http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=47096
Aerotow primary releases?
JD Guillemette - 2016/03/23 09:37:33 UTC
Hi Entelin,
Just to clarify what i meant about the weak link getting cut at the hinge, it happens under tow loads and not during the release. The issue is that the ring that the webbing is attached to (anchor point) is directly opposite the hinge. So under full tow loads and everything is pulled into to straight line, the weak link can get pulled into the hinge and get cut. It doesn't happen every tow but it happened enough that at least one release fabricator changed the anchor point of so it's not directly opposite the hinge (as previously pictured) I forget where I bought that release but that was how I bought it. It worked fine for several seasons until I moved on to more advanced gliders and tow technique. One thing I always did after set up is to do a test release to make sure it was adjusted properly and the cable is not bound up.
And yes, with a falcon class glider the tow forces will likely be too high to "pro-tow" (from the chest) comfortably, I don't know I never tried it with a falcon. But once you move on to your next glider you will probably graduate to pro-tow as well and that release will go into your gear bag and not be used much. I just flew a sport 2 pro-tow last weekend ... no problem at 3/4 VG with light bar pressure. but I have a lot of experience towing from the chest.
The debate has been going on for years (as you can tell)... straight pin ... curved pin ... weak links ... release mechanism ... and it's hard to filter through all the noise. Even my opinion has changed over the years. I still fly with curved pin barrel release on my chest with a release on both sides. I used to fly with a single loop of green spot 120lbs, but in competition conditions in rowdy air those would break frequently and now use single loop of 200 lbs ... I also hook in at 225 lbs so i'm pretty heavy. If I was lighter and only flew mild conditions I would consider going back to 120 green spot.
I use only one weak link on my left (secondary) release. Some people don't use a secondary release on the chest and just have weak link on one side and a release on the other, I did this for a while too. However once at the end of calm tow, my bridle wrapped the tow line after release. The conventional wisdom is that the weak link will break if the bridle wraps, but mine (120 green spot) did not ... at least not right away. I thought for a moment to cut it with the hook knife, but instead i speed up, made slack in the tow line, and then pushed out and it popped. Since then I always have release on both sides so i can dump the bridal if i ever wrap again.
I mostly tow in comps so things need to be simple and streamline. if there was a better release that I didn't need my hand to release and was not difficult and sloppy to rig I would consider it. Mouth releases are interesting, but do you get one that releases on the bite or one that releases on the open mouth (spit it out). Each system has pros and cons.
I'm sure at least one person in particular is going to shoot down what I have said and interject their own opinion, but what I do works for me, and is the "norm" for most comp pilots.
I'm not sure where you fly, but I live in Phoenix AZ area and will be at the FL comps in few weeks. If you happen to be in either area look me up.
Hi Entelin...
Bye Entelin.
Just to clarify what i meant about the weak link getting cut at the hinge, it happens under tow loads and not during the release.
During release it gets cut by the notch on the end of the gate. But we shouldn't do anything about any spinnaker shackle issues because a quarter century ago Bobby Fucking-Genius Bailey walked out of a sailing shop with a Wichard spinnaker shackle and drilled it and welded a cable housing stop onto it and...
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2871
speed link
JD Guillemette - 2008/02/07 12:51:57 UTC
For these same reasons, It just bothers me when people try to "improve" upon Bobby Bailey's designs ... simply put, the designs are at the maximum of efficiency and safety. So I'm right back to where I was. I see no problem in the way things are currently done and creating overly complicated mouth actuated releases is just a waste of time.
...it just bothers JD when people try to "improve" upon his "designs".
The issue is that the ring that the webbing is attached to (anchor point)...
The ANCHOR POINT is on the fuckin' glider. And I'm pretty sure you're not gonna be able to come up with anybody referring to an ANCHOR POINT with respect to a tow system prior to Yours Truly. Ditto for "bent pin release".
...is directly opposite the hinge. So under full tow loads and everything is pulled into to straight line...
Yeah... Under full tow loads everything is pulled into to a straight line. Don't like the sound of that AT ALL.
...the weak link can get pulled into the hinge and get cut.
Has anybody ever bench tested that hypothesis? I NEVER had that issue with a spinnaker shackle I installed in MY system. And I never once flew any Quallaby crap.
It doesn't happen every tow but it happened enough that at least one release fabricator...
- Quest.
- Notice you didn't say DESIGNER.
...changed the anchor point...
Get fucked. They drilled the base to misalign the spinnaker shackle connected between the anchor point and bridle end.
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1523/25679752020_89cc46e0e3_o.jpg
That's the single most revolting piece o' crap I've ever seen installed on a hang glider - with the exception, of course, of Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney and his ilk.
...of so it's not directly opposite the hinge...
