A collection of Videos about Hang Gliding

Re: FTHI

Postby miguel » Wed Oct 26, 2011 11:27 am

TadEareckson wrote:Which one? The last or the one before?


Both of them.

Most every body has figured out that you do not care for Mr. Rooney. Why keep belaboring the point? The attacks harken back to grade school. The only thing missing is neener, neener neener. It also detracts from the message.



miguel wrote:However, I will continue to turn and inspect.

TadEareckson wrote:1. But, under no circumstances, lift and tug?



If I fly somewhere where there is a nice laminar breeze, I will.

TadEareckson wrote:2. Will turning and inspecting check you leg loops?


That is all part of turn and inspect. Confirm that:
a. helmet strap is secured (forgot that once and helmet blew off on final so that is checked before launch.)
b. carabiner is locked and all straps are correctly routed through the carabiner
c. legloops are visually checked (forgot one leg once so this is always checked)
d. hang check




TadEareckson wrote:3. If you pick up and trim but have to wait ten or fifteen seconds will you turn and inspect again?

As long as I am on launch, no need to recheck. If I back off of launch, I unhook, chill for a bit, and start completely over.
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Re: FTHI

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Wed Oct 26, 2011 11:33 am

TadEareckson wrote:I'm perfectly willing/happy to be shot down on my statement but I'd appreciate something a little more detailed than a stream of punctuation marks and smilies.

It's been a very long time since I've foot launched but from the fall of 1980 on I lifted and tugged WITHOUT FAIL on all of them and if there was enough wind to float the glider the suspension was tight when I started moving forward. If the air was light or dead I typically held the glider up tight myself but I'm not sure if I always did.

Worked for me but I can see that someone with shoulders which allowed a lot of air between them and the control frame might have issues I wasn't considering when I clicked submit.

Tad, I have no problem with the lift and tug in any conditions where the pilot believes (since you don't like "feels") it is safe to do so. What you don't seem to be understanding is there can be situations where a pilot feels (oops ... believes) that it isn't safe to stand at launch lifting the glider to tighten the hang straps. That should be the pilot's call ... not yours ... and not ours.

Launching anything always involves an element of risk - even under ideal conditions. And less than ideal conditions tend to increase that risk. Fortunately, there are decisions a pilot can make to decrease that risk as well. If a pilot is absolutely (within the practical meaning of that word) sure that they are hooked in, but they feel (oops, believe) they are on the very edge of their ability to handle the wind with no ground crew available, then standing at launch and lifting the glider is NOT a good trade off. The pilot has the right, no, the responsibility to make those tradeoffs.

I know you're going to quote me this regulation again, so I'll do it myself:

With each flight, demonstrates a method of establishing that the pilot is hooked in just prior to launch.

That's fine, and I endorse it within common sense constraints. But the there's nothing in that regulation that says the "method" can't be that the pilot explicitly remembers that they are hooked in, and that they can demonstrate it by saying "I know I am hooked in because I did a hang check and a hook-in check and my hands have been on the down tubes ever since". Now I'm not saying that's the best "method", but at some point we must rely on some degree of memory or pilots shouldn't be flying. I've flown airplanes which are regulated by your often-referenced FAA. The FAA regulations implicitly accept the notion that a pilot can remember what they've done and what they haven't done in preparing for a flight. When you're sitting on the runway with the yoke in one hand and the throttle in the other, you must be remembering that you've checked the fuel for water because you remember that you went through the check list. You don't have to perform that check (and dozens of other checks) AS YOU ARE TAKING OFF. You know that you've performed all of those checks based on your memory so you can keep your hands on the yoke and throttle ... rather than on the carb heat and fuel selector valve!!

Now there's nothing wrong with lift and tug, and it's probably the best method out there ... when the pilot believes that it's safe to do so. But if the pilot believes (for whatever reason) that it's not a safe tradeoff, then we must allow the pilot to make that decision. If that means interpreting "just prior" as 15 seconds or 15 minutes (with a solid memory of nothing having intervened), then that's how it must be interpreted in the context of that launch and in those conditions.

I will make one more comment here. We are human beings. That means we can make mistakes. But it also means that we have judgement. You (and our current "nanny state") tend to lean toward removing our judgement and replacing it with some set of "hard rules". What you'll find is that those "hard rules" can often be very brittle. I've spent most of my professional career trying to get computers to exhibit some of the more flexible characteristics of human thought using techniques known as "Neural Networks". Why? Because we've found that brittle logic (at which computers excel) often fails in the real world. It's simply not robust under all of the conditions that we encounter in the real world. By your own admission ("Minus folk like Zack what physically can't do it ...") you have someone who's not physically capable (I don't know why) of doing a lift and tug. So your brittle little absolute rule is already broken!!

So rather than try to make absolute rules and force everyone to obey them, how about if you use your writing talent to put together a persuasive manual that convinces people of the best practices in hang gliding? You could build an on-line site featuring videos of people not hooking in. I think that would save far more lives than trying to force our organization into forming rules intended to replace good judgement. If you do a good job, then we might even ... make a rule ... requiring people to review the material and possibly even take a test as part of their rating. But our rules should NEVER remove a pilot's ability to exercise their own good judgement when THEIR LIFE is on the line.

