Broken side wire . . .
How 'bout a stomp test, asshole?Red Howard - 2015/08/26 19:59:05 UTC
Campers,
It's been a while, and nobody was hurt, but one day a friend of mine broke a side wire in flight. The pilot (C.H.) took some time to deploy, but got a full canopy about 100 yards (meters) AGL. I dove after the busted glider, and cheered for that parachute, out loud. The twirling glider came down in scrub oak. When I got there, the pilot was smiling, and asked me "Red, did you come down to rescue me?" "Nah," I said, "I just came to help you carry the glider out of the trees."
So, I took the busted side wire to work, and used a low-power microscope to look at the ends of the broken wire. I wish I had photos, but our microscopes could not record pictures. Working from memory, the 49 steel strands showed some dull ends, meaning these strands were broken (and corroding) for some time. Some strands were bright silvery breaks, meaning they broke only the day before. Some strands had both bright and dull ends, so those strands were partially broken, but had not failed entirely, until everything failed. All seven center strands were broken, long before the wire failed. All of these strands broke just inside the end of the NICO sleeve, and no level of pre-flight inspection would have found them.
Yeah he did. But he ELECTED not to take it because...Knowing the guy who had sold that glider to my friend, just weeks before the wire failed, I believe the side wire had been kinked at the tang, resulting in a sharp bend where the cable exited the NICO. If the kinked cable is then straightened, the visible defect is gone, but the bending damage has doubled. The new owner had no chance, here.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=13864
My new wing
...the risk of his foot hitting the ground and grinding the wire into the rocks was unacceptably high.Red Howard - 2009/10/03 17:07:37 UTC
I don't care what anybody says, do NOT stomp on your wires, as a load test. If your foot hits the ground, then, you will grind your wires into the rocks. Bad plan, man.
Yeah red, let's convict the guy on your say-so and speculation on what happened and how it happened.Faith in the previous owner's care was mis-placed, to say the least.
Why? You get a commission on all replacement wires?Now I recommend getting new side wires, when buying any used glider.
Here ya go...As best I remember things, I have re-created the pattern of broken and partly-broken steel strands, from the failed cable. The drawing is attached below.
I would like to hear from anybody who can inspect any broken cable ends in this manner, with at least a jeweler's loop or better magnification. Pix welcome here, of course.
Asshole.
Good thing he was high enough to get his chute out and lucky enough not to have it eaten by his spinning glider, wasn't it red?
Fuck you. I don't assume wires that from ANY source, including me, that have been under ANYONE's control and care, including mine, are good to go.
I really hope that was a Wills Wing glider that asshole buddy of yours almost killed himself on. 'Cause if it was then the only reason he almost killed himself - and undoubtedly fucked up the airframe a good bit - was because he deliberately ignored the most important and critical procedure in the preflight checks specifications.
And fuck you for not having reported this incident until now and fuck him for not having reported it at all.