Yikes
It's clipped from:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bDOeGbaecgw
which was up sixteen months ago tomorrow.
They who? Nicos Halvatzis and any ants in the vicinity?Diev Hart - 2014/12/04 05:07:51 UTC
Lowest spin I have seen....slight turn...high side and push out....hope they were ok.
He was upright and too slow and crashed.Carole Sherrington - 2014/12/04 13:01:44 UTC
Turning too close to the lift band. IMHO. A bit of turbulence caused a left turn that stuck the right wing into lift. Too low and slow to do anything about it.
Bo Peep is a site close to Bo Peep farm near Brighton UK and doesn't take prisoners. Pilot was OK, glider well bent.
...roll...Karl Allmendinger - 2014/12/04 17:28:14 UTC
I have always assumed that the spreader on the hang loop is to prevent the hang loop from touching the keel and reducing the pilot's...
You ASSUMED that? Are there other possible explanations of which I'm not yet aware?...control authority.
17-11422In this video the spreader is much closer to the carabiner than the keel...
http://c1.staticflickr.com/9/8546/29432805605_c0c2c710bb_o.png
In tons of videos total morons have their spreaders way the fuck down....allowing the hang loop to touch the keel.
I dunno. Could coming in upright...This raises some questions:
Could this interfere with the pilot's control authority?
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=27086
Steve Pearson on landings
...with one's hands at shoulder or ear height where he can't control the glider interfere with the "pilot's" control authority? That never seems to bother anybody. Why should this issue be any different? Either way you're decertifying the glider. Might as well go for both at the most critical period of the flight.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.
On Aeros gliders? Yes.Is the spreader fixed to the hang loop so it cannot be moved?
Yeah, they're total fucking idiots. They have no idea what the spreader's for and how it's supposed to work. They just know they're supposed to have one. Right...This glider seems to be a Discus and drawings in the manual:
http://www.aeros.com.ua/manuals/DiscusV04.12.07.pdf
pages 44 & 45 show the spreader in a low position.
19 - 13501
http://farm4.staticflickr.com/3895/14743990195_8b8c2933c2_o.png
...Chris?
Yeah, make sure it's on the feet. That's absolutely critical.Red Howard - 2014/12/04 20:48:54 UTC
Campers,
Something else may have been happening also, possibly more serious; the low wing was probably dropping into an abrupt wind gradient, causing the low wing to stall and drop further. The high wing, still in smooth air if not actual lift, would not drop. Results as seen; happy to hear the pilot was okay, at least.
Landing closer to the crest of the hill would have been a safer approach, but the pilot would be dealing with stronger ground winds, there. Ideally, you want to make your landing where the pilot is down in the wind gradient, and the wing drops out of the lift, just as the pilot's feet are almost touching.
He was upright and too slow and never pulled in the least bit even after the tip stall onset. The whole fucking effort was focused on stopping on his feet - as usual. Big fucking surprise.That wide-open top-landing area is not as benign as it looks. There is really just a narrow strip of ground (across the top) that is a safe area to land in.
Some careful measurements of the wind speed at various altitudes (2m, 4m, 6m, 8m, and 10 m) and repeated at measured distances back from the crest would produce a "picture" of the wind gradient that many HG pilots there would benefit to see. In all cases, a pilot should have some excess of airspeed, and preferably wings level, when descending into the wind gradient.
Thank you so much for speaking on my behalf, Nico. I do so tire of expressing thoughts for myself.Nic Welbourn - 2014/12/04 22:27:12 UTC
Canberra
It's a good reminder for all of us
Any.Brian Scharp - 2014/12/05 00:12:22 UTC
Yes, with roll control. I doubt it would interfere much...
Nah, if you want a really good excuse for stalling......with the pitch control and be an excuse for prematurely stalling.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=27217
Bad Launch!
...put your hands on the downtubes. Most anybody will let you off the hook.Ryan Voight - 2012/09/25 05:59:51 UTC
You see... the human shoulder limits how far you can pull in. Prone or upright, you can really only get your hands back about even with your shoulders.