Yes. They changed the anchor point OF so it's not directly opposite the hinge.
...(as previously pictured)...
I forget where I bought that release but that was how I bought it.
Keep working on buying it, JD. I'm always pulling for ya.
It worked fine for several seasons...
Oh great. Increased the leeeeength of the track record.
...until I moved on to more advanced gliders and tow technique.
Oh good. A more ADVANCED...
Dr. Trisa Tilletti - 2011/11
However, there is no upper tow point when pro-towing, so there is nothing but your body weight to hold down the nose of your glider while launching and towing. In that case, you should hold your weight farther forward than at best glide speed when lying prone in the cart just prior to launch, because your body needs to be farther forward while towing. In fact, vertical lockouts are all too common with pro-towing, because sometimes pilots cannot move far enough forward to keep the nose down. A vertical lockout is very dangerous for both the tug pilot and the hang glider pilot.
Pilots should also realize that the cone of safety is much smaller when pro-towing than when using a normal 3-point aerotow bridle with an upper tow point, and. that lockouts occur much quicker when pro-towing. For these reasons, we discourage pro-towing here at Cloud 9. It is a safety risk that some top comp pilots may wish to take for a miniscule amount of better high speed glide performance, but otherwise is a risk that just isn't worth taking for the vast majority of other pilots who aerotow.
...tow technique. So tell me JD... If this is a more ADVANCED tow technique how come there's no u$hPa PT Special Skill signoff to let tow operators know the pilot is properly qualified? How come? 'Cause it would be tough to describe the "SKILL" involved? 'Cause u$hPa's already stated IN PRINT on more than one occasion that there is no skill involved and it's DANGEROUS?
One thing I always did after set up is to do a test release to make sure it was adjusted properly and the cable is not bound up.
And that it'll function under a good twenty pounds of load. What else could we POSSIBLY need to worry about?
And yes, with a falcon class glider the tow forces will likely be too high to "pro-tow" (from the chest) comfortably...
- Oh. It's the high TOW FORCES that'll make a pro toad uncomfortable going up. So how 'bout THIS:
10-03323
http://farm3.staticflickr.com/2928/14397296584_1d0e5e389b_o.png
guy? He's towing one point off the chest and under enough tow force to be going up like a fuckin' rocket. Does he look UNCOMFORTABLE to you?
- Yes. A Falcon needs more tension to get up at the same climb rate as a same-weight T2C.
-- Does that mean the tug's GIVING IT more tension? Or is it getting the same tension and just climbing slower?
-- If it's climbing at the same rate as the T2C shouldn't it be using a proportionally stronger weak link to deal with the extra drag?
I don't know I never tried it with a falcon.
Put a comma in there. It'll make you easier to understand. (And we need all the help we can get.) Also try holding down the shift key a little more often.
But once you move on to your next glider you will probably graduate to pro-tow as well...
Can I come to the ceremony? Please, please, please, please, please!
...and that release will go into your gear bag and not be used much.
I'll bet Zack Marzec's got one that went into his gear bag and isn't getting used much.
I just flew a sport 2 pro-tow last weekend ... no problem at 3/4 VG with light bar pressure.
Where was the bar?
but I have a lot of experience towing from the chest.
You must be pretty good then. What other ways are you decertifying your glider as your skills progress and you move ever closer to mastery of Mother Nature?
The debate has been going on for years (as you can tell)... straight pin ... curved pin ... weak links ... release mechanism ... and it's hard to filter through all the noise.
- 'Specially if you've got a brain the size of a fuckin' walnut - *JD*.
- The NOISE that assholes such as yourself provide to obscure the actual SUBSTANCE that comes from Tad's Hole in the Ground.
Even my opinion has changed over the years.
- That's good that *EVEN* YOUR *OPINION* has changed over the years. The guys I'm working with get their UNDERSTANDINGS changed in SECONDS.
- So you're saying you're not getting any guidance from the dickheads - Davis Dead-On Straub, Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney, Dr. Trisa Tilletti, u$hPa - running these shows. You're saying that when you start doing or believe you're starting doing something better it's all stuff you've figured out on your own. So what's that say about the culture at large?
I still fly with curved pin barrel release on my chest...
- We generally refer to pulling off the SHOULDERS in AT. We're down a good bit from the top but still in shoulders territory. And that's the dynamic.
- Big fuckin' surprise.
- Guess you got scared off by all the cons of the straight pins.
...with a release on both sides.
- As opposed to both releases on one side.
- Who was the first person to fly with twin barrels? (I got a lot of smartass crap from the Ridgely guys when I started doing it.)
I used to fly with a single loop of green spot 120lbs...
Even safer than 130. Good on ya, mate.
...but in competition conditions in rowdy air those would break frequently...
