EMERGENCY PROCEDURES
A few emergencies can occur in the release phase of aerotowing. These are only true emergencies if you are not prepared, so let's prepare now.
Emergency Release
First we should point out the situations that demand a release by either the hang glider pilot or the tug pilot.
The hang glider pilot must release if:
1. Anything prevents him or her from controlling the glider.
2. The hang glider reaches a position relative to the tug at which it is not responding to corrective controls.
3. The pilot's health condition becomes problematical.
The tug pilot must release if:
1. A problem exists with the tug which makes it riskier to continue towing than to release.
2. The hang glider becomes misaligned to the point that control is hampered.
3. The hang glider doesn't respond to repeated release signals.
4. The tug pilot's health condition becomes problematical.
A few emergencies can occur in the release phase of aerotowing. These are only true emergencies if you are not prepared, so let's prepare now.
- When IS "the release phase of aerotowing"? Is it at a couple thousand feet when you get the signal? At a couple thousand feet there ARE NO emergencies - whether you're prepared or not. True emergencies tend to happen below two hundred feet and sometimes it doesn't matter a whit whether you're prepared or not - your best bet for survival is to never let yourself get into a situation in which an emergency can develop. You do that by using a driver who knows what the fuck he's doing, having streamers along the runway, knowing what a weak link is, and never going up with the kind of shit equipment you bastards describe, illustrate, and endorse in this stupid book.
- The release phase of aerotowing can be any time you're connected to a tug with its engine spinning fast enough to pull you forward and can come upon you so fast you don't even have time to think.
Bill Bryden - 2000/02
Dennis Pagen informed me several years ago about an aerotow lockout that he experienced. One moment he was correcting a bit of alignment with the tug and the next moment he was nearly upside down. He was stunned at the rapidity. I have heard similar stories from two other aerotow pilots.
- Bullshit.
The hang glider pilot must release if:
1. Anything prevents him or her from controlling the glider.
Dennis Pagen - 2005/01
I am personally familiar with such a problem, because it happened to me at a meet in Texas. Soon after lift-off the trike tug and I were hit by the mother of all thermals. Since I was much lighter, I rocketed up well above the tug, while the very experienced tug pilot, Neal Harris, said he was also lifted more than he had ever been in his heavy trike. I pulled in all the way, but could see that I wasn't going to come down unless something changed. I hung on and resisted the tendency to roll to the side with as strong a roll input as I could, given that the bar was at my knees. I didn't want to release, because I was so close to the ground and I knew that the glider would be in a compromised attitude. In addition, there were hangars and trees on the left, which is the way the glider was tending.
Like when you're "pro towing" soon after liftoff when you've hit the mother of all thermals ('Cause you didn't have streamers along the runway, right?), are standing on your tail and going up like a rocket, have pulled in all the way, can't get the nose back down, and have hangars and trees on the left - the way the glider is tending?
2. The hang glider reaches a position relative to the tug at which it is not responding to corrective controls.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3600
Weak link question
Danny Brotto - 2008/11/04 12:49:44
I had the Axis on the cart with the AOA a bit high, launching to the west, with a moderate ninety degree cross from the left. I came out of the cart rolled and yawed to the right with the upwind wing flying and the downwind wing stalled. It was rather dramatic. If I had released or if the weak link had broken, the downwind wing would have further stalled and I would have cartwheeled into terra firma in an unpleasant fashion. I held on tight gaining airspeed until the downwind wing began flying, got in behind the tug, and continued the flight.
Sunny later told be he was about to give me the rope and I thanked him to no end that he didn't.
Like when you're in a moderate ninety degree left cross and slow, rolled and yawed to the right with the upwind wing flying and the downwind wing stalled, and your driver's about to give you the rope?
3. The pilot's health condition becomes problematical.
Oh my God!!! I think I'm having a heart attack!!! I know there's a procedure for dealing with this situation in the excellent book, Towing Aloft, by Dennis Pagen and Bill Bryden. If only I could remember what it was!
The tug pilot must release if:
1. A problem exists with the tug which makes it riskier to continue towing than to release.
Name a situation in which it ISN'T riskier to continue towing than to release - especially at launch when the glider's in bad enough shape that there's a one hundred percent certainty that he'll crash as a consequence of you cutting him loose.
2. The hang glider becomes misaligned to the point that control is hampered.
Whose control?
Yours?
- When ISN'T a tug's control being hampered by having another plane on the back end of its towline?
- "Well the glider has become misaligned to the point that my control is hampered. I've got plenty of margin, I'm not in any immediate danger, and if I cut the glider loose I'll kill him. But that's OK because the excellent book, Towing Aloft, by Dennis Pagen and Bill Bryden, says if my control is being hampered I MUST cut him loose."
The glider's?
Bill Bryden - 1999/06
1999/02/27 - During the tug's roll-out for the second launch attempt, the tug pilot observed the glider clear the runway dust and then begin a left bank with no immediate correction. At that point he noticed that the launch cart was hanging below the glider and immediately released his end of the 240 foot towline. The tug never left the ground and tug pilot watched the glider continue a hard bank to the left achieving an altitude of approximately 25 feet. Impact was on the left wing and then the nose of the glider. Rob was killed immediately from severe neck and head trauma.
Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974
"A bad flyer won't hurt a pin man but a bad pin man can kill a flyer." - Bill Bennett
"The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release." - Richard Johnson
Who the fuck are you to determine from looking in a mirror from 250 away what the glider's control situation is and that you get to override his decision to stay on tow and get back into position?
3. The hang glider doesn't respond to repeated release signals.
Why is this under the "Emergency Release" procedures heading?
- If it's an emergency for the:
-- tug you don't signal him - you dump him
-- glider it's your job to stay in front of him while he deals with it as best he can. If getting off tow were in his best interest he'd have done that already.
- Has anyone in the history of hang glider aerotowing NOT responded to a release signal?
4. The tug pilot's health condition becomes problematical.
Oh my God!!! I think I'm having a heart attack!!! I know there's a procedure for dealing with this situation in the excellent book, Towing Aloft, by Dennis Pagen and Bill Bryden. If only I could remember what it was!