RickMasters wrote:I remember getting pretty excited about ATOL when it first came out, mostly because of the clean air it presented the wing and the constant tension pay-out (for safety), but also because we were plagued by snaggy little bushes in our area and ATOL could do away with the tow line coming in contact with the ground if you did it right. As for looking pretty, well-maintained equipment is the priority, looking good comes in second. Still, at the time I did not yet appreciate the complexity that towing with weight shift presented. Nor did I realize how much luck was in play for a lot of hang glider pilots experimenting with towing, since I was too cautious to try it myself.
I was out at El Mirage on a disappointing, low wind day with my sailcar. Bill Bennett's group was giving tows when Trip Mellinger showed up. They offered him a tow in their new wing. I don't remember what it was but it was years after Trip had made a name for himself flying north from Cerro Gordo with Gene Blythe on Pheonix 6Bs and he mentioned he hadn't flown in a year. Well, this was an obvious recipe for disaster: New wing, unfamiliar harness, and maybe little or no towing experience.
He ran and got off okay, then flew up to maybe 300 feet but he didn't release. The truck saw that he was flying okay and slowed down, and the tow line hung down from Trip's glider in a big arc. Then he did the most unbelievable thing. With the truck still heading west, he executed a 180 and flew away from it, still attached to the tow line. I was expecting the line to snap taut and tumble the glider, but at the last moment, he turned back and came down and landed by the truck, none-too-happy, if I remember correctly.
Maybe he knew what he was doing and maybe he didn't. That was when I determined to never tow. There was just too much stuff going on and I had mountains in my backyard, so what was the point?
Wow!! I'm shocked that someone other than myself knows of, (or remembers), the incident with Trip Mellinger out at El Mirage dry lake. That was not "Bill Bennett's group", that was me and my hang gliding friend Oscar Higgins. We designed and built the tow system so we could have a more dependable starting point for our cross country adventures. While we were towing, some people showed up and were watching us, when Trip asked if he could "give it a try". At the time I thought Trip was a "sky god" and decided he could handle the fairly straight forward instructions with the tow system. Well, you saw what happened! That was my (brand new) Wills Wing 180 Duck and High Energy Sports harness. I was shocked when he turned tail without releasing the tow line, I thought he was going to die, and destroy my new hang diver! You can imagine my relief when, at the last possible moment, he turned into the wind and landed safely.
We all laughed later when someone mentioned that his rapid, (without a word), departure was most likely due to the sudden need for laundry detail, hahaha!
I learned a very good lesson that day: DON'T EVER LET SOMEONE ELSE USE YOUR GLIDER! (even if they appear to be qualified).
Since you were there, maybe we met that day? I believe we were towing hang gliders very early on the towing hang glider time line. Eventually we decided the system was not fulfilling our need to get up and go, and there were safety issues with the multi-ground crew process.
Thanks for the rememories!
Keith
Ps Maybe Trip is lurking and will chime in on what he was thinking/doing during that moment?