Woo hoo! I actually pulled off a good landing!
You didn't learn aero. There are less than a dozen people on the planet who understand aero and you definitely aren't one of them.Mike Badley - 2014/06/01 20:42:00 UTC
I guess NOMAN needs the résumé:
Started in 1987 - flew a Harrier 1 for a couple of years, got a Magic IV (race) and flew that for several more. Travelled around learning towing (platform, static, aero)...
No glider is hard to land if it's landed the way it SHOULD be....and many different kinds of buttkicking sites with flat slopes, cliffs, ramps, some with launches at 11,0000 and some with coastal marine ridge soaring air - and everything in between.
Borrowing gliders along the way - Comets, Ducks, Sports, Dreams, Falcons, Moyes GTRs, HP's, the HPAT, etc. (all considered the hot ship of the day, some harder to land than others). Loved my K2 which I had for fifteen years but finally started de-laminating, etc. and retired.
Because I hadn't been doing TOO MUCH flying for a good ten year stint (just a few a year) I decided to drop down to an Eagle and work back up. Hated it. Tried an Aeros Stealth 2 (which is much HARDER to land than the T2) and I didn't care for that, nor the way it flies.
Great! Is that how you learned to hit that area of waist high grass so easily in the Dunlap LZ?Test flew the U2 and big Sport 2 - loved the U2, spot landed it with no stepper on every one of those three tows with almost no wind.
Ask Jonathan how he feels about having to give up his.I think that is probably the RIGHT WING for me if I wanted to be 100% comfortable with every aspect of flying. I might be making that choice this year.
But I have been flying the T2 (second season) and in the air, you just can't beat it. Every time I fly with it I don't regret it a bit - and it would sadden me GREATLY to have to give it up.
During an approach is a really crappy time to be slowing it down.It opens up so much more area to fly and handles like a dream compared to other so-called high performance gliders in the past that I have flown (ever tried to turn a Magic IV fullrace with v.g. on??) It's not hard to set up approaches with, and it can slow down (a bit).
Bullshit.With a lot of speed, it has a tendency to adverse yaw...
"IT" CAN'T *PIO*. PIO is an abbreviation for PILOT Induced Oscillation. The PILOT would be YOU. A glider is INCAPABLE of oscillating ITSELF....and can PIO (that's what I mean by 'screwy').
...besides general cluelessness...The thing that is beating me...
You don't EXPECT a particular groundspeed when landing. Whatever the fuck it is you IGNORE it and fly the goddam glider....is the ground speed. You spend a long time getting used to the 'feel' of a glider and the ground speed expected with finals along with the bar/downtube pressure.
Bullshit. If you can fly it at altitude there's zero reason not to be able to fly it on final.My mind is sort of 'imprinted' with this based on a U2 kind of wing and I have to overcome that because I've never had one that needs to be flown in with that much speed.
You really need to start looking at what GOOD pilots are doing and stay the fuck prone.I need to get myself really pushing my chest through the frame and not settling into a 'trim speed' approach.
Yeah. Everybody and his dog noticed that. So how come you titled the post:I understand all that - just have to get the 'mantra' going on approach. What's happening to me now is just this slowwwwing down (based on what I am eye-balling), and then a late flare because I've been at trim too long.
Reminds me a lot of idiot fucking Lauren Tjaden and:Woo hoo! I actually pulled off a good landing!
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3107
I have a tandem rating!!!
If your gonna belly flop a third of the time ANYWAY how come you don't just:Usually that just means a little belly flop or butt-skid. When it was really off, I got a sideswipe landing because of the tip stall.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=27086
Steve Pearson on landings
Steve Pearson - 2012/03/28 23:26:05 UTC
I can't control the glider in strong air with my hands at shoulder or ear height and I'd rather land on my belly with my hands on the basetube than get turned downwind.
Gawd. I'd hate to see what it was looking like BEFORE it started getting there.It's getting there...
You don't hafta speed it up to stop it. Try doing what Niki does. She burns it down to the surface, levels out, and lets it settle on the wheels when IT wants to and stop when IT wants to....but it's a bit like chewing on the advice "You got to speed it up, to stop it." (say what??) and not let your eyeballs deceive you.
Don't worry. What you're doing is gonna suck on any wing.Maybe the T2 isn't my wing.
Day One, Lesson One on the fuckin' dunes.I'm sure as hell going to work on this aspect of flying for the rest of the summer before I give it over for a U2.
It's total bullshit.It's not that I'm 'over my head' with this wing, it's that I've got some bad habits to fix and I think I can do it - even if you don't. I'll tell you what, though. Your comment (NOMAN) about guys flying wings that are a bit over where 'you' think they should be at is a common thread over the years.
I shake my head whenever I see crap like THIS:Some guys make it look easy on the high performance, and some guys you just shake your head.
http://vimeo.com/4945693
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3786/14082586920_34b189f5c2_o.png
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=25536
Whoops! Snapped another tip wand :-O
NMERider - 2012/03/14 15:17:14 UTC
His one-technique-fits-all attitude espoused on the Oz Report Forum has become tiresome to read. It does not work in the fucked-up world of XC landings and weary pilots.
"Just take one of my clinics and I can teach you how to safely land in a narrow dry riverbed with large rocks strewn all over the place in switchy turbulent air just as perfectly as I did on my Happy Acres putting green in totally dead air."Christopher LeFay - 2012/03/15 05:57:43 UTC
January's canonization of Rooney as the Patron Saint of Landing was maddening. He offered just what people wanted to hear: there is an ultimate, definitive answer to your landing problems, presented with absolute authority. Judgment problems? His answer is to remove judgment from the process - doggedly stripping out critical differences in gliders, loading, pilot, and conditions. This was just what people wanted - to be told a simple answer. In thanks, they deified him, carving his every utterance in Wiki-stone.
Great recipe for getting crippled or killed.
BULL FUCKING SHIT.I've seen plenty of broken downtubes, bad approaches, sketchy flying and pulled a few of these 'hot pilots' out of the bushes - or worse. Hang gliding is an imperfect art...
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hhpa/message/11595
http://groups.yahoo.com/group/hhpa/message/11598Nate Wreyford - 2010/11/09 14:59:39 UTC
Flight experience is totally irrelevant - lol! That is a good one. In a sport that is an art and a science, if you take a mechanical approach and ignore the visceral that comes from frequent hands on, you will get bit. Some here have the bite marks to prove it.
Zack C - 2010/11/10 06:18:31 UTC
One more thing I'll add...I don't think of this sport as 'an art and a science'. Music and paintings are art. Aviation is pure science. I'm not saying feel and intuition aren't important - in fact I believe they are, but ONLY because they compensate for a lack of understanding of the science.
Flying is unintuitive and a reliance on intuition is dangerous. This is one of the main points of Langewiesche's "Stick and Rudder".
Really makes ya wonder how Cessna, airline, bush, carrier pilots pull it off as consistently as they do....that makes it hard to duplicate every aspect of every flight, every time.
Yeah, always a student. It's just fuckin' amazing that the heads of professional pilots like Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney don't explode by a week an a half into their careers. If I'd learned a bit from every flight I took I'd have told my instructor to go fuck himself after my first wheel landing - which was also my first flight.We learn a bit from every flight we take.
No. It should be afraid of you though.I'm not afraid of this wing...
Everybody does. Consider trying to get dialed into reality instead....just wish I would get dialed into the 'groove' for landing it with that picture perfect flare.