Personal Journals about Hang Gliding

Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Tue Sep 06, 2016 11:03 am

Paragliding
September 5, 2016
Image
Grosseto Gianluca Guelfi, the one thousand, five hundred and fifth soaring parachutist to die (according to my incomplete records)
    Unintentionally demonstrating the Universal Paragliding Design Flaw (UPDF) for his colleagues, the highly-experienced soaring parachutist entered a nose-down spiral dive and rode it into the ground.
    “Ho visto Gianluca cadere giù con una velocità sicuramente oltre i 100 chilometri all'ora”, ha raccontato Daniele Iori al Tirreno, presidente del club di volo Asd Volattoni, che era tra il pubblico e che è stato tra i primi a portare soccorso. http://notizie.tiscali.it/cronaca/articoli/parapendio-norma-guelfi/
    "I saw Gianluca falling down with a speed definitely above 100 kilometers per hour," said Daniele Iori at Tirreno, president of the flying club ASD Volattoni, who was in the audience and was among the first to reach the man.

Eight years ago, the chief safety officer of the British Hang gliding and Paragliding Association issued the following warning about the dangerous flying characteristics of paragliders.
    Eight years later, nothing has changed. Get an airframe.

Image

SAFETY NOTICE
Issued by Angus Pinkerton - Chairman of the Flying & Safety Committee 21 November 2008.
All paraglider pilots, Instructors, Coaches and Safety Officers must READ, DIGEST AND TAKE ACTION on the contents of this Notice and keep it for future reference.
If you hold a copy of the BHPA Technical Manual this notice must be inserted into it and retained until it is withdrawn or superseded on instructions from the Chairman FSC.

PARAGLIDERS: 360 DEGREE TURNS AND NOSE-DOWN SPIRAL DIVES

    Following some recently reported incidents prompting further investigation, it has become apparent that it is possible for pilots to unintentionally enter a nose-down spiral dive from a sustained 360 degree turn – and that recovery from this spiral can be difficult. These characteristics tend to be worse on the ‘safer’ low aspect ratio EN A, B, LTF (DHV) 1 and 1 / 2 wings.
    Once in a nose-down spiral dive extremely high rates of descent – 14 to 27 m/s (approximately 30 to 60 mph straight down) may be reached, along with forces of 3g to 4g and airspeeds of up to 100km/h. Clearly any pilot inadvertently entering a nose-down spiral will find all of the above extremely disorientating. Whereas in most situations a low aspect ratio wing (EN A, B, LTF (DHV) 1, 1 / 2 ) will ‘self-recover’ if the pilot lets up on the controls, this is not the case in a nose-down spiral.
    Reaching and activating an Emergency Parachute may also be difficult whilst subject to high ‘g’ forces.

360 turn / Spiral dive mechanism:
    If a 360 degree turn is continued for a revolution or two, without the airspeed and bank angle being controlled, then the pilot will tend to swing out. The situation can then accelerate rapidly. The effective pilot weight increases as centrifugal force increases, which increases the wing loading, which increases the airspeed, which increases the centrifugal force etc..
    And as the pilot swings out, the pitch/roll/yaw axis of the paraglider tilts, with the result that the yaw resulting from holding on inside brake now brings the nose further down, whilst the secondary effect (roll) keeps the glider rotating on the downward vertical corkscrew path.
    Instructors and Coaches should brief students and pilots in their care on the dangers outlined above – especially if teaching 360’s, thermalling and ways of losing height before commencing a landing circuit. Students and pilots should be briefed when 360ing that 30 degrees of bank angle is more than sufficient. The correct technique for normal 360ing is to establish the turn using inside brake and weightshift and then, keeping these constant, to control the turn with outside brake so that a steady bank angle, airspeed and rate of turn is maintained. Initial 360s should be practised one at a time, then two at a time, and so on.

Normal angle of bank for 360 turns.
    Pilots should avoid tight, high speed 360’s. 30 degrees of bank angle is more than enough for normal flight manoeuvres, including thermalling. The correct technique for a 360 turn is to establish the turn using inside brake and weightshift and then, keeping these constant, to control the turn with the outside brake so that a steady bank angle, airspeed and rate of turn is maintained. Particularly when you are learning 360s, whilst maintaining a good lookout, be aware of the horizon in the background and keep your inner wingtip at least 20 degrees above it (20 degrees is the width of two fists held at arms stretch) – the straight ahead view should be similar to that shown in the illustration. Use the controls as necessary to maintain a steady bank angle and airspeed. Your first 360s should be carried out one at a time, before linking them two at a time, and so on.

