Bill Cummings wrote:ARP wrote:OK Bill,
If you draw the arc that the pilot follows due to the harness suspension and then do the same for the chest harness it will show where the pilots head will be at any time during a nose in. The further forward the pilot is so the lower he/she would be pulled. When standing upright the pilots head would be closer to the keel.
Tony
What looks like the far downtube is really the hang strap.
What looks like the basetube is really the ARP Restraint Rope.
Imagine the far downtube is hidden behind the nearest downtube.
Tony,
I'm thinking that using wheels along with the ARP,R (R=Restraint Rope) one could also make a nose skid that is hidden under the fabric nose cone (Sacrificial piece) waiting to cause a skidding situation rather than a nose dig in.
Still to figure out is what the "G" load would be for an average whack at let's say -- 30mph (on the high side-). Then plan on the tension strength (breaking strength) of the ARPR for the way it must be routed. I would want the ARPR to break after the control frame but not before.
I want to keep in mind that if I load a ARPR in the middle of the cord that it will break before a straight in line load would.
http://ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=25&t=1146
(Thanks Bob!)
Just looking at the action diagram in the link above I would guess that the ARPR being loaded in the middle, if it is routed to both downtube bottoms, one would have to add 0.6 times to the cords breaking strength.