That was an excellent description of the accident.
Steve Morris - 2010/03/31
In 2009 there were several serious hang gliding accidents involving pilots on the HG forum (or who had close friends on the forum that reported that these accidents had occurred). In each case there was an immediate outcry from forum members not to discuss these accidents, usually referring to the feelings of the pilots' families as a reason to not do so. In each case it was claimed that the facts would eventually come out and a detailed report would be presented and waiting for this to happen would result in a better informed pilot population and reduce the amount of possibly harmful speculation.
In each of these cases I have never seen a final detailed accident report presented in this forum. So far as I can tell, the accident reporting system that has been assumed to exist here doesn't exist at all, the only reports I've seen are those published in the USHPA magazine. They are so stripped down, devoid of contextual information and important facts that in many cases I have not been able to match the magazine accident report with those mentioned in this forum.
The end result has been that effective accident reporting is no longer taking place in the USHPA magazine or in this forum. Am I the only one who feels this way?
It reminds me of how much I was surprised by the relative difference between upwind speed and downwind speed when I was first learning.
Any other thoughts on how we can do a better job protecting H2 pilots in that vulnerable stage of their training?
Thanks, by the way, for the post Nobody. I encourage everyone to take a look at that report.
bobk - 2011/10/18
Otto Lilienthal died in a glider accident in 1896. Maybe you should mention that as well?
Tad Eareckson - 2011/11/05
Note the Packsaddle interpretation of the "just prior to launch" clause.
TadEareckson wrote:bobk wrote:Thanks, by the way, for the post Nobody. I encourage everyone to take a look at that report.
Do you recall your response when *I* referenced that fatality about three weeks ago?
TadEareckson wrote:Shane Nestle
John Seward
2010/06/26
Being that John was still very new to flying in the prone position, I believe that he was likely not shifting his weight, but simply turning his body in the direction he wanted to turn. Because his altitude was nearly eye level for me, it's difficult to judge what his body was doing in the turn. And because the turn was smooth throughout, it would make sense that he was cross controlling the turn. It was also supported by Dan's observations.
And one "pilot" slamming back into the face of Packsaddle - and possibly some of Eric Aasletten's scattered ashes - and leaving in a body bag. So I hope all those other guys are having enough fun flying to compensate.
Tad, Al had started a topic to discuss his first high flight, and you posted this...
That said, there can be no doubt that Jeff is responsible for more people successfully becoming competent pilots in your area than the rest of them combined.
Your post had nothing to do with Al's first high flight...
...and you didn't provide any reference to the location of the full report of Eric's death.
Compare that to Nobody who simply posted a link to the full report in a new topic.
He didn't rain on Al's parade...
...or make some tortured comparison between Al's fun and Eric's death.
He just posted a link so we could read it for ourselves - which I did.
If you keep your posts short and on topic, then people will actually read them.
But if you want to slice and dice every published word 10 times over, then you're going to find fewer people reading what you write.
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