http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22308
Better mouse trap(release)?
Jim Rooney - 2010/12/16 18:47:05 UTC
Oh, I've heard the "everything we do is an experiment" line before.
The trouble is, it's not.
I've seen experimentation with towing gear more than anything else in HG.
I've not seen many go out and try to build their own sails for example. When someone does, they're very quickly "shown the light" by the community. Example... the guy that was building the PVC glider in California somewhere.
But for some reason, towing gear is exempt from this.
The difference is what we do has been done by thousands of people already. It's been tested... a lot.
What we do is free of the experimentation part.
It's still dangerous, but not at the level of building new gear is. Not even close.
That's what people fail to realize.
It's no small difference. It's a huge chasm.
Notice how I'm not saying to not do it.
Go forth and experiment. That's great... that's how we improve things.
I'm just warning you of that chasm.
A few years ago, I started refusing to tow people with home made gear.
I like the idea of improving gear, but the lack of appreciation for the world they were stepping into didn't sit with me.
For example... flying with the new gear in mid day conditions?
Are you kidding me????
Approach it for what it is... completely untested and very experimental gear which will likely fail in new and unforseen ways as it tries it's damndest to kill you... and then we can talk.
Oh, I've heard the "everything we do is an experiment" line before.
Oh, I'll bet if there's a line to be heard,
you've heard it. How fortunate
we muppets are to have
you hearing lines. I remember the dark years before
you arrived. Fuckin' bloodbath.
The trouble is, it's not.
And evaluating them for
us.
I've seen experimentation with towing gear more than anything else in HG.
I guess so...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24534
It's a wrap
Paul Tjaden - 2011/07/30 15:33:54 UTC
Quest Air has been involved in perfecting aerotowing for nearly twenty years.
Quest Air has been involved in perfecting aerotowing for nearly twenty years...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=22660
What can be learned from this "scooter" towing accident?
Mitch Shipley - 2011/01/31 15:22:59 UTC
Enjoy your posts, as always, and find your comments solid, based on hundreds of hours / tows of experience and backed up by a keen intellect/knowledge of the issues when it comes to most things in general and hang gliding AT/Towing in particular. Wanted to go on record in case anyone reading wanted to know one persons comments they should give weight to.
...and surely they're running all their prototypes up to Ridgely to have the benefit of
your keen intellect and expertise on everything worth knowing, punch all the crash data into the database when the experiments fail.
I've not seen many go out and try to build their own sails for example.
- Oh, that sounds so much more cerebral than saying "I've never seen anyone go out and try to build his own sail." - the way a mere mortal might state it.
- Where would somebody GO OUT TO to TRY TO build his own sail?
- So you've seen SOME go out and TRY to "BUILD" their own sails. But never anyone who's actually BUILT one. They just TRY. And then they give up when they start realizing what they're up against. And then they hafta scrap the airframe they were planning on which they were planning on fitting it.
- Perhaps because the gliders are certified to strength and performance standards and don't totally suck the way the bent pin shit you Ridgely douchebags punch out and perpetrate on the public?
When someone does, they're very quickly "shown the light" by the community.
- Keep up the great work "showing the light", community. And when you get a chance post some photos of all the partially built sails you've kept from being finished and installed on fully built airframes so we can all have good laughs.
- We've had a dozen US community member fatalities since the end of this month a year ago - including one at Ridgely, quite likely on your watch. (Not a single experimenter amongst them. Not a single experimenter reported being scratched.)
-- Are you sure those members were qualified enough to be very quickly "showing the light" to anybody else?
-- Why do you think the surviving community members weren't sufficiently quick to "show the light" to the non surviving community members?
Example... the guy that was building the PVC glider in California somewhere.
Yeah, reminds me a lot of the "THE GUY" that strapped the JATO to the roof of his car out in the California desert "SOMEWHERE" and vaporized himself against a cliff face. Got any REAL examples?
But for some reason, towing gear is exempt from this.
- For SOME reason. No fuckin' clue what it is. Just the general insanity of the sport that I, Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney, am here to get under control.
- Shit. Towing's so much more dangerous than free flight, virtually all of it's controlled by professional pilots who all have similar opinions on everything... One would think that towing gear would be THE LAST area to be exempt from experimentation. Why do you think that is exempt?
The difference is what we do has been done by thousands of people already.
Every single one of whom is alive and smelling like a rose. Not one single individual has ever been so much as scratched on or because of Industry Standard gear. Well, maybe a skinned knee or two before the track record had lengthened adequately.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3107
I have a tandem rating!!!
