Have adequate skids or wheels on airframe.
Joe, hang gliding is the simplest form of flight.
Wheels and skids add complexity, drag, weight, and the potential for disaster by snagging something.
They are strictly optional.
I never use them.
Have adequate skids or wheels on airframe.
Rick Masters wrote:Have adequate skids or wheels on airframe.
Joe, hang gliding is the simplest form of flight.
Wheels and skids add complexity, drag, weight, and the potential for disaster by snagging something.
They are strictly optional.
I never use them.
Have adequate skids or wheels or skis or pontoons on airframe. Optional. Controversial. Comments are invited.
Rick Masters wrote:I don't see any reason to mention skids or wheels in a code of conduct.
I don't even see a reason to mention a code of conduct.
Although, maybe points could be reduced on a rating for moral and ethical conduct violations.
If Mark Forbes or Jim Gaar have a u$hPa rating of H3, then I would say give them a new maximum of a H2.
Conduct codes? Address such matters in your local RHG group.
Be very conservative in issuing those ratings.
Special skills should not be dealt with by USHGRS.
It is not necessary under FAR 103.
USHGRS should meet the minimum requirements of FAR 103 and nothing more.
This is why H5 is dropped.
There is always a tendency to make things more complicated than necessary.
Resist this. Distribute the responsibility for special skills across the rating holder's clubs, observers and fellow pilots.
If we keep USHGRS simple, it may not collapse under its own weight.
Otherwise, you risk creating something that will not work.
Rick Masters wrote: Politics has to be left out.
Politics has to be left up to the local clubs and local pilots.
USGHRS must be a ratings system only.
No one in USHGRS can choose to play god, even if they are God.
That's what screwed up USHPA.
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