Update...
Once again Allen has exercised his God given right to take valuable evidence of a serious incident out of circulation and make the job of people dedicated to reducing the frequency of reruns a lot harder. I think he keeps trying to beat his previous record of pulling the video in the shortest possible time after I've posted the link. Looks like he did about forty-five seconds this time.
So, from my downloaded (and safely backed up) copy...
1:03 - Suspension goes tight and glider goes back down on shoulders.
1:12 - Left foot moves. Allen's confidence in his memory and courage are both superior to mine by a factor of at least five - pretty remarkable given his early history.
1:14 - About a half a dozen steps into the launch run the suspension once again goes tight and Allen's confidence in his memory and courage is validated.
1:04 - Allen is on final approaching the Lookout primary from the west with a slight tailwind.
1:23 - Allen loses interest in piloting his aircraft and shifts his focus to stopping his glider on his feet as close as possible to a traffic cone. His first effort towards achieving this most admirable of all hang gliding stunts is to totally dismiss the idea of rolling in on his twelve inch wheels, start rotating up from prone, and free his soon-to-be worse than useless legs from his pod.
1:24 - Allen probably moves his right hand from glider control to whipstall / arm break / shoulder rip position a bit below shoulder level.
1:25 - Allen moves his left hand from glider control to whipstall / arm break / shoulder rip position a bit below shoulder level.
1:26 - Allen shifts both hands to higher/better whipstall / arm break / shoulder rip position a bit above shoulder level.
1:27 - Allen is fully poised in classic stunt landing position save for the bar being a wee bit forward from where it should be. But hey... He can certainly be forgiven for that 'cause we all know it's a real bitch to try and hold the bar back when you're in stunt landing configuration. And besides, he's a fair bit short of his goal of cone stomping glory and it wouldn't hurt to try to float the glider a wee bit closer.
1:28 - The flare is executed a wee bit late with the glider a wee bit slow and Allen a wee bit behind the glider. All very minor, forgivable stuff and we've all been there, done that. And like Mike Meier says, "If other aircraft were as difficult to land as hang gliders no one would fly them." Left toe is about a foot off the surface and the ignominious twelve inch wheels are floating about three times as high.
1:29 - "Landing gear" is down - left foot far forward, right foot far aft - ready to run. Ignominious wheels are still a good two feet safely off the surface. But, alas, the glider's still a wee bit too fast and Allen only gets to take one step before the glider outpaces him. Despite his automatic and instantaneous response of shifting his hands up another eight inches, he's still unable to adequately slow the mushing glider. The glider then alters his status to that of passenger and lands itself a bit roughly on those nice twelve inch pneumatic wheels, briefly dipping its nose to horizontal.
1:30 - Within this one second time span the glider rolls to a complete stop only about a wingspan short of the cone and eating up only another two feet of runway. The deceleration causes the passenger to swing forward relative to the glider and, after just a bit of energy is absorbed by the shoulder, his left hand is freed from the downtube and he rotates around his right hand still on the downtube without further injury. The passenger then swings back to about normal prone trim position, much as he was when he was piloting his aircraft from just after launch up to 1:23.
1:31 to 1:37 - The dust cloud betrays a tailwind of maybe as much as three miles per hour. I suppose a ribbon on the cone could've provided that information PRIOR TO landing but - as the cone was placed in the field as a challenge rather than an aid - that would diminish its purpose to some extent.
I'm always getting accused of...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=14230
pro tow set-up
Ryan Voight - 2009/11/03 20:51:52 UTC
Coming from a guy who's username is aerotowing, yet has nothing good to say about it... that's pretty funny.
...never having anything good to say about anything and...
Jim Rooney - 2009/11/10 06:11:41 UTC
I think my opinion on Mr Negative are pretty clear, so I'll just say
Ah, with that out of the way....
Back on topic
Ryan...
...being a Mister Negative but I'd like to say some positive things to say about this landing.
- On final the speed is good and the glider stays level all the way in and down.
- Allen touches down and stops perfectly lined up with the target and just a little outside of the radius specified for the Hang Four spot landing requirement - no mean feat, lemme tell ya.
- The nose only drops to horizontal and there's no damage to the glider whatsoever - despite the tailwind.
I see much worse landings just about every time I'm in a primary in light air and, all in all, I'd say this is a pretty good landing on which to end the season.