Lauren Tjaden - 2008/03/23 22:20:15 UTC
When Jim got me locked out to the right, I couldn't keep the pitch of the glider with one hand for more than a second (the pressure was a zillion pounds, more or less), but the F'ing release slid around when I tried to hit it. The barrel release wouldn't work because we had too much pressure on it.
Anyhow, the tandem can indeed perform big wingovers, as I demonstrated when I finally got separated from the tug.
No surprises there.
It's been tested... a lot.
Reg: If you want to join the People's Front of Judea, you have to REALLY hate the Romans.
Brian: I do!
Reg: Oh yeah, how much?
Brian: A lot!
Reg: Right, you're in.
All proven systems that work. And yet the "light showing" is about what you'd expect to find a couple thousand feet into an abandoned mine shaft on a moonless midnight on December 21 in the far north.
What we do is free of the experimentation part.
- We already know all the ways it kills people by a thousand flights into the track record.
- Show me one failure of a release mechanism that a halfway intelligent ten year old kid couldn't have easily predicted by looking at the piece o' crap.
- So Paul was LYING when he told us Quest Air has been involved in perfecting aerotowing for nearly twenty years? And the community was letting him get away with it?
It's still dangerous, but not at the level of building new gear is.
- Fuck yeah. Much better to kill somebody every now and then with known defective Industry Standard gear than build new gear which eliminates the defect but multiplies the kill rate tenfold. That's why the Davis Dead-On Straub crowd banned the type of release mechanism that killed Robin Strid (at least for a short while) from the Worlds at Hay. It was the only sane choice possible.
- So how do you explain all the certified glider models that have evolved over the decades with virtually no issues regarding safety? Shouldn't we be seeing tons of crashes and parachutes being thrown during certification flights?
Not even close.
Fuck no. Just ten percent of the kill rate.
That's what people fail to realize.
How?
You've seen experimentation with towing gear more than anything else in HG, the danger level of building new gear is astronomical, for every person you kill on defective gear you kill ten on what Quest Air has been perfecting for nearly twenty years, you're posting the detailed fatality reports on The Davis Show where everybody who meets with Davis's approval can see them.
So if people fail to realize the biggest and most obvious threat to their safety - despite having the advantage of incessant warnings from the most highly respected AT professional in the business - how are they able to succeed in realizing ANY threat involved in their flying and why should they be flying AT ALL?
It's no small difference. It's a huge chasm.
- I can't express anything in terms of percentage 'cause I'm just pulling stuff outta my ass... But trust me... It's a HUGE CHASM.
- Then why isn't the community very quickly "showing" people "the light"? If it can't even recognize a HUGE CHASM like this how do we know they've got their shit together on much less huge chasms? How are people with their heads so far up their asses capable of "showing the light" to anyone in a manner that's a positive influence on his long term survival?
Notice how I'm not saying to not do it.
- Oh good. Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney isn't telling us not to do something. So there's a possibility we'll be able to do it.
- Why not? "The guy" that was building the PVC glider in California "somewhere" was "very quickly" shown the light by the community. What's different here?
Go forth and experiment.
- Should we also multiply once we've gone forth? Do you think that God thinks he's Rooney sometimes? I fuckin' DARE you to say that in a real room with real people who can beat the shit outta you.
- Who specifically? Where?
That's great... that's how we improve things.
Why should
we waste our time, effort, lives to IMPROVE things while
YOU're PERFECTING them?
I'm just warning you of that chasm.
- Are there any other chasms
you should be warning
us about?
- I thought the definition of towing gear that worked in reality was...
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=30971
Zach Marzec
Jim Rooney - 2013/02/12 18:00:27 UTC
Your second statement is why.
I just buried my friend and you want me to have a nice little discussion about pure speculation about his accident so that some dude that's got a pet project wants to push his theories?
Deltaman loves his mouth release.
BFD
I get tired as hell "refuting" all these mouth release and "strong link" arguments. Dig through the forums if you want that. I've been doing it for years but unfortunately the peddlers are religious in their beliefs so they find justification any way they can to "prove" their stuff. This is known as "Confirmation Bias"... seeking data to support your theory... it's back-asswards. Guess what? The shit doesn't work. If it did, we'd be using it everywhere. But it doesn't stand the test of reality.
...that we'd be using it everywhere. How come this so doesn't work at all with respect to huge chasm spotting and awareness? How come we're all clinging to life on a single Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney thread?
A few years ago, I started refusing to tow people with home made gear.
Guess that's why you told
us to go forth and experiment rather than to come hither and experiment.
So a few years ago - let's call it 2007 - you started refusing to tow people with homemade gear. 'Cept, of course, for deranged megalomaniac and convicted paedophile Tad Eareckson whom you continued towing with entirely homemade gear, including Tad-O-Links, through the end of the 2008 season.
