http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=30971
Zach Marzec
William Olive - 2013/02/20 06:42:07 UTC
Re: A few overlooked factors?
I use 3/16" poly rope behind a trike, but I like it a bit longer than 50 yards. My ropes are about 70 metres, but to each his own.
Yeah, name something in aerotowing that ISN'T just a matter of personal preference or opinion.
One thing though, new poly rope has a penchant to twist and can quickly wrap up a DF release, rendering it impossible to release and even if the WL does fail, the top rope wont pass through the ring, which is why Bill Moyes uses expensive Spectra rope for his towlines.
And you OFF THE SCALE *STUPID* FUCKING MORONS...
Towing Aloft - 1998/01
I witnessed a tug pilot descend low over trees. His towline hit the trees and caught. His weak link broke but the bridle whipped around the towline and held it fast. The pilot was saved by the fact that the towline broke!
...couldn't POSSIBLY address that issue by:
- putting weak links at BOTH ends of the bridle?
- following FAA regs and and putting a weak link at the front end of the towline?
- all of the above?
Did you ever experience such a wrap up youself? I expect not, if you kept on using poly behind a DF.
What? You think that a catastrophic and easily remediable failure of a component of an aerotow system would cause somebody to alter his configuration? How many times have we needlessly killed somebody - even when in flagrant violation of existing regulations and standards - and kept right on doing things the same way because we get away with it damn near all the time and it's so easy to write off as dead guy error?
Poly rope is a good WL in its own right, and I usually find that the rope will break before the tug end WL does if you put the rope over a fence etc.
How very reassuring for the asshole at the FRONT end.
You:
- have no fucking clue what a weak link is to begin with.
- ASSUME that:
-- a single single loop of 130 pound Greenspot is an ideal weak link for all solo gliders
-- it blows at twice the strength it does
-- a tandem glider weighs twice a solo glider
-- a double loop blows at twice the single loop you've ASSUMED blows at twice what it does
-- the double loop blows at 2.6 times what it ACTUALLY does
- use the same weak link on the front end that you do for the tandem so it's a toss-up who gets the rope.
The front end weak link is already too light to safely tow a solo.
You:
- use a tow mast breakaway the same strength as your fishing line.Then you dumb down your front end weak link so it will break before the breakaway.
- ASSUME that a cheap shit dangerous elastic towline will protect your dangerously understrength weak links.
- USE a cheap shit elastic towline which DOES protect your dangerously understrength weak links.
So wanna take a stab at what tension you're capable of pulling and holding? Just kidding.
Clueless fuckin' assholes.
William Olive - 2013/02/20 06:56:25 UTC
Re: Your brain is the weaklink!
A weaklink break is ALWAYS an unexpected event...
Gawd how I wish that were true. I've always been ASTONISHED when they HOLD.
...why is that a logical reason for increasing the strength.
You all the sudden wanna start talking LOGIC?!?!?! The entire fucking lunatic system collapses the nanosecond you introduce the slightest TRACE of LOGIC.
And PERISH THE THOUGHT that any logic should begin with anything like...
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.
...strengthening a piece of string to the point that it didn't break needlessly and permitted you to accomplish what you came out on that particular day to do and leave in the driver's seat of your car instead of the back of an ambulance.
You could extrapolate that to mean use a 3/16" steel cable, coz that sucker won't break and ruin your day.
If you DID use 3/16" steel cable I one hundred percent guarantee you that aerotow expenses and crash rates would drop to tiny fractions of what they are now. You think Zack Marzec was thinking, "Thank GOD I wasn't using 3/16" steel cable!" as he was tumbling to his death?
BTW, I don't advocate the exclusive use of greenspot, and in fact, I think an infallible weak link should be between the towline and the release, which with a pro-tow system it clearly isn't.
- It clearly is on MY "pro tow" system...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8305308635/
...asshole.
- And of course there would be NO MORE A POSSIBLE WAY to put a weak link on the back end of the towline than there is to put one on the front end of the towline - like it says in the FAA regs.
But hey, I don't feel strongly enough about that I won't tow with a pro tow myself, they're just too damn convenient.
Yeah, until you're blasting up in a thermal at 150 feet waiting for your Moyes Link to pop with the bar stuffed about an inch and a half back from pro toad trim. Then things start getting damned inconvenient pretty damned fast - for HUNDREDS of people.