- Not meeting your expectation of being strong and reliable enough to avoid frequent breaks in turbulence? Are you sure you're tying them properly to break more consistently?
- Not much fun for us non comp weekend recreational pilots EITHER - motherfucker.
...and now use single loop of 200 lbs ...
- Why don't you just hide the knot on 130 so's it will break at 260?
- No...
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467
weak links
Marc Fink - 2007/05/19 12:58:31 UTC
A 400lb load limit for a solo tow is absurd.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=16265
weaklinks
Kinsley Sykes - 2010/03/18 19:42:19 UTC
In the old threads there was a lot of info from a guy named Tad. Tad had a very strong opinion on weak link strength and it was a lot higher than most folks care for. I'd focus carefully on what folks who tow a lot have to say. Or Jim Rooney who is an excellent tug pilot. I tow with the "park provided" weak links. I think they are 130 pound Greenspot.
...shit. Can we find something in print that identifies two hundred as an appropriate comp weak link?
I also hook in at 225 lbs so i'm pretty heavy.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=31052
Poll on weaklinks
Jim Rooney - 2013/03/04 19:31:36 UTC
The law of the land at comps was 130lb greenspot or you don't tow. Seriously. It was announced before the comp that this would be the policy. Some guys went and made their case to the safety committee and were shut down. So yeah, sorry... suck it up.
How many megatons of Ridgely/CHGA SHIT did you motherfuckers dump on me when I was pushing for two hundred pound weak links about a decade ago?
- See that revolting Quest release photo above? We now know what the 200 Davis and many others are now happy with and using to get comps airborne.
If I was lighter and only flew mild conditions I would consider going back to 120 green spot.
- Yeah JD. If I were ten years old and clipped into a baby Falcon at 75 pounds and only flew in sled shit I might consider 120 pound Greenspot too - if that flavor of fishing line actually existed. 'Specially if I were flying bent pin placebo releases I didn't want overloaded.
- So you're:
-- saying AT weak link strength should vary in direct proportion to flying weight. What an astounding concept.
-- still using fishing line as a pitch and lockout protector 'cause you know your "releases" will be totally useless in any emergency situation which requires an abort and are still unable to conceive of any situation in which getting dumped off tow would be anything worse than a harmless inconvenience.
- So how 'bout Zack Marzec?
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=30971
Zach Marzec
Davis Straub - 2013/02/09 20:32:10 UTC
180 lb pilots, 75 pound glider, 38" tow bridle, chest loops 12" apart, pro tow set up.
What kind of fishing line do you think HE should've had on his pro toad bridle when he was slamming into one of the most powerful thermals ever encountered coming out of Quest through the mild conditions that had until that moment been the word for the day?
I use only one weak link on my left (secondary) release.
- Fuck yeah... If you had another two hundred pound weak link on your right shoulder you wouldn't have your instant hands free release come into play until...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=27393
Pro towing: 1 barrel release + weak link or 2 barrel release
Juan Saa - 2012/10/18 01:19:49 UTC
Boca Raton
The normal braking force in pounds for a weak link is around 180, at least that is the regular weak link line used at most aerotow operations. By adding a second weak link to your bridal you are cutting the load on each link by half, meaning that the weak link will not break at the intended 180 pounds but it will need about 360.
If that is what you use and is what your instructor approved then I have no business on interfering, i dont know if you are using the same weak link material but there shoul be only ONE weak link on a tow bridle for it to be effective in breaking before higher loads are put into you and the glider should the glider gets to an attitude or off track so much that the safety fuse of the link is needed to break you free from the tug.
I made the same mistake on putting two weak links thinking that I was adding protection to my setup and I was corrected by two instructors on separate occacions at Quest Air and at the Florida RIdge.
eight hundred pounds. And if you hid the knot à la Dr. Trisa Tilletti for a more consistent breaking strength you'd be up to sixteen hundred. And then the weak link might not break when it was supposed to.
- 'Cause if the bridle wraps after the only one weak link on your left (secondary) release increase the safety of the towing operation during a low level lockout you will no longer NEED a weak link to further increase the safety of the towing operation. You'll just make the easy reach to your primary bent pin release. And if that's overloaded 'cause you're in a lockout with it feeling twice normal/bridle lockout tension you can just pull your backup release on your left shoulder because it hasn't yet been pulled and isn't under any tension at all.
How do things like you manage to breathe without receiving full time instruction?
Some people don't use a secondary release on the chest and just have weak link on one side and a release on the other...
I thought we all played by the same rules or we didn't play.
I did this for a while too.
'Cause there'd be like no fuckin' way you could ever have a bridle wrap and still only be getting 125 pounds of pull from the tug.
However once at the end of calm tow, my bridle wrapped the tow line...