I don't have time to respond to the rest of your post, but I have read it ... and you're getting half a warning for language. I suspect you know that the word "bull..." is not acceptable, but you either don't know what you're typing (one form of pathology) or you can't resist typing it anyway (another form of pathology). Either way, this is yet another fair warning, so I'll have no sympathy for your complaining when you end up confined to the "Free Speech Zone".
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Re: FTHI

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Wed Oct 26, 2011 12:03 pm

While I was typing, miguel wrote:That is all part of turn and inspect. Confirm that:
    a. helmet strap is secured (forgot that once and helmet blew off on final so that is checked before launch.)
    b. carabiner is locked and all straps are correctly routed through the carabiner
    c. legloops are visually checked (forgot one leg once so this is always checked)
    d. hang check

That's pretty much what Joe Greblo teaches. He calls them the "4 C's":

    Chinstrap (helmet)
    Connection (carabiner)
    Crotch (legloops)
    Clearance (proper hang distance above base tube)

That's in addition to a hook-in check just prior to launch.
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Re: FTHI

Postby Rick Masters » Wed Oct 26, 2011 4:07 pm

At an Owens Valley Comp (1982?), I saw, from a distance, Jim Lee, in a UP Pod, lift and tug, then launch. But Jim fooled himself and he fooled me. He had been clipped in by going around the outside of his down tube. When he launched, he immediately engaged in a struggle not to enter a spiral dive. I remember saying, "Throw your chute! Throw your chute!" But he made it to the Pitts and crash-landed in a turn that damaged his glider - but he survived.

My good friends Bob Dunn and Dave Butz both launched unhooked. Bob held on to his base tube all the way down from Plowshare. The impact split his skull and he suffered terribly until he died during the night, alone. Dave pulled himself onto his control bar and rode the glider down from the high Santa Barbara launch.

My sincere thanks to Carlos Miralles and Bill Dodson for teaching me the ONLY way.

NOTHING substitutes for a hang check immediately before take off. I know. I'm still here.
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Re: FTHI

Postby TadEareckson » Wed Oct 26, 2011 7:01 pm

Why keep belaboring the point?

Zack C - 2011/08/26

Wow. The irony. The ARROGANCE. And people call TAD arrogant...I can see why you have so much contempt for this guy, Tad.

'Cause every once in a while somebody ELSE sees why I have so much contempt for that guy. And hang gliding makes a tiny bit of progress against stupidity, evil, and corruption.

If I fly somewhere where there is a nice laminar breeze, I will.

1. So you've never actually done it?

2. And you would never in a thousand years consider doing it in conditions lacking a nice laminar breeze?

Rob Kells - 2005/11

Always lift the glider vertically and feel the tug on the leg straps when the harness mains go tight, just before you start your launch run. I always use this test.

3. And you're assuming that Rob either flew only in nice laminar breezes or was insane and extremely lucky getting away with this dangerous procedure in nasty nonlaminar breezes for as long as he did?

a. helmet strap is secured (forgot that once and helmet blew off on final so that is checked before launch.)

1. Meaning it wasn't a full face. I don't have real strong feelings on this but one time I had a rather mild crash on the dunes, kissed the basetube, and got some stitches in the lip I wouldn't have with something in front of my mouth besides aluminum tubing.

2. On what percentage of your flights have you needed a helmet?

b. carabiner is locked...

Does a locked carabiner make you safer?

d. hang check

1. In case your clearance has changed since last time.

2. THAT'S part of turn and inspect?!?!?!

As long as I am on launch, no need to recheck.

Yeah, you're one hundred percent positive that you're hooked in and totally immune to the kind of on-ramp distractions that killed Dick Stark, Tim Schwarzenberg, and Werner Graf and three quarters killed Gil Aldrich so you can ignore the "just prior to launch" requirement, skip the deadly lift and tug, and set that example for everyone else.

So where's the hook-in check?

Summary...

Steve Kinsley - 2005/10/04

One last attempt.

We have now rounded up all the usual suspects and promised renewed vigilance, nine page checklists, hang checks every six feet, etc. Bob Gillisse redux.

A hang check is part of preflighting your equipment. You do it in the setup area - not on the launch or the ramp. When you get in line you are hooked in and ready to go. No going down for a hang check cum hook-in check. A hook-in check is a procedure that every pilot performs on his own.

JBBenson - 2009/01/25

I get what Tad is saying, but it took some translation:

HANG-CHECK is part of the preflight, to verify that all the harness lines etc. are straight.

HOOK-IN-CHECK is to verify connection to the glider five seconds before takeoff.

They are separate actions, neither interchangeable nor meant to replace one another. They are not two ways to do the same thing.

1. You're describing a bunch of preflight stuff, some of which is important, some of which is trivial or worse than useless.

2. There's no confirmation of your hook-in status - or your leg loops - JUST PRIOR TO LAUNCH and thus no distraction insurance.

