs' Choir either. "Why bother? My Bailey and Greenspot have always worked JUST FINE. If it ain't broke... And besides, I'm not being a TEST PILOT for an UNPROVEN SYSTEM."Not as far as I could tell.
Even if I could... In Flickr you can't reload or replace something with a new edit. You have to trash the original - AND ITS URL - unless you want duplicates all over the place. And I have links to specific photos all over the goddam web - mostly in fora from which I've been banned.Maybe you should try re-uploading...
I'm actually not POSITIVE it is. I mainly don't like Matt's 'cause it's inefficient, unnecessarily complex, ridiculously overbuilt, and correspondingly expensive (and it's Matt's). But it appears to work well and I'd predict that it's gonna do a whole lot better than all that ass covering stuff in the owner's manual indicates. But I'm still never gonna be completely happy until I can get you to build something in.So why is Joe's release better than Lookout's?
Notice how SMOOTHLY the bridle's feeding out through the tow ring? (Actually, you CAN feel irregularities pretty easily.)Here are my releases from Saturday...
Oops. Forgot to divide by two before going to print. (A certain failed Mars probe is coming to mind.) Thanks for the catch. If I start putting out too much potentially deadly misinformation I'm probably gonna get sued for copyright infringement by USHGA, Wallaby, Quest, Lookout, and/or Sport Aviation Publications. I went back and fixed it just in case.I thought it was more like 400 *POUNDS*.
Around here I always fly with a T-shirt if it's 80+ on the ground. This time of year we generally don't get higher than 4000' or so. The highest we ever get (June-August) is ~7000' and then it's always hot as hell on the ground so it ain't too bad at 7K.Tad Eareckson wrote:Between the T-shirt and the boring looking clouds I was figuring it was pretty smooth.
While it's good to hear I'm just trippin', I'm no less confused.Tad Eareckson wrote:No, don't panic, everything's fine.
I didn't really follow you. How is this different from using a loop (two strands) of weak link material? You've verified that this doesn't double the strength.Or just think of the Bridle Link as a rope that breaks at X pounds. If you double it / fold it in half you can lift 2X pounds.
I think the explanation to your Flickr woes is here:I tried to save those bastards [Flickr] bandwidth by cropping out every pixel that wasn't hardware and they screwed me over anyway.
I'd still go with a long sleeved T and gloves 'cause I'm scared of cancer (it - and the chemo (and surgery)) did a real number on me in '83 and you're never entirely sure what you're gonna slide into at the other end of the flight.Around here I always fly with a T-shirt...
Lemme do this one out of order...I'm no less confused.
The breaking strength of a line is determined with the line straight (I think they use Chinese finger trap devices at the factory) and ALL of the fibers equally/evenly loaded.How is this different from using a loop (two strands) of weak link material? You've verified that this doesn't double the strength.
You're thinking of it as if it were a Spectra bridle with a loop of 130 Greenspot on one end and a loop of 200 on the other. It doesn't work that way. It's an optical illusion.What am I missing?
No.I was assuming the number of stitches would be the same on each end...
Throw out the Primary Bridle and tow one point with the Number 13 to simplify things....because it seems to me that the force on the lower end of the primary bridle...
YES. (And because the tow ring is free to slide on the bridle (link).)...will be split 50/50 to each bridle link end...
NO....and thus if one side had fewer stitches than the other it would blow at a lower force than the other.
Yeah. Looks like Moore's law may have started heading back south....I thought it was a shame they were of such low resolution given the amount of effort you put into them.
Well Chad... Steve and I put a lot of thought, time, effort into our designs and came up with something that's definitely lighter and cleaner, at least as simple, and probably cheaper and a lot more powerful than the Russian job - but hardly anyone is the least bit interested.Chad May - 2011/03/28 16:57:31 UTC
Update...
Hey gang, CinCas (Linas) was very kind to sell me one of his mouth releases... and I haven't had a chance to test it yet, but I think I will youtube a video of its operation and forces involved etc.
I haven't heard from Aeros or anyone on the Oz Report about this, but something might turn up.
From my initial toying with the Russian-made release from Linas, it seems very easy to both hold in your mouth and to easily release and spit out. Someone put some thought into its design, as deceptively simple as it looks.
We could put our money together and either copy it or just ask Linas to contact the Russian gentleman and have him ship us over a box.
More to come...
Why? So you can piss all over it and tell people how dangerous it is to use anything with more parts than a webbing loop, a fat barrel, and a bent pin?Jim Gaar - 2011/03/28 19:16:23 UTC
Keep us informed!
You pretty much only kinda need it if you're gonna tow one point. If you give it a try towing two you can kill yourself pretty easily.Chad May - 2011/04/08 06:30:13 UTC
Hi y'all,
Tom Clark, owner of DeimosPG.com (and HG too) was very kind to contact Aeros (he's listed as a dealer) and inquire about mouth releases... and they have no plans to sell them. I guess they did at one time?
Well, Tom graciously offered to make a release or maybe a few if we ask him:
DeimosPG.com
I would send him mine for a pattern, but I kinda need it. I'm still waiting to give it a try, weather's been windy last few weeks.