But everybody else at Ridgely and all the other tug pilots at all the other AT operations continued towing all that completely untested and very experimental gear which would likely fail in new and "unforseen" ways as it tried its damnedest to kill the test pilots. So you don't really give a flying fuck about the safety of anyone trying to improve things. Either that or you're just trying to kill all efforts to improve gear as effectively as you know how. And you're not even doing that very well 'cause if you were you'd have gotten other tug pilots and AT operations on board with you and tried to get the SOPs made appropriately restrictive. Talk about majorly deranged.
So now after eight years of this carnage where's the carnage? Where's a single scraped knee or glider gone upside down at altitude as a consequence of all that completely untested and very experimental gear which will likely fail in new and unforeseen ways as it tries its damnedest to kill us?
I'll bet the Taliban would like to know how to engineer devices capable of maiming and killing as easily and effectively as hang glider pilots trying to make towing equipment as safe as possible.
I like the idea of improving gear...
Just as long as it's just the IDEA of improving gear.
...but the lack of appreciation for the world they were stepping into didn't sit with me.
So 100.00 percent of the many individuals in sync with
your liking of the idea of improving gear were totally clueless regarding the world they were stepping into.
And the reason that
you started refusing to tow people with homemade gear was that the lack of appreciation for the world
they were stepping into didn't sit with
you. And
you would be totally unable to get any of these scores of people to appreciate the world
they were stepping into. Well, yeah, if
they REALLY appreciated the world
they were stepping into
they probably wouldn't even be thinking about stepping into it. Kind of a Catch-22 thing. Who in his right mind would go up with gear that might kill him even more than a bit over half the time in emergency situations?
So if they wanted to go up still lacking appreciation for the world
they were stepping into they'd hafta step to the side and wait five minutes for the next tug.
Sounds a lot to me like you're a total shit instructor. You seem to be totally unable to get people to appreciate the huge chasm issues of the worlds they're stepping into and you're perfectly willing to blow them off and let them get mangled or killed behind one of your close friends. Isn't the whole point of instruction and the rating system to train pilots to understand risks, make decisions, execute and stay healthy without supervision?
For example... flying with the new gear in mid day conditions?
Are you kidding me????
So why not tow them in morning and evening glass? Then if their experimental gear proves to be within a reasonable range of your...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=14230
pro tow set-up
Jim Rooney - 2009/11/02 18:58:13 UTC
Oh it happens.
I have, all the guys I work with have.
(Our average is 1 in 1,000 tows)
Oh yeah... an other fun fact for ya... ya know when it's far more likely to happen? During a lockout. When we're doing lockout training, the odds go from 1 in 1,000 to over 50/50.
...sterling safety standards - only kills people a bit over half the time in emergency simulations - you could try some bumpier stuff or simulate bumpy stuff at altitude. Like the way you u$hPa guys...
The United States Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association, Inc. - 2014/03/14
Standard Operating Procedure
12. Rating System
02. Pilot Proficiency System
11. Hang Gliding Special Skill Endorsements
-A. Special Skills attainable by Novice
-D. Aerotow
05. The candidate must also demonstrate the ability to properly react to a weak link/tow rope break simulation with a tandem rated pilot, initiated by the tandem pilot at altitude, but at a lower than normal release altitude. Such demonstrations should be made in smooth air.
...train people to safely respond to increases in the safety of the towing operation.
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467
weak links
Jim Rooney - 2007/08/01 13:47:23 UTC
Whatever's going on back there, I can fix it by giving you the rope.
You mean you can fix whatever's going on back there by giving us the rope - as long as it's nothing related to experimental gear.
Approach it for what it is... completely untested...
As bench testing counts for NOTHING. If it did you'd all be doing it already and, in fact, NONE of you do it already.
...and very experimental gear...
If I clamp my Quallaby release lever to the downtube within easy reach rather than...
05-02713
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1639/25711853442_938287954f_o.png
08-03206
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1707/25806738026_c5b53178e3_o.png
09-03212
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1630/25806737416_581e6ff03b_o.png
20-12126
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1493/25532092990_c8f2010dc2_o.png
...velcroing it on does that make it "very experimental gear"?
...which will likely fail in new and unforseen ways as it tries it's damndest to kill you... and then we can talk.
- Meanwhile, go FORTH and attempt to improve things behind some other tug driver who doesn't give a rat's ass about
your safety.
- Yeah, it will LIKELY fail in new and unforeseen ways. Even Davis Dead-On Straub who's been at an around all this plenty long enough to understand what's what and who's who...