3. If you maintain discipline your procedures will probably get you through a flying career without incident.

4. If ten or twenty people use these procedures somebody's gonna launch unhooked.

5. A hundred - somebody's gonna get seriously hurt.

6. Three hundred to a thousand - somebody's gonna die.
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Re: FTHI

Postby TadEareckson » Wed Oct 26, 2011 11:37 pm

Tad, I have no problem with the lift and tug in any conditions where the pilot BELIEVES (since you don't like "feels")...

Oh, don't trouble yourself too much with the distinction. In this situation they both suck. A REAL pilot wouldn't BELIEVE or FEEL - he would KNOW.

...it is safe to do so.

And since in the three and a half decades or so that the smart people in this sport have been following this procedure for EVERY foot launch we still have ZERO ACTUAL reports or evidence of it being the least bit dangerous, a REAL pilot will KNOW it's ALWAYS safe to do so.

What you don't seem to be understanding is there can be situations where a pilot feels (oops ... believes) that it isn't safe to stand at launch lifting the glider to tighten the hang straps.

Yeah. But you can't actually cite any.

That should be the PILOT'S call ... not yours ... and not ours.

So what's a "pilot"? Anybody connected to a hang glider suspension strap or dangling from a basetube? Does he hafta meet any standards or exhibit any competencies? If so, who defines the standards and competencies?

A couple of summers ago John Seward - who hadn't been taught to fly - didn't get his glider back under control until he was pointed back at the Packsaddle launch. At that point the proper - and counterintuitive - procedure would've been to stuff the bar, accelerate back towards the slope, and snap it back away a little bit before arrival. But in that situation he FELT/BELIEVED that slowing the glider down and reducing his closing/ground speed was the safest strategy and so made that CALL.

And guess what happened.

Launching anything always involves an element of risk - even under ideal conditions.

OK, then maybe I can count you as being on board with the viewpoint that using a weak link that blows every other tow doubles the risk involved in getting to altitude.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bTa6XL16i0U

Oops. Forgot the landings. You OK with saying that it quadruples it?

And less than ideal conditions tend to increase that risk. Fortunately, there are decisions a pilot can make to decrease that risk as well. If a pilot is absolutely (within the practical meaning of that word) sure that they are hooked in...

Like the way everybody who's ever launched unhooked has been? Yes, do continue.

...but they feel (oops, BELIEVE) they are on the very edge of their ability to handle the wind with no ground crew available, then standing at launch and lifting the glider is NOT a good trade off.

1. Because, with no supporting evidence, that's what YOU *BELIEVE*. And NOTHING will EVER change that belief.

Paul Hurless - 2011/10/16

Having your hang strap taut will help you avoid that kind of problem. When it's loose you don't have that direct connection to the glider, which limits the control you'll have over it.

Brandon Russell - 2011/10/16

Come to think of it, I usually make a conscious effort to pick the glider up high enough to tighten my hang strap. I didn't do that here.

2. While meanwhile, back in the REAL world, it seems the PRECISE OPPOSITE is true.

3. I've got news for ya. If he's in marginal wind conditions HE won't be lifting the glider. He'll either be letting it do what it wants to or fighting to hold it DOWN.

The pilot has the right, no, the responsibility to make those tradeoffs.

Definitely. He should always go with HIS beliefs and HIS feelings and ASSUME that something's a TRADEOFF - even if it's actually a win/win.

I know you're going to quote me this regulation again, so I'll do it myself:

>
With each flight, demonstrates a method of establishing that the pilot is hooked in just prior to launch.
<

That's fine, and I endorse it within common sense constraints.

So when you were on the USHGA Board of Directors how come you didn't move to put common sense restraints on the regulation THEN? Think of all the lives you coulda saved.

OK, let's modify it...

With each flight, demonstrates a method of establishing that the pilot is hooked in just prior to launch within what the individual determines are common sense constraints based upon his beliefs, feelings, and/or monotheistic religious affiliation.

(Does "common sense" include determining that an actual problem exists before you start dismantling a solid safety system to solve it?)

But the there's nothing in that regulation that says the "method" can't be that the pilot explicitly remembers that they are hooked in...

George Whitehill - 1981/05

The point I'm trying to make is that every pilot should make a second check to be very certain of this integral part of every flight. In many flying situations a hang check is performed and then is followed by a time interval prior to actual launch. In this time interval the pilot may unconsciously unhook to adjust or check something and then forget to hook in again. This has happened many times!

If, just before committing to a launch, a second check is done every time and this is made a habit, this tragic mistake could be eliminated. Habit is the key word here. This practice must be subconscious on the part of the pilot. As we know, there are many things on the pilot's mind before launch. Especially in a competition or if conditions are radical the flyer may be thinking about so many other things that something as simple as remembering to hook in is forgotten. Relying on memory won't work as well as a deeply ingrained subconscious habit.

In the new USHGA rating system, for each flight of each task "the pilot must demonstrate a method of establishing that he/she is hooked in, just prior to launch." The purpose here is obvious.

But they didn't SAY in the regulation that you couