http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=33501
How we judge our flying risk
Dave Hopkins - 2015/10/15 14:25:26 UTC
I agree with going upright at a decent alti.
Me too, Dave. The sooner you get up on those control tubes the better.
I DON'T think...
We know. Stunningly obviously.
...having our feet out of the harness with hands on the base bar is a good or safe method.
Neither do I. When people get their feet out of their harnesses they become tempted to use them for landing.
Our body swings around too easy and if the base tube hits the ground we are head down and likely to die.
1. If we don't have wheels or skids on our basetube we deserve to die.
2. Whereas if our basetube hits the ground and we're upright we're fuckin' bulletproof. No way in hell anything bad can happen to any part of us - least of all our head.
A likely scenario is that you hit low turbulence losing control,
Right. Get those hands up on the control tubes. Can't lose.
Need to transition because to ground is coming up but need to compromise because we are fighting for control. We have boxed ourselves into a bad spot.
The Jack Show mutual masturbation society - where total fuckin' assholes like you can spew whatever moronic lunatic rot they feel like totally unchallenged.
If we are going to keep our hands on the base bar keep one foot in the harness.
Thanks but no fuckin' way am I gonna have my hands on the base bar. I want optimal maximum control whenever I see the ground close and coming up.
If we need more speed we should have one hand on the upright and one down.
Fuck more speed. We're trying to STOP the glider, aren't we? What kind of total moron would ever want more speed on a landing approach?
Practice this at altitude and it becomes quite comfortable.
Also a great place to practice and become comfortable using your Industry Standard easily reachable and Voight/Rooney instant hands free releases.
It is easy to move the other hand up and move a foot in and out of the harness.
Name something that ISN'T easy at altitude, Dave.
It Keeps our option open.
Why would we want OPTIONS on a LANDING? If we have options we're gonna start doing stupid shit like going back prone with our hands on the basebar, rolling or bellying in headfirst, trying to stop before we get to the old Frisbee in the middle of the LZ.
The safest position to be in when approaching the ground is hands on the uprights...
Control tubes. Let's start using the proper terminology so the young pilots can more easily grasp these concepts.
..feet down.
And head up - as high and safe as possible from the threat of impact with the ground.
Also... With your head up you've got a better chance of seeing invisible dust devils like the one that killed Joe Julik at the beginning of last fall. Probably a good idea to aerotow upright for the same reason.
That way we can use the gliders frame to absorb shock in a hard hit rather then a head chopper.
The way Jesse Fulkersin did Sunday afternoon.
Head down with hands on the base tube has killed several pilots.
None of whom anyone can actually name.
Eliminate that from your flying and fight Accelerated risk factor.
Somebody really needs to chop this asshole's fingers off to reduce his productivity to some comfortable minimum.
Raymond Caux - 2015/10/15 16:32:00 UTC
Göteborg, Sweden
About "downtubes approach", the drawbacks come often from assuming that the hands hold the downtubes at the shoulders' level. Here the speed and control authority is weak...
Non fucking existent.
...anything can happen and happens according to Murphy's Law.
Fuck Murphy's Law. You don't need or use it to predict the averages for outcomes of Russian roulette rounds.
But the downtubes are long and it's also possible to hold the downtubes at the elbows' or hips' level. There the speed and control authority is almost as good as hands on the bar...
Bullshit. We have much better leverage and thus control authority with our hands anywhere on the control tubes and why would anyone in his right mind want SPEED on a LANDING approach?
...without need to transition at a critical moment...
Show me a video of some motherfucker who NEEDS to transition on a landing approach.
...only to slide the hands up, and without the head down.
Yeah, keep that head up as high as possible. That way if anything goes wrong with the landing you've got more time and better options to interrupt its trajectory towards the surface - or one of the large rocks strewn all over the place in your narrow dry riverbed.
Sorry to stay out of the initial thread.
Better late than never, Raymond. And keep staying prepared and optimized for those critical landing moments.