Yeah, it's not like anyone's ever missed anything that's part of THE inspection often enough to justify a one second verification JUST BEFORE *COMMITTING* TO A LAUNCH.Yes, because leg loops check is part of the inspection.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=15239
Lift and Tug - identified my absent leg loop - thank you!
*By which he means ME - not the smartass bastards who infest that dump and do their utmost to destroy any message beyond the scopes of their single digit IQs.Norm Boessler - 2010/01/11 13:24:30 UTC
Armidale, New South Wales
I went for a fly at Mount Borah last Saturday and it turned out to be a PG comp weekend. No probs, I decided to help out with sniffing for thermals in front of the ridge for the pilots as the first thermal was proving hard to hook. Quite a few were bombing out. I decided to switch harnesses to the powered one so I could sit it out in front of the hill till thermals reappeared. Turned out to be a good move as I would have definitely have bombed out myself.
Anyway, I got in the harness and was sure that I had both legs in the loops but the mosquito A10 is a front entry and is difficult to sight what is being stepped into but I was sure that I had them both in. I did my hang check which confirmed (among other things) that the hang loop was the right length for that harness but did not give me any leg loop confirmation. It is very difficult to visually check but I REMEMBERED stepping into both loops so why should there be a problem??
So I started the motor and did final power checks - all normal and ready. This particular takeoff is a little tricky as it combines a powered launch with a sloped hill launch. Not really a good situation as it mixes two paradigms of launch. One which is committed from the first step and one which must have abort planning. I opted to use the entire run space by starting right at the back of the launch area so I could have some abort possibility if needed. The wind was light so I was not expecting an abrupt updraft at the ridge. It was also going to be a gradual power up and not a full power launch - just enough to get good airspeed and clean separation from the hill.
Wings balanced and level, all clear, lift the glider and a quick squat and BAM - only one leg loop pulls on my tackle. This asymmetric nad squishing was IMMEDIATELY detected followed by a mental switch which condemned the launch as I spat the throttle out and put down the A-Frame with the greatest of shock and relief simultaneously!!!
Thank you ORG* for giving me the 'lift and tug' final check immediately before launch.
Cheers, Norm.
OF COURSE IT DOES!!! 'Cause in hang gliding:Yep
- "weak link" and "hook knife" are other terms for the word "release"
- "pressure" means "tension"
- "pitch attitude" means "angle of attack"
- "half" means "twice" (as in "This release shall be operational with zero tow line force up to twice the rated breaking strength of the weak link.)
- "just prior to launch" means whatever the fuck anybody wants it to!!!
Is this a great country or what!
YA DIDN'T ANSWER THE QUESTION. THE QUESTION WAS:takes all of 30 seconds
---
IS THERE SOME REASON THIS (A PREFLIGHT INSPECTION) NEEDS TO BE DONE ON THE RAMP?
---
Shouldn't legendary pilots have their shit together enough to to have walked to the front of the glider, held the nose wires, made a half turn and inspected the stretched out harness lines, hang loop, and carabiner, and turned back around BEFORE GETTING ON THE RAMP.
If not, why stop there? Why not check the sidewires and make sure the leading edge / cross spar junction bolts are secured with locknuts and safety rings?
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1167
The way it outa be
Steve Kinsley - 2005/10/04 14:04:25 UTC
One last attempt.
We have now rounded up all the usual suspects and promised renewed vigilance, nine page checklists, hang checks every six feet, etc. Bob Gillisse redux.
A hang check is part of preflighting your equipment. You do it in the setup area - not on the launch or the ramp. When you get in line you are hooked in and ready to go. No going down for a hang check cum hook-in check.
GREAT! How long does it take for something lethal to happen to glider or crewman on a ramp when a freak surge blasts through? From this neck of the woods I can recall ramp incidents in which a crewman left on a sidewire for a real quick out and return flight and one glider each interrupting his flying career, ending his flying career, and ending his life. And the latter three are/were good friends.Yes, takes all of 30 seconds.