Emergency Actions: Getting out of a nose-down spiral dive
    The key first step is to slow the glider by applying both brakes. Considerable force may be required on the controls to do this – the brake pressure required may be two, three or four times normal. As the glider slows the nose will come up. Then it is important to keep the glider turning: completing another, wider, circle in the initial direction (by raising the outside brake) is a good way of dissipating the energy. Avoid exiting immediately to straight flight as you will have considerable airspeed and energy, and this will result in a surging climb followed by a dive which must be ‘damped’ out to prevent a possible collapse.
    Nose-down spiral dives are a potentially dangerous manoeuvre and should be treated with a great deal of respect. They are however a valid emergency rapid descent technique for those who are in current practice with their use – but recovery should always be completed at least 300m (1000ft) above ground level. Pilots should seek skilled instruction before attempting this manoeuvre, on a course conducted in accordance with the BHPA SIV Course Information Sheet.
____________________________

Seven years ago, I wrote, in part:

The control recommendations by the BHPA are pathetic and iffy kludges for controlling an inadequately designed aircraft. These kludges would never be tolerated in any other aviation sport.
    This is the sudden short moment of terrible realization that you have stupidly chosen to fly an inherently deficient aircraft that wants to kill you.
    It has become apparent to me that paragliders are much more difficult to fly – and sometimes impossible to fly – in extremis, than are hang gliders. Whereas an average person can often master thermal flying in a hang glider, it seems to take an exceptional, even reckless, individual to survive the wild control divergence of paragliders. These control divergences simply do not exist in hang gliding.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Sun Sep 18, 2016 8:31 am

Parasailing

How to make yourself a vegetable in five seconds.     :o     This is what a head injury looks like.
"Open craniocerebral trauma," said the hospital news release. Brain exposed.
Chance of survival, less than 50-percent. Chance of permanent disability, almost 100-percent.
Towing? No thanks. Parachutes or hang gliders, it doesn't matter.
When you choose to place your fate in the hands of others, this is what can happen.
Note how the left corner of the parachute folded in, causing the turn.
When you neglect to understand the importance of an airframe to constantly maintain the shape of your airfoil, bad things like this can happen to you.
(Thanks to BobK for pointing out the importance of helmets to the USHPA.)
This unfortunate stunt parachutist also hit several bystanders in the crowd. A little girl was injured.
Last edited by Rick Masters on Sun Sep 18, 2016 10:32 am, edited 2 times in total.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Sun Sep 18, 2016 9:33 am

Rick Masters wrote:How to make yourself a vegetable in five seconds.     :o     This is what a head injury looks like.
"Open craniocerebral trauma," said the hospital news release. Brain exposed.
...
(Thanks to BobK for pointing out the importance of helmets to the USHPA.)

USHPA's way of thanking me was with an expulsion.

Your method is much more effective in promoting real safety.    :thumbup:
Join a National Hang Gliding Organization: US Hawks at ushawks.org
View my rating at: US Hang Gliding Rating System
Every human at every point in history has an opportunity to choose courage over cowardice. Look around and you will find that opportunity in your own time.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Bill Cummings » Sun Sep 18, 2016 11:27 am

Rick Masters wrote:Parasailing

How to make yourself a vegetable in five seconds.     :o     This is what a head injury looks like.
"Open craniocerebral trauma," said the hospital news release. Brain exposed.
Chance of survival, less than 50-percent. Chance of permanent disability, almost 100-percent.
Towing? No thanks. Parachutes or hang gliders, it doesn't matter.
When you choose to place your fate in the hands of others, this is what can happen.
Note how the left corner of the parachute folded in, causing the turn.
When you neglect to understand the importance of an airframe to constantly maintain the shape of your airfoil, bad things like this can happen to you.
(Thanks to BobK for pointing out the importance of helmets to the USHPA.)
This unfortunate stunt parachutist also hit several bystanders in the crowd. A little girl was injured.

This learning video will be pulled and lost forever unless someone records it for posterity.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Sun Sep 18, 2016 5:15 pm

This learning video will be pulled and lost forever unless someone records it for posterity.

Download mp4 80.4 MB     https://www.dropbox.com/s/sj0var0y7rkcdq3/ParasailRussia.mp4?dl=0
------------------------
Bill, you are correct that this video may be removed on complaint. This was my experience:

Mythology of the Airflame, August 28, 2011

I have just received this message from YouTube:

        The YouTube Community has flagged one or more of your videos as inappropriate. Once a video is flagged, it is reviewed by the YouTube Team against our Community Guidelines. Upon review, we have determined that the following video(s) contain content in violation of these guidelines, and have been disabled: Jody's Thermal - September 22, 2002."

