http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=29415
Holy Crap
Lin Lyons - 2013/07/03 18:16:20 UTC
At Hollister, with the surface tow, on a foot launch, one can get up a bit over a thousand feet.
With the cart, one can get up another two to four hundred and sometimes even more.
However, typically the advanced pilots use the cart, because it's so much easier.
Maybe if they did a foot launch, they'd come closer to the normal cart launch altitude.
Ain't it great the way all these schools start you off forcing you to do and use a lot of stupid, dangerous, demanding crap that will never be of any use in a real flying career - especially at the stage of a beginning student...
- towing foot launches
- upright flying
- upright only training harnesses
- easy reach releases
- beginner strength weak links
- long final legs
- dead stop standup spot landings in field centers
...and then, assuming you haven't been discouraged, crashed, injured, killed out of the sport you may be permitted:
- dolly launches
- prone flying and harnesses
- funky shit releases
- legal range weak links
- prone wheel or skid short field runway landings
Tom Lyon - 2013/07/03 19:24:05 UTC
Lin Lyons - 2013/07/03 16:38:14 UTC
Yeah, I know I can do it, but when I looked over the edge, it does cause some consternation.
Lin, I had this same feeling when I looked at the ramp at Lookout Mountain in Georgia. However, by the time I finished with all of my flights on the two different sized training hills, my fear of the ramp...
And of:
- launching unhooked
- seeing one of your friends launch unhooked
...was mostly gone. It was the progression through foot launch training that gave me the confidence.
I can't begin to tell you just how happy for you I am.
When I made my first mountain launch, some of my fear came back, but not too much. I knew I would have a successful launch if I just did what I had been trained to do.
- preflight in the setup area
- hang check at the back of the ramp
- wait for previous glider to get a good cycle
- use wait time to (re)check radio, vario, helmet strap, camera
- move to launch position
- brief wire crew
- check:
-- streamers
-- traffic
-- pitch an roll trim
- yell clear
- keep nose down and run it into the air
By my third mountain launch, the fear was gone...
Bill Priday's was too on about his twelfth mountain flight on 2005/10/01 at Whitwell.
...and I just had the required (tremendous) respect for the importance of executing a good, strong launch.
And no respect whatsoever for the USHGA regulation for all flights for all ratings which states:
With each flight, demonstrates a method of establishing that the pilot is hooked in just prior to launch.
Although I'm a licensed sailplane pilot, I'm actually less comfortable with towing.
First halfway intelligent thing you've said.
Although towing hang gliders is relatively safe...
Relative to WHAT? Mother Grizzly taunting?
...and very well established now...
The more very well established it gets the less accountable and the more insanely dangerous it gets.
...it's not quite as simple/failsafe as the Tost...
...or Schweizer...
Like Bobby has on his Dragonfly.
...tow hooks for regular sailplanes.
Oh. So you're saying that highly engineered, certified, built-in systems which allow the pilot to blow tow without control compromise are safer than velcroed-onto-the-downtube crap coat-hangered together from whatever off-the-shelf parts that first come to the mind of some stupid Dragonfly jockey and failsafed with a:
- bent pin backup;
- couple of inches of 130 pound test fishing line;
- hook knife; and
- parachute?
How would you account for the difference?
What the fuck have you done in the way of looking into and supporting better systems?
I guess what I'm saying is if you have an interest in foot launching, I'd go for it with proper instruction. I absolutely love it now.
He WAS foot launching on 2013/06/15 when one of his flights brought him international fame.
He HAD...
Pat Denevan and his instructors at Mission Soaring Center have been teaching hang gliding for forty years. Pat is a leader in the hang gliding community - he has been instrumental in developing the teaching standards for the United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association (USHPA). He is currently the Flight Director for the Wings of Rogallo, the largest hang gliding club in the US. Mission Soaring LLC is recognized world-wide for safety and customer satisfaction.
...top notch professional instruction that damn near got him killed.
I don't think this has been working too well for him.
P.S. There is NOTHING "SIMPLE" about a Tost sailplane release. Take a good look at one and see if you can figure out how it works in less than the three days it took me.
It's also about a hundred times as bulletproof as a Schweizer which is something even Bobby Fucking-Genius Bailey was able to figure out and duplicate. So do everybody and yourself a big favor and drop the "simple/failsafe" bullshit.