Zach Marzec
By a bunch of off the scale stupid pigfuckers of your caliber - you useless snot-nosed little punk.Jim Rooney - 2013/02/13 19:09:33 UTCIt was already worked out by the time I arrived.Zack C - 2013/02/13 15:02:38 UTC
Can you explain, then, exactly how we arrived at the current 130 lb weak link standard?
Ignorance, stupidity, brainwashing, intimidation, cowardice.The reason it sticks?
Yeah? So what else was tried, by whom, where's the data, and where are the fatality reports on some of the less viable concepts?Trail and error.
Cite ONE incident attributable to any of the other bullshit you've seen out there and tell us what that bullshit was and how it performed in bench tests in comparison to the Sacred Fishing Line and the glider model and flying weight.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.
Well gee, Jim. Since you've obviously got the PERFECT weak link for the AVERAGE glider I would think you'd get an equal number of little girl types coming along every now and then with the "new" idea of a WEAKER weak link.Every now and then someone comes along with the "new" idea of a stronger weaklink.
So where are they?
How come whenever you read some crap like the rot Davis and Trisa excrete it's all about tying and hiding knots to make the weak link STRONGER - 260 pounds preferably - and to keep it from breaking by using polypro towlines and bridles?
Where are the grieving friends of the two hundred pounders writing posts and articles and making YouTube videos on how to get a loop of 130 pound Greenspot to blow at just 180 pounds?
Yeah, motherfucker? Name ONE person, give me ONE quote, and cite pounds, Gs, flying weight, roll attitude, altitude loss - you lying little shit - and show me how things would've been significantly different/better with...Eventually, they scare themselves with it and wind up back with one that has a very proven track record.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3648
Oh no! more on weak links
...a standard aerotow weak link.Carlos Weill - 2008/11/30 19:24:09 UTC
On June of 2008 during a fast tow, I noticed I was getting out of alignment, but I was able to come back to it. The second time it happen I saw the tug line 45 deg off to the left and was not able to align the glider again I tried to release but my body was off centered and could not reach the release. I kept trying and was close to 90 deg. All these happen very quickly, as anyone that has experienced a lock out would tell you. I heard a snap, and then just like the sound of a WWII plane just shut down hurdling to the ground, only the ball of fire was missing. The tug weak link broke off at 1000ft, in less than a second the glider was at 500ft. At that point I realized I had the rope, so I drop it in the parking lot.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eTKIAvqd7GII mean really... no exaggeration... hundreds of thousands of tows.
4:00Say what you will, but if you want to argue with *that* much history, well, you better have one hell of an argument... which you don't.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pC1yrdDV4sI
Yeah? It amuses me...It amuses me how many people want to be test pilots.
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/flyhg/message/17223
Pilot's Hotline winter flying
...when your asshole friends fly with Rooney Links that clearly protect them from high angles of attack and take themselves out of the gene pool.Mark Frutiger - 2013/02/03 13:41
Yesterday was a light and variable day with expected good lift. Zach was the second tow of the afternoon. We launched to the south into a nice straight in wind. A few seconds into the tow I hit strong lift.
Zach hit it and went high and to the right. The weak link broke at around 150 feet or so and Zach stalled and dropped a wing or did a wingover, I couldn't tell. The glider tumbled too low for a deployment.
Fuck you.It amuses me even more that people...
A) Don't realize that "test pilot" is exactly what they're signing up for and B) actually testing something is a far more involved process than "I think I just try out my theory and see what happens".
WOW! I'm REALLY impressed. What percentage of them went the way the flyers on both ends wanted them to and...Allow me to repeat... hundreds of thousands of tows.
http://ozreport.com/12.080
No one makes it back - Santa Cruz Flats Race, day two
...what percentage of them never got more than ten feet off the grounds because the keel cradles weren't set right?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. You've got to get the keel cradle set right.
Exactly how large, Jim? I was never that good at math.Sure, there's other stuff out there too. Some of it even has a number of tows behind it... but hundreds of thousands is a very large number.
That's really amazing, Jim. Slap a loop of 130 pound Greenspot on a 180 pound Falcon 3 145 and it works just like it does on a 360 pound T2 154. I sure wish theory was relevant to hang glider aerotowing so I could see those graphs.That's not "religion" my friend.
The shit works. It works in reality and it works consistently.
How could it be anything less? Quest has been perfecting aerotowing for twenty years.It's not perfect...
So how come Russell Brown told people to double up their Quest Links at Zapata two summers ago? How many test pilots were killed in the course of that exercise?...but Joe-Blow's pet theories have a very high bar to reach before they are given credence.
Antoine...
Now that Rooney's really blazing away at his feet, looking like the moronic little piece of shit that he's always been, and getting cut up a little bit do feel free to get back in there and start kicking him when he's down.