“ Nobody who thinks the way I do has ever been killed towing.
But an awful lot of people who think the opposite are no longer around.”
You could easily turn the tables on that one. People who prefer towing have no trouble citing non towing fatalities.
If I decide never ever again to cliff launch then cliff launching would be the safest form of flying for me???
Maybe I’ve misunderstood what you are saying.
Rick, we must agree to disagree.
If I stand ready to tow launch I am in control. I call “ALL OUT” when I’m ready just as when I’m on a cliff edge I call “RELEASE”.
With both disciplines I am committed to some degree. If a wing pops up or there is some other problem just at the point of takeoff I could be in trouble.
However, it’s not hard to argue that the first two or three seconds over flatland is likely to be a bit more survivable then the first two or three seconds when you have a drop of however many hundreds of feet to deal with. Also I always have the option to call STOP I can’t do that on a cliff edge once my feet leave the ground.
With light wind conditions cliff launching might require me to turn quickly to hug the lift band. How many pilots have misjudged that manoeuvre? There are no such issues with towing.
Towing is not a different sport, a very strange statement indeed if I may say so. It’s just a different way to get you high enough to go gliding, a means to an end. If I tow launch and go on a three hour XC the tow launch is incidental.
A different sport grouped with speedflying? Frankly, I’m at a loss to understand your thinking.
I have done lots of cliff launches and lots of tow launches. With the setup, equipment, procedures and crew at my disposal I can say, on balance, the latter is less likely to kill me. I don’t know what tow systems are like in the US but I would guess there are good ones with good people and bad ones that are an accident waiting to happen.