Crash at Ellenville
That's OK, there isn't any. (Often the case when you're dealing with global warming deniers.)zamuro - 2013/07/10 20:42:10 UTCI can't get the logic here at all.Rodger Hoyt - 2013/07/10 20:16:47 UTC
I've often wondered about the wisdom of pilots staying on low-perf gliders.
This is something one is supposed to have learned already.Great that it worked out for you but not everybody learn at the same pace.
This isn't about being wired into whatever glider you happen to be flying at the moment. It's about knowing what to do with it.I'll say learn to do a proper approach consistently in several fields with an easier to fly glider before stepping up. If you are unable to do a good approach in a small field in let say a WW Sport, moving up to a T2 is not going to help you.
Yeah, always go for that bull's-eye. Really horrible things tend to happen to gliders that miss bulls'-eyes. That's why hang gliding puts so much focus on them.zamuro - 2013/07/10 20:49:30 UTC
Something that worked out for me once was going to a place where I could do many approach-landings in one day in several conditions (Morningside) and always trying to land in the bull's-eye.
Yeah, do whatever it takes to nail that predetermined spot. How else are ya gonna learn to win spot landing contests?Then go to other places and try to land the glider in a predetermined spot.
And make sure you nail that spot - EVERY TIME. As one of the country's premiere XC pilots I'm certain you understand the critical importance of that.NMERider - 2013/07/10 20:58:12 UTC
That's what I'd like to see more of in SoCal. We have the Big O Loop at Crestline which was inspired by Morningside but it seems underutilized for this purpose. I would like to use it a whole lot more myself.
1. Sometimes flying into the trees at the upwind end of the field at the end of final is the only answer - due to having been too fucking stupid to have come in as low as possible over the trees at the downwind end of the field.Steve Baran - 2013/07/11 00:03:28 UTC
Sometimes S turns on final are the only answer - due to encountering lift on final or a change in wind direction.
2. Bullshit. We don't see planes in REAL aviation doing S turns on final and there is ZERO excuse for being so high that you're even in a position to BE ABLE to S-turn - let alone NEED TO.
When these two gliders:
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1525/26167489042_9f5e5af537_o.png
1:25
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W-8oVEo8ybA
finish rolling out onto final they're on the fuckin' ground - with the minimum possible portion of runway behind them. And they couldn't care less about any goddam spots in any goddam middles of fields.
BULLSHIT.I had to do a S turn on my last flight...
Yeah Steve, keep making sure you land in middles of fields. Ya just never know when somebody's gonna put a traffic cone in the middle of one and declare a spot landing contest. And is just one of the fundamental laws of hang gliding that you're never gonna be in a situation in which you're wishing that you had considered putting it down somewhere in the first half of the field....pioneering a new LZ at a new site (to make sure I landed in the middle of the field I was headed for).
How badly were you injured and was your glider damaged by the large rocks strewn all over the place?But, I'm flying a U2 and I kept my speed up. However, my landing kinda sucked (dropped the control bar at end of my flare in a very slight cross wind).
Get that landing perfected before you move up. Then you can start learning to perfect it on the topless.Until I get totally wired into the U2 I'll be putting topless dreams on standby.
Idiot.
Sure Tom. How 'bout posting a video of someone doing Figure 8 turns and keeping the runway in front of him.Tom Galvin - 2013/07/11 01:18:59 UTC
Figure 8 turns are a much better choice. You keep runway in front of you.
The way they're taught when they're going for their ratings.NMERider - 2013/07/11 06:16:58 UTC
And don't just mechanically DBF by going through the motions.
Which end of the runway?Have your runway visualized and keep your eyes on end of the runway during your entire pattern.
- The downwind end the people who have their shit together have their eyes on?
- The middle end that all of our asshole instructors and mentors wire people to lock on to?
- The upwind end where people who've kept their eyes on the middle end tend to wind up - give or take fifteen yards?
Seen one, seen 'em all. And it's a pretty good bet that you, by now, have LITERALLY seen 'em all.On Tuesday I landed in gusty, thermic conditions and what turned out to be a river-rock strewn field I have never seen before.
Just one more thing to go wrong. And since Dave Hopkins used one once and had bad results I don't know where YOU think YOU'RE coming off using one.All I could see from the air were the bushes and I had three different runways picked out in advance since I had no idea what the wind gradient would do to my path. It turned out to be a 15 mph shear but my nose was pointed down in a steep descent (utilizing my drag chute)...
Why don't you just take his advice...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=25536
Whoops! Snapped another tip wand :-O
...and come in upright using your body and open harness as a drag chute?NMERider - 2012/03/14 15:17:14 UTC
I refuse to come in with both hands on the downtubes ever again. I have had some very powerful thermals and gusts kick off and lost control of the glider due to hands on the downtubes. I prefer both hands on the control bar all the way until trim and ground effect. I have been lifted right off the deck in the desert and carried over 150 yards.
Astounding that it didn't....and the glider accelerated nicely when I passed the gradient and rounded into ground effect with enough speed to set up a decent flare with enough steps to not stumble on the rocks. Had my drag chute failed...
What about the imaginary spot you'd been targeting? Wouldn't that have cost you all your imaginary points and the imaginary six-pack you were about to win in your imaginary spot landing contest?...I would have set down on the next imaginary runway.
Ya know, Jonathan...
You've got your shit together pretty well on XC landings and reasonably well on landings in general. But when you let total idiots like Dave Hopkins get away with spewing crap that's pretty much the precise opposite of what you're saying then what you're saying - for your target audience - just gets lost in the noise. Your target audience is just hearing a din of conflicting opinions that cancel each other out.
You need to hammer that motherfucker - and you need to hammer the asshole instructors who are sending these spot landing accidents waiting to happen out into the real world. But you probably wouldn't be all that thrilled with the social consequences so just keep on doing what you're doing and hoping for better results.