Nate's minor accident at PackSaddle
Accident? I've been looking at reports for decades trying to find examples of hang gliding accidents. Adam Parer - 2009/11/16 and Tim Martin - 2011/06/06 are pretty reasonable fits but I'm having a hard time remembering much else at the moment. Nate wasn't anywhere near the ballpark.
No one likes to post these events, or talk about it for that matter...
C'mon Darth, look at the numbers of posts and hits whenever there's a really spectacular pooch screw. Pretty much everybody LOVES to talk about them.
Of course there are always a FEW people - invariably in key positions - who REALLY don't like lotsa other people talking about them.
I post them up because they need to be read so that pilots don't make the same mistakes.
1. It's ALWAYS good to publicize crash information.
2. But there's very little that people tend to actually learn from them.
Jim Rooney - 2011/06/12
Most common HG injury... spiral fracture of the humerus.
But do we question the wisdom of stopping gliders by whipstalling them at just the right instant two feet off the ground instead of just rolling them in like everybody else in fixed wing aviation does?
3. And what are we supposed to learn from this one? Don't land in rotors?
Emanuel was not even suppose to have a HG in his possession...
Where does it say that in USHGA or FAA regulations?
My opinion is that it was ENTIRELY appropriate for him to have purchased that glider. He was the equivalent of a pretty solid Hang 1.5 and - even if he had never touched a glider before - there's a lot of stuff you can learn safely on your own if you're smart and careful. There's A LOT of stuff you can learn on flat ground, preferably with a little breeze, where the risk factor is essentially zero.
And remember that Otto Lilienthal didn't have a card from anybody in his pocket when he started coming off the hill. And he lasted a lot longer than a lot of people under full supervision in USHGA certified training programs flying HGMA certified gliders.
No, it wasn't a great idea for Lemmy (his name was Lemuel, by the way) to go up on a winch in those conditions. But likewise we can all legally purchase bicycles - no questions asked - and blow through lights into busy intersections with inadequate understandings of control, brakes, and the green-yellow-red coding system.
...and John Stewards' accident, so young, and so sad for his family, that he only had an idea of how to fly a hang glider...
1. Accident?
2. So if he really didn't know how to fly a hang glider - and he DIDN'T - how come he was on a ramp with, in his pocket, a USHGA Hang Two card saying he DID?
Martins accident, to much in a rush to fly & forgot to hook in...
1. Accident?
2. Nobody ever launched unhooked because he was in too much of a rush, forgot to hook in, or was distracted. The ONLY reason ANYONE has EVER launched unhooked is because he didn't CHECK to see if he was hooked in within two seconds of launch.
3. And the reason hardly anyone ever checks to see he's hooked in within two seconds of launch is because his instructors and he choose to operate in flagrant violation of clear USHGA regulations.
4. Martin's instructors are a**holes. They have no business teaching.
5. Martin's an asshole. He has no business flying.
Nate's an asshole too - but my judgment on that really isn't influenced one way or another as a consequence of this incident.
...these events were kept undercover among flying clubs...
Mick Howard - 2010/10/04
My report was intended for hhpa and hgt club members participating in this event and was intended to consider areas for improvements next year. As with any unplanned event such as weak link break there is more to the story, and only those present will understand the context of my report, which was not intended for debate.
Zack C
Mick, I know your message wasn't intended for debate, but I do feel the incident is worth discussing. At least Tad brought it up under the 'Question' topic, for which it is quite relevant. That said...
You said the message was to consider areas for improvement. Wouldn't it be an improvement if we didn't have any weak link breaks next year?
What /was/ the story? Why did the weak link break? Why do we consider this kind of thing acceptable?
I haven't taken sides yet in this debate...I'm just asking questions. But I haven't seen anyone flocking to the defense of the universal Cortland 130 lb Dacron Trolling Line loop.
Mick
As said, my post was intended for our group but I made the mistake of posting it to the groups when I now realize I should have created a distribution list and sent the message to paid members, so in future I will avoid posting such matters to the group as I don't wish to engage in a conversation with someone who has demonstrated a lack of respect for others.
Sorry Mick. People don't deserve respect just for showing up and breathing. It needs to be earned. And people like you don't stand a snowball's chance in hell of ever getting it from me.
...if people keep braking the rules and not doing what they are suppose to do.
If people keep breaking rules why do we NEVER see fines, suspensions, and revocations? The way it works now is that everybody does whatever he feels like and when the rare random punishment comes around it's often a death sentence executed immediately and with no possibility of repeal.
H.A.W.K
?
hang check
air
wings level
klear
?
Not having a safety check list for towing...
What's on it?
If you've got a Wallaby Release lever on your downtube, a couple of Bailey Releases on your shoulders, a fresh loop of 130 pound Greenspot at the top end of your bridle, no wheels on your basetube, and Jim Rooney at the Dragonfly controls of the Dragonfly... Is it OK to go up?
Well, maybe - as long as you've hooked your backup suspension, locked your carabiner, and buckled your chin strap. Oh yeah - and have a hook knife readily accessible.
...and not having hook knifes...
Save the weight. Take up a can of tiger repellent instead. More likely to come in handy - even if you do all your flying on Prince Edward Island.
Not knowing how to fly a hang glider and hanging on for dear life
Shoot the instructor whose name is on the card.
Not doing the Pre-flights inspections
The gliders nowadays are pretty hard to put together dangerously wrong. Not to say don't do good preflights but I don't think we're seeing many significant problems as consequences of oversights in this department.
But... If you do NOTHING ELSE - load test the flying wires before every flight (or at least the first flight of the day if your discipline is as lousy as mine).
Unlike some of the other national forums, we don't ban people for not being liked.
I hope we encourage them and go out of our way to find them.
Zack C - 2010/11/04
Re: [HHPA] Tad Poll
Rich D(iamond):
>
Zack (mr moderator)
its replies like this from TADpole that We should not have to put up with his crapola anymore.
At the meeting or Now on line , i wish to Call for Vote by its HHPA members to Ban Tad .
<
Rich, as I said in the off-group meta-discussion, I'm OK with a vote if someone can quote me what he's said to warrant banning (either a violation of our current rules or a rule you think should exist). No one has. If his last post is so ban-worthy, you shouldn't have any trouble doing this.
Being an 'arrogant asshole' is not enough. We're not going to have rules legislating acceptable personalities.
That model tends to serve me well - let's stay with it.
There may be a reason to keep "wraps" on the information...
Yeah, there's ALWAYS a reason to keep wraps on the information. And it's ALWAYS the same one. And it's NEVER in the interests of the sport.
There are no requirements ... to joining the group, however.
For most people anyway.
The Austin Free Flight Association requires members to report incidents on their board, but in practice this is rarely done.
In hang gliding if the person still has a detectable pulse when he's loaded onto the chopper it's not defined as an incident. Therefore the clubs can often boast of eight to ten months of incident-free recreational flying - good times had by all!
Local Club Forums could also be a great source of information, but they're scattered across the country (and the world).
They also tend to be friendly and incestuous and suffering the ravages of inbreeding.
As an experiment, try to add a link to the US Hawks in your own signature line on hanggliding.org and see what happens.
Don't do that Zack. I need you to keep a moderately low profile so you can stay in there and harass Davis a bit whenever he rears his ugly head.