Yeah. Four people like that ended up as Black Bear dung in the George Washington National Forest within a few miles of the Woodstock launch in the space of about a dozen years. Tends to motivate people to be a lot more ready to go when they get on the ramp.Ever been behind someone waiting for the silver platter fairy to deliver the perfect launch cycle?
I'll try again...
Why does a thirty second preflight inspection need to be done ON THE RAMP?
Twenty-five gliders, twenty miles per hour, McConnellsburg north ramp, four man crews. Everybody wastes thirty seconds on preflight on the ramp. Twelve and a half minutes of extra launch team exposure and fifty man-minutes down the tube for the crew.
I think it's the "committing to" issue that you're having trouble understanding.I think we have a problem with semantics.
See, when your legendary pilot finishes dicking around with his preflight he's not "committing" or "committed" to ANYTHING. He can pick up his glider, take it back to the setup area, break it down, and put it back on the car.
When Bob Gillisse takes a step forward on the McConnellsburg ramp he's COMMITTED TO launch - even though about a step and a half later he, along with everyone else and his dog, realizes he's not connected to it.
That's why REAL (as opposed to legendary) pilots like Rob Kells and Steve Kinsley follow the rules instead of coming up with hundreds of idiot excuses not to.
LIFTING a glider up high on a turbulent launch is NOT a good idea.
Yet another tragic day at Packsaddle.
Martin had done his usual hang check at the back of the ramp and, for good measure, when on the ramp did a walk-through to check his leg loops, harness lines, hang strap, and carabiner. The air was pretty rough so he knelt down under the glider and idled away the next ten minutes zeroing his altimeter and talking on the radio to the pilots already aloft about conditions.
Then things settled down and straightened up a bit and he prepared to launch. He picked up the glider and held it down on his shoulders and was about to commit. But at that moment he suddenly remembered the bit of unpleasantness he had experienced at Hearne a year and a half prior and foolishly lifted his wing up an extra eight inches into THE TURBULENCE ZONE.
His glider immediately entered a climbing right turn, inverted, and slammed back into the slope at almost the exact point Danny's glider had only three months before. Five pilots interrupted the Hacky Sack game in which they had been engaged in the parking area and rushed to his aid. CPR was administered but unsuccessful.
OK everybody, LISTEN UP! The Turbulence Factor this afternoon is THREE! Remember to keep those gliders DOWN and ON YOUR SHOULDERS - especially you tall guys. No letting them up into the turbulence zone to check your connections. That's why we do hang checks in the setup area.
And don't EVEN ASK about crew. You know the rules - no crew on the ramp when the Turbulence Factor is over Two. Just too much risk.
Do they have instructors teaching this absolute horse shit or do you guys think it up all by yourselves?Sorry everybody, bad news. The Turbulence Factor has ramped up to Five!!! Everybody over five foot four might as well start pulling battens. We just can't risk getting those wings up that close to the turbulence zone. And you little guys... You know the drill. Keep those gliders down tight on your shoulders.
And save your idiot arguments about the turbulence actually DECREASING the higher you get over the ramp. I've heard it a million times before from comp pilots insisting that it's actually SAFER this way. Get real dudes!
There was only one question mark amongst those three sentences. And the question bloody well wasn't rhetorical. But lemme try it this way...rhetorical questions, not needing an answer.
If you saw Rob Kells or Jeff Nicolay (yeah, we'd need a time machine for either of them) complying with USHGA regulations with respect to the launch sequence in there any possibility that you'd follow suit or would you still be spending all your time coming up with idiot imaginary reasons not to?
Did you:Don't remember. That was many many years ago.
- get any ratings subsequent to 1981/05?
- ever read any of Doug Hildreth's failure to hook in fatality reports?
Hope I'm getting back up to standards now.Your flames are a bit weak today.