    This is the high-resolution video I assembled at the request of the organizers of the 2002 U.S. Paragliding Nationals [my old hang gliding friends Mark Axon, Peter Gray and J.C. Brown] showing Jody Lucas' launch accident - first at true speed, then zoomed in black and white to show his line arrangement, then a color zoom to show his actions at takeoff and in flight.
    I held off publishing the high-resolution version for almost nine years, finally deciding a few weeks ago that both current and potential paraglider pilots had a right to see how vulnerable a highly-experienced instructor and competitor could be to a thermal at launch, and to decide for themselves if inland thermal sites were the best place to practice paragliding.
    Also, I was getting tired of hearing the cynical myth that paraglider pilots were spreading around: that it was Jody's fault, that it was his pilot error that caused the accident. (They eat their own.)
    The individual responsible for the complaint to YouTube sent me this venomous note:

        "Wow, just wow, imagine being such a low life piece of s*** that you would use the death of a pilot to try to make your airframe look better!!"

    This is just one of the many pseudo-fascists in the sport who set aside any democratic principles that might interfere with their “fun” in efforts to "protect" novice and potential pilots, and even each other, from the truth about the dangers of paragliding, actively denying them the information needed to think for themselves.

Image
Accompaniment to the video swallowed by YouTube
https://soundcloud.com/rick-masters/the-900


Five hundred soaring parachutists have been killed since that video was pulled.
I hope Google/YouTube and that pathetic, witless punk are proud of themselves.
I kind of look at them as complicit in mass murder.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Tue Oct 18, 2016 3:07 pm

Image
Unpublished comment to U.K. Daiily Mail and Mirror
Ian Meekcoms was the 1,515th person to die on a paraglider that I have records for, dating back to the first paragliding fatalities in 1986. It was hardly a "freak accident." A canopy collapse in normal air turbulence, not the "freak gust" the U.K. media and paraglider operators are so fond of inventing, resulted in lines wrapping around a wing tip, causing a spiral into the ground. This exactly has been the cause of hundreds of deaths. This design flaw makes paragliding a dangerous stunt, best reserved for unmarried daredevils with little aeronautical knowledge.
Rick Masters, British Hang Gliding Team host, Owens Valley, California, 1984

Dad plunged 70ft to his death when paraglider caught by freak gust of wind in Himalayas
http://www.mirror.co.uk/news/uk-news/dad-plunged-70ft-death-paraglider-9068344

British father-of-two dies in freak paragliding accident in India
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-3846784/British-father-two-dies-freak-paragliding-accident-India.html#readerCommentsCommand-message-field

Image
SAFETY NOTICE
Issued by Angus Pinkerton - Chairman of the Flying & Safety Committee 21 November 2008.
All paraglider pilots, Instructors, Coaches and Safety Officers must READ, DIGEST AND TAKE ACTION on the contents of this Notice and keep it for future reference.
If you hold a copy of the BHPA Technical Manual this notice must be inserted into it and retained until it is withdrawn or superseded on instructions from the Chairman FSC.

PARAGLIDERS: 360 DEGREE TURNS AND NOSE-DOWN SPIRAL DIVES

Following some recently reported incidents prompting further investigation, it has become apparent that it is possible for pilots to unintentionally enter a nose-down spiral dive from a sustained 360 degree turn – and that recovery from this spiral can be difficult. These characteristics tend to be worse on the ‘safer’ low aspect ratio EN A, B, LTF (DHV) 1 and 1 / 2 wings.
Once in a nose-down spiral dive extremely high rates of descent – 14 to 27 m/s (approximately 30 to 60 mph straight down) may be reached, along with forces of 3g to 4g and airspeeds of up to 100km/h. Clearly any pilot inadvertently entering a nose-down spiral will find all of the above extremely disorientating. Whereas in most situations a low aspect ratio wing (EN A, B, LTF (DHV) 1, 1 / 2 ) will ‘self-recover’ if the pilot lets up on the controls, this is not the case in a nose-down spiral.
Reaching and activating an Emergency Parachute may also be difficult whilst subject to high ‘g’ forces.

360 turn / Spiral dive mechanism:
If a 360 degree turn is continued for a revolution or two, without the airspeed and bank angle being controlled, then the pilot will tend to swing out. The situation can then accelerate rapidly. The effective pilot weight increases as centrifugal force increases, which increases the wing loading, which increases the airspeed, which increases the centrifugal force etc..
And as the pilot swings out, the pitch/roll/yaw axis of the paraglider tilts, with the result that the yaw resulting from holding on inside brake now brings the nose further down, whilst the secondary effect (roll) keeps the glider rotating on the downward vertical corkscrew path.

