http://www.kitestrings.org/post9642.html#p9642
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34646
Are you satisfied with flex wing handling qualities?
When WOULDN'T it have been a good time to bring this out? DURING the Bloodbath period?Takeo Eda - 2016/08/23 05:27:17 UTC
Silicon Valley
I guess this is a good time to bring this out.
Read Mission.As many know I did all of my time from Hang-1 through Hang-3 doing surface tow.
- Birrenator.Most of my moments consisted of broken weak links and inadvertent releases...
- Both equally good things.
- Generally worse than almost locking out off tow....but I did have one occasion where I almost locked out on tow.
- Damn. Where are those weak links and inadvertent releases when you really need them.
No pilot hanging under the wing to absorb impact. Pity.The decision about when to release / when not to came from an odd source:
I've been a RC modeller my entire life, and most of my experience with sailplanes are with elastic Hi-Starts. What happens when something goes wrong on a hi-start? Your lovingly built Gentle Lady reduces itself to a pile of sticks.
Bullshit. You're just trying to save a bad situation rather than releasing before there is a problem.Most of the time no amount of control input will save the situation.
That's a total bullshit way to look at the issue. You can be:Therefore in my mind I knew that if on tow I got past a certain angle from "on course" I was going to release.
- past your certain angle from "on course" and totally dependent upon your rope to stay alive and healthy - à la Nuno Fontes (just before his idiot fuckin' driver fixed whatever was going on back there)
- dead fuckin' center in Dr. Trisa Tilletti's Cone of Safety with everything going great and seconds from a fatal tumble - à la Zack Marzec
Anybody who's got any business on a towline knows that there's a whole shitload of factors going into in-flight decisions - airspeed, tension, vertical and lateral alignment, altitude, obstructions, crosswind, turbulence, thermal activity, bridle configuration, driver competence... And the person who resembles that remark is ALWAYS gonna have a good feel for what's going on and idea about what to do about it and a better feel and idea than the asshole on the other end of the string.
And if you're not equipped to execute your decisions while maintaining full available control of your aircraft you're just another dope on a rope and have no business being on it.
Let's say it happened to Nancy. How would anyone outside of the silent circle of eyewitnesses know?I remember making the decision to release, and I also remember reaching for the rope, but I don't remember missing it as the video shows.
I don't know if this has happened to anyone else...
- Good that you found that out in an incident. Saved Mission from having to get the point across to you....but it's clear that speed is of the essence...
- Any comment on the speed with which Mission can zero the tension from their end...
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...in response to a tow emergency?
- How? We've had over 35 years of towing through the pilot to develop safe - read SIMPLE - release systems. If technological advancement over Missions state-of-the-art equipment were possible don't you think the collective intelligence of the sport of hang gliding would've achieved it already?...and there definitely could be some technological progress in this area...
- So what is it that you find unacceptable with?:
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Aside from it not being state-of-the-art I mean.
- What do you mean "STOPPING" the tow tension? Freewheeling the winch doesn't necessarily stop the tow tension enough to keep the guy on the glider alive. We saw the video of Lin Lyons and that was obviously also the case with Nancy Tachibana....(maybe an instructor release option, some cases stopping the tow tension may not be enough?).
- What? Like a...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ifQk5L3Ux7U
...guillotine? Sorry, that doesn't fall under the Mission definition of state-of-the-art.
Good ol' Mitch. You can always count on Mitch to show you things that you didn't notice before - all the shit he's so good at not revealing in his fatality reports.The annotated video was done for me by Mitch Shipley and he showed me some things that I didn't notice before.
I'm using the original posted 2014/10/22 video:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dWWZbbP-33I
Release tow line!
Crap quality, despite 1080 resolution. If digital works like film I'd say wide aperture (lousy depth of field) / slow shutter speed. Amending the comments where they appear in the Shipleyed version.
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- 01 - chronological order
- 00 - seconds
- 18 - frame (24 fps)
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OK, lookin' good. Now stomp your foot to signal to your driver that you're hooked in, have your leg loops, and are good to go.
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Note empty cart in background. Only for the advanced tow pilot who don't need the simplicity and safety of balancing and trimming the glider on his shoulders, running up to launch speed, flying upright with hands on the control tubes at shoulder or ear height for optimal control authority...
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Hook-in check...
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Yep, you were right.
~~~
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Good. Fully airborne. Now make sure you don't prone out and start flying your glider. Stay upright and keep your hands on the control tubes to make it easier to practice your stunt landing.
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11-1207Autorelease goes tight on high nose angle
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Yep, that's when you really want your Birrenator kicking in - when you're pitching up into a near stall / good climb attitude. (Wonder why it's not increasing the safety of the towing operation for ya. You should talk to Peter - he's got an NAA Safety Award so you really can't go wrong.)
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Uh-oh, bridle's getting pretty close to that port wheel. You should pull in, get some roll control authority, relieve some tension, get your glider straightened out a bit.
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15-1407Bridle contacts left wheel
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Oh. You ARE already pulled in as much as possible. Sorry, please carry on with whatever it is you're doing up there.
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OK, time to make the easy reach to your state-of-the-art release lanyard while you fly the glider with the other hand on the other control tube at shoulder height where you can't control the glider with both hands on the control tubes. (Don't worry about the lockout. There's absolutely no control compromise involved in taking a hand off a control tube to abort a lockout with an easily reachable state-of-the-art release.)
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18-1421Decision to first release attempt - 0.5 sec
Decision 4.5 sec after liftoff
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Not working? Guess your driver must've cut back on the tension to the point that there's not enough resistance to blow your state-of-the-art release. (Lightbulb - This is what happened when Nancy pulled her state-of-the-art release prior to turning back towards her designated traffic cone.)
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28-16122nd successful release - 1.6 sec post decision
6.4 sec post liftoff
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(Enough successful releases and you'll eventually get yourself into free flight mode. If first you succeed just keep succeeding until you're actually clear or hit the ground - whichever comes first.)
Well, ya got it, Takeo77. Good job. Time to resume flying the fucking glider...
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Or whatever facsimile of flying you're able to manage in stunt landing configuration.
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Must say... Your state-of-the-art equipment almost looks even more elegant after you've extracted yourself from climb/lockout mode.
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Nice job nailing that traffic cone. Keep up the good work. Some day your life will depend upon your ability to nail a traffic cone with a degree of accuracy comparable to that. Just ask Nancy Tachibana if you don't believe me.
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Full rez close-ups of the easy reach sequence:
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Smoking gun classic.
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