05-0527
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1649/25841502075_969f1d656e_o.png
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1621/25841495775_5e7e52244e_o.png
08-0813
...would be totally helpless regarding spotting a deadly issue.
- New and unforeseen ways. It could explode or start a fire. Those would be new and unforeseen. All the old and foreseen ways are limited to working when we don't want it to and increasing the safety of the towing operation at the expense of...
http://4.bp.blogspot.com/-bRrpHNa68iY/UQ6Pv9gRZyI/AAAAAAAAjTg/Hc22bx5122Q/s2048/20943781_BG1.jpg
...inconveniencing us a bit or...
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
...not working when we need it to and thus decreasing the safety of the towing operation.
We still have a Rooney Link...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=14230
pro tow set-up
Jim Rooney - 2009/11/03 06:16:56 UTC
As for being in a situation where you can't or don't want to let go, Ryan's got the right idea. They're called "weak" links for a reason. Overload that puppy and you bet your ass it's going to break.
You can tell me till you're blue in the face about situations where it theoretically won't let go or you can drone on and on about how "weaklinks only protect the glider" (which is BS btw)... and I can tell ya... I could give a crap, cuz just pitch out abruptly and that little piece of string doesn't have a chance in hell. Take your theory and shove it... I'm saving my a$$.
...don't we? You can't teach any of these test pilots to just pitch out abruptly...
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-9Ek9_lFeSII/UZ4KuB0MUSI/AAAAAAAAGyU/eWfhGo4QeqY/s1024/GOPR5278.JPG
http://2.bp.blogspot.com/-Xh_NfnOcUns/UZ4Lm0HvXnI/AAAAAAAAGyk/0PlgrHfc__M/s1024/GOPR5279.JPG
...to more quickly and effectively increase the safety of the towing operation?
A few years ago, I started refusing to tow people with home made gear.
I like the idea of improving gear, but the lack of appreciation for the world they were stepping into didn't sit with me.
For example... flying with the new gear in mid day conditions?
Are you kidding me????
Approach it for what it is... completely untested and very experimental gear which will likely fail in new and unforseen ways as it tries it's damndest to kill you... and then we can talk.
How 'bout scooter tow - in morning and evening glass then carefully nudging the envelope?
http://c1.staticflickr.com/5/4778/39004826790_90f4fd60c9_o.jpg
You use Industry Standard two and one point AT configurations on completely untested and very experimental students who will likely fail in new and unforeseen ways as they try their damnedest to kill themselves. On the early flights they don't even release themselves and are instructed not to - everything critical is controlled by the...
Wills Wing / Blue Sky / Steve Wendt / Ryan Voight Productions - 2007/03
NEVER CUT THE POWER...
Reduce Gradually
Increase Gradually
...power that you're NEVER SUPPOSED TO CUT anyway. Tell me how anything bad could happen with any operator who wasn't a couple miles south of the total dickheads who run these operations. Explain to me why one couldn't easily set up a flight testing program - taking the completely untested and very experimental gear up through a progression in which you're simulating 914 Mach 6 takeoffs in midday conditions.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=31052
Poll on weaklinks
Freedomspyder - 2013/03/04 03:21:55 UTC
I saw a quote of yours that you often give pilots the rope. Is this common? What circumstances does this happen?
Jim Rooney - 2013/03/04 09:25:48 UTC
Really?
I'd suspect what you actually read was that I've got an itchy trigger finger. I don't know that I've passed out that many ropes really. I can probably think of all/most of the ones I've given.
It's a pain in the ass btw. If I drop my rope, I have to go get it... which means I'm not towing again for a while... and who knows where you're going to leave it.
So thankfully it's not too common.
You have to scare me.
You're either trying to kill yourself, or you're trying to kill me.
Either you're way out of whack and threatening to crash or you're pointing me at stuff that will hurt (trees, the ground, etc)
Lockouts generally look pretty similar. For me, they feel similar as well. Remember, you're a big/heavy thing yanking on my tail... I can generally tell when you're getting out of shape.
So you're willing to put up AT rated PILOTS who have so little reliability that you're afraid they're trying to kill themselves or you (guess we can't possibly have BOTH) and cut them loose - confident that they'll have enough competence to appropriately respond to the increase in the safety of the towing operation / power cut and maybe land with 250 of Spectra draped over their basetubes. But you draw the line at any experimental gear regardless of the rating, experience, skill, track record of the pilot. Bullshit.
Pretty fuckin' obvious that you're too fuckin' stupid to either accomplish what you CLAIM you want accomplished or present a sane justification for stifling development of quality tow systems which is what you ACTUALLY want.