Instructors and Coaches should brief students and pilots in their care on the dangers outlined above – especially if teaching 360’s, thermalling and ways of losing height before commencing a landing circuit. Students and pilots should be briefed when 360ing that 30 degrees of bank angle is more than sufficient. The correct technique for normal 360ing is to establish the turn using inside brake and weightshift and then, keeping these constant, to control the turn with outside brake so that a steady bank angle, airspeed and rate of turn is maintained. Initial 360s should be practised one at a time, then two at a time, and so on.

Normal angle of bank for 360 turns.
Pilots should avoid tight, high speed 360’s. 30 degrees of bank angle is more than enough for normal flight manoeuvres, including thermalling. The correct technique for a 360 turn is to establish the turn using inside brake and weightshift and then, keeping these constant, to control the turn with the outside brake so that a steady bank angle, airspeed and rate of turn is maintained. Particularly when you are learning 360s, whilst maintaining a good lookout, be aware of the horizon in the background and keep your inner wingtip at least 20 degrees above it (20 degrees is the width of two fists held at arms stretch) – the straight ahead view should be similar to that shown in the illustration. Use the controls as necessary to maintain a steady bank angle and airspeed. Your first 360s should be carried out one at a time, before linking them two at a time, and so on.

Emergency Actions: Getting out of a nose-down spiral dive
The key first step is to slow the glider by applying both brakes. Considerable force may be required on the controls to do this – the brake pressure required may be two, three or four times normal. As the glider slows the nose will come up. Then it is important to keep the glider turning: completing another, wider, circle in the initial direction (by raising the outside brake) is a good way of dissipating the energy. Avoid exiting immediately to straight flight as you will have considerable airspeed and energy, and this will result in a surging climb followed by a dive which must be ‘damped’ out to prevent a possible collapse.
Nose-down spiral dives are a potentially dangerous manoeuvre and should be treated with a great deal of respect. They are however a valid emergency rapid descent technique for those who are in current practice with their use – but recovery should always be completed at least 300m (1000ft) above ground level. Pilots should seek skilled instruction before attempting this manoeuvre, on a course conducted in accordance with the BHPA SIV Course Information Sheet.
____________________________

The control recommendations by the BHPA are pathetic and iffy kludges for controlling an inadequately designed aircraft. These kludges would never be tolerated in any other aviation sport. Little has changed by 2016.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Sun Nov 06, 2016 8:01 am

INDIA
3 paragliders die in 22 days, state alarmed
Successful hosting of Paragliding World Cup at Bir-Billing area of Kangra district in October last year had brought Himachal Pradesh on the international paragliding arena but now death of three foreign pilots during flying in last 22 days has raised a serious question on the safety of pilots...
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/city/shimla/3-paragliders-die-in-22-days-state-alarmed/articleshow/55271060.cms
----------------
India appears to have no idea whatsoever of the Universal Paraglider Design Flaw (UPDF).
http://ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=2586&p=18746&hilit=UPDF&sid=dbe4e9ad5277fbbf07270a9caefbc2b8&sid=dbe4e9ad5277fbbf07270a9caefbc2b8#p18746

An additional soaring parachutist died in Nepal on November 4.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Sun Nov 06, 2016 7:09 pm

Image

VIDEO: https://vimeo.com/jorgehunt/longrodriguez

This wonderful craftsman, husband and father, Carlos Rodriguez Ruiz, crashed a paraglider last week.
It took him five days to die.

Nikolay Udin
Edgardo Mauricio Camaño Abello
Shailendra Pahadi
Makota Sukoma
and two others from Switzerland and Spain, and likely more, have followed him during this bloody, bloody week in paragliding.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Mon Nov 07, 2016 8:51 am

Insurance trends
Image
On October 30, two German soaring parachutists who had come to Italy to fly from Grappa cleverly flew into each other and fell out of the sky. They were rescued by two Search and Rescue helicopters and flown to hospitals. One German was billed € 4,920 (US $5,428) for his rescue, a rate of € 120 per minute. The authority to bill injured pilots for their rescues comes from Resolution 1411 of 2011, which was passed on complaints from Search and Rescue about excessive numbers of paraglider rescues around Grappa, many involving uninjured soaring parachutists who had landed in the wilderness and did not wish to walk out. The Resolution also applies to hang glider pilots, who have never been a significant problem. Local Italian pilots receive a 20-percent discount.
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Re: Other dangerous sports news

Postby Rick Masters » Sat Nov 19, 2016 4:30 am

November 13, 2016        Universal Paragliding Design Flaw (UPDF)
Image
The one thousand five hundred and twenty seventh paragliding fatality that I know of.
The eighty-eighth paragliding fatality of 2016.
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