1. It NEEDS to be a Four. Three doesn't do it - as I've verified on the ground and Steve's verified in the air.Also, I'm hopeful that a 3 or 4 string cascade style release as was posted on the Oz Report might actually work well.
Do us a favor and drop the "hopefully".You hold a string in your teeth... if you let go, it threads itself back through the cascading loops and hopefully nothing wraps.
Glad to hear that's a problem on that unit. Sounds like somebody screwed up a little bit. But, what the hell, you really only need this thing for the first couple hundred feet and I'm also thinking you can probably shorten whatever it is you're using to mount it and so compensate. (You could probably also redo/replace the cable assembly.)And Linas has the email address of the Russian fellow who made his.
I wish the release actuator cable on mine was a little longer.
Yep, that's exactly what it's there for.Red Howard - 2011/04/08 14:12:41 UTC
Campers,
Wanna laugh? Look up Deimos in your Funk and Wagnall's.
Blue Sky
Aerotow Release Primary
Aerotow Primary Release --Moyes stainless spinaker release with velcro and attachable bicycle brake release handle
After the second failed attempt to release, I thought about releasing from the secondary, but before I could move my hand the tug stalled and started to fall...
I just kept hitting the brake lever for a few seconds in WTF mode, and the instructor used the barrel release.
Robin's own release failed to release. Do not use a 'Wichard' or 'spinnaker' release directly connected to a string or rope. This type of metal release has a metal knob on the opening arm that a rope will catch on, even when the release is activated and open.
I tried to release but my body was off centered and could not reach the release.
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.
Yep. Spend the big bucks so you know you're getting something good.$175.00
REALLY? Different STYLES!!! Styles are always SO important to me! Can I get different shaped pins?Barrel Release
Standard barrel release, can be produced in a variety of styles
The barrel release wouldn't work because we had too much pressure on it.
I so do love the curved ones. And can we get them with different colored webbing?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.
$18.00
Yeah, keep that extra stress off the harness. I've had six or seven close friends killed because their harnesses were torn apart while they were connected just to the platform loops.Platform Release
(Three-Ring Tow Release by Blue Sky) The three-ring tow release by Blue Sky is a soft yet strong release designed to bypass the pilot to the carabiner to avoid added stress on the harness. Just route the main straps through Platform towing loops up to the Carabiner.
1. How many years does it take to verify the strength of a design?This simple design has been proof tested over the years to be strong...
Very reliable. What the hell does that mean?...and very reliable.
If you can get to it in time.Bill Bryden - 2000/02
The rapidity of the lockout was absolutely stunning to those observing the event. The glider went from being banked approximately 25 degrees and angled roughly 45 degrees to the towline, to being rolled over and pointed down in less than two to three seconds after the rollover.
1990/03/29
Brad Anderson
24
Novice
Flight Designs Javelin
platform tow
McMinnville, Oregon
head injury, ruptured thoracic aorta
"Strong novice" pilot with a lot of flying and some truck tow experience. With instructors present launched and rose to fifty feet over truck. Pushed out hard enough to release and continued to push out after release. Whip stalled and dove into the ground. Died instantly.
You're not letting guys fly at Manquin with the release lanyard on their wrists, are you? (Rhetorical.)1990/07/05
Eric Aasletten
24
Intermediate
2-3 years
UP Axis
platform tow
Hobbs, New Mexico
fatal / head
Reasonably proficient intermediate with over a year of platform tow experience was launching during tow meet. Homemade ATOL copy with winch on the front of the truck. Immediately after launch, the glider pitched up sharply with nose very high. Apparently the angle caused an "auto release" of the towline from the pilot, who completed a hammerhead stall and dove into the ground. Observer felt that a dust devil, invisible on the runway, contributed or caused the relatively radical nose-up attitude. Also of concern was the presumed auto release which, if it had not occurred, might have prevented the accident. Severe head injury with unsuccessful CPR.
Shorter mains can be easily changed for Aerotow purposes.
Yeah, use it for aero. These things make SUPER aerotow releases.2006/01/19
James Simpson
Then the radical actions continued and the glider went upside down and the wings folded. From 500 feet the glider tucked and spun. The pilot got the parachute out, but it did not open in time to stop the impact.
The rope looped around the side wire and formed a knot.
One of the things that interests me about this accident is that it highlights one of the potential problems of the Windtech type tow release. These releases are really difficult (if not impossible) to release with one hand if there is no tension on the tow rope. You need the bridle to be under tension for the release string to remove the pin. It strikes me that if you have enough slack in the rope to wrap around your wing wire there is probably insufficient tension to release even if you wanted to.
$75.00
Aerotow Release Secondary
Simple barrel release with v-bridle complete
Yeah Steve, as long as it's SIMPLE we're definitely good to go - in hang glider towing it doesn't matter whether or not something actually WORKS or can be gotten to when the shit hits the fan.I have never had a lockout situation happen so quickly and dramatically and had no chance to release as I have always thought I could do.
Not bad for five bucks of materials and one and a half for labor.$33.00
Well gee, OBVIOUSLY then all you need to do is overcome your natural inclination! It's all PSYCHOLOGICAL!!! And all this time I've been thinking that it would further compromise your control in an already critical situation.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.
http://ozreport.com/pub/fingerlakesaccident.shtmlI'm willing to put the barrel release within a few inches of my hand.