The tow LINE or the tow RING? There's a DIFFERENCE.
...after release.
As opposed to BEFORE release.
Did you ever consider using a bridle...
http://www.flickr.com/photos/aerotowrelease/8313526097/
...too short and thick to be capable of wrapping? Just kidding. I know it just bothers you when people try to "improve" upon Bobby Bailey's "designs" - the way I did when I put barrels on BOTH shoulders.
The conventional wisdom is...
...whatever Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney TELLS everybody it is.
...that the weak link will break if the bridle wraps...
Hard to get much more conventional wisdom than that.
...but mine (120 green spot)...
Keep screwing 130 pound Greenspot up as many ways as possible. Give "greenspun" a shot if you run out of ideas.
...did not ... at least not right away. I thought for a moment to cut it with the hook knife, but instead i speed up, made slack in the tow line, and then pushed out and it popped.
Instant hands free release!
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=21033
barrels release without any tension except weight of rope..
Bart Weghorst - 2011/02/25 19:06:26 UTC
I've had it once where the pin had bent inside the barrel from excessive tow force. My weaklink was still intact. The tug pilot's weaklink broke so I had the rope. I had to use two hands to get the pin out of the barrel.
No stress because I was high.
No stress because you were high.
Since then I always have release on both sides so i can dump the bridal if i ever wrap again.
This why you need to be EXPERIENCED to be able to make brain dead obvious modifications to your tow configuration.
I mostly tow in comps so things need to be simple and streamline.
- And what better way to streamline than to drop letters from the ends of words.
- So you fly with a simple single surface fixed geometry glider, simple knee hanger harness, and no instrument pod, radio, wheels, skids.
...if there was a better release that I didn't need my hand to release and was not difficult and sloppy to rig I would consider it.
Unless it were something that Tad developed before Ridgely got its first glider off the ground at the beginning of the 1999 season. Then FUCK THAT.
Mouth releases are interesting, but do you get one that releases on the bite or one that releases on the open mouth (spit it out). Each system has pros and cons.
So rather than pick one or try both the SMART thing to do is...
07-300
...continue flying with the same cheap easily reachable bent pin crap that killed Steve Elliot and broke John Claytor's neck and use an extra safe weak link.
I'm sure at least one person in particular is going to shoot down what I have said...
Ya think - motherfucker?
...and interject their own opinion...
I don't do OPINIONS. I don't TOLERATE them.
...but what I do works for me...
- Name some dead people who weren't doing what worked for them - until it didn't one lovely summer afternoon.
- I get so sick of hearing these asinine "works for me" statements. They're invariably tells that people know they don't know what the fuck they're talking about and are cruising around on LUCK. I don't do hook-in checks because they "work for me". I've never come close to launching unhooked and thus not one of my thousand or so hook-in checks has ever "WORKED FOR ME". I do hook in checks because I know that is THE strategy for preventing unhooked launches. I use bulletproof releases in order that I have the maximum possible control and thus chance of survival in the unlikely event that everything lines up really wrong when I'm low in the kill zone.
...and is the "norm" for most comp pilots.
Hard to "argue" with that. If there's one thing at which hang gliding really excels it's adhering to...
http://ozreport.com/12.081
Weaklinks - the HGFA rules
Davis Straub - 2008/04/22 14:47:00 UTC
Pilots must use weaklinks provided by the meet organizers and in a manner approved by the meet organizers. All weaklinks will be checked and use of inappropriate weaklinks will require the pilot to go to the end of the launch line to change the weaklink.
Weaklinks will consist of a single loop of Cortland 130 lb. Greenspot braided Dacron Tolling line and should be placed at one end of a shoulder bridle.
..."norms" - regardless of how totally moronic and insane they are.
I'm not sure where you fly, but I live in Phoenix AZ area and will be at the FL comps in few weeks.
Gonna catch the ECC after that?
If you happen to be in either area look me up.
Yeah, you guys can have melding of minds and get your collective IQ up into double digits.
Tell ya sumpin', JD... Everything that you assholes just recently starting to do right now I was doing and advocating one to three decades ahead of you. And the way things will be trending for the coming few years there's gonna be fewer and fewer of you assholes but the same number of ME. So all I gotta do to increase my proportional presence is maintain a pulse and keep moving my fingers a bit. Your mind boggling levels of ignorance and stupidity are NOT SUSTAINABLE.
Notice that:
- this moron has laid a total minefield for Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney just on the weak link issues
- Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney hasn't posted anything in response to anybody subsequent to his:
Oh dear lord... don't do that to him without warning him!
That dude is a serious nutcase.
I'm not kidding in the least.
I'm praying for him to say something and he may be just smart enough to know that and keep his mouth shut.