by reluctantsparrow » Fri Mar 30, 2018 8:35 am
RS & Frank C.,
I am getting a lot of feedback from PG pilots who WANT to crossover to HG but do not want to fly head first. My engineer friend Peter Jamtgaard, whose company specializes in safety restraint systems and who gave me the harness idea I am currently testing is very serious about learning to HG now that he see's the 'suprone" position demonstrated successfully. Not only that, Peter is building a new home in Chelan Wa. on top of a mountain overlooking Lake Chelan, facing south (full sun exposure), with his backyard on the ridgeline 2,000 feet above the lake and the Manson golf course. Peter stood on my porch and personally begged me to teach him to fly HG in the Suprone position. Peter even wants input on a roof design for his new home so he can walk his glider up one side and launch off the other......totally doable given his location on the ridge. How fun.
An update on Peters forward cantilevered riser design.....Yes, it works, but in it's current configuration is a solid, 1 1/8 inch tube bent to a certain specification married to continues webbing....a bit awkward in ground handling.
Frank....think about this....imagine risers coming down from the hang point as they usually do....in a straight line between the caribiner and just forward of the pilots buttocks....okay....now make that riser tubular webbing....and a large enough "tube" of webbing to slide some rigid material inside the 'tube" of webbing....now, instead of a solid bar bent to certain specifications, (like my current set up).....imagine the ideal shape of that bar chopped into segments, like the phalanges on our fingers.....and lets connect those "segments" (surrounded by tubular webbing) with joints that freely pivot in one direction (the side facing the pilot) but lets make those joints so they lock up at certain degrees in the opposite direction (facing away from the pilot).
What we would have then are flexible risers that drape over the pilots shoulders and do not inhibit the pilot in any way when the glider is picked up....the risers would simply "curl" under towards the pilot....(via the 'joints' that only allow the risers to "curl" in one direction)....
Then, as the pilot begins the take off run....the 'risers' uncurl but the "joints" inside limit how far they are allowed to "uncurl"....just like the phalanges on our fingers....
Hold your fingers up....perfectly straight....the bend your finger....for most of us our fingers are only allowed to curl in one direction only and can not be "bent" backwards.....so, lets just limit the "unfolding" of our fingers just a little bit so when the finger is straightened as much as possible the finger is still held in a predetermined "curve" away from the pilots shoulders..with "P" representing the pilot and the parenthesis mark representing fully loaded risers that can only unfold to predetirmined degree marks
P )
This allows 8 inches between the pilots shoulders and the risers when the pilot is in the upright position ready to flare....
This is the shape I am flying with now....so when I am totally upright and ready to flare from the DTs the front risers are still 8 inches in front of my shoulders....and viola!....I have had three full flare landings In this configuration and perfect no-step landings each time....
the last landing I paid special attention to the distance left between my shoulders and the risers and there was still 1-2 inches of clear airspace between them during a Larry Tudor , "flare like an angel" style flare......now...
imagine if those risers draped over my shoulders were soft and flexible.....with "one way finger joints".. and covered by nice soft webbing..as described above....but when the harness loads up those joints lock up to form the perfect shape for flaring.....
a simple solution indeed.....in fact...
With this solution the only thing that really needs to be invented are the "one way finger joints".
I am calling this the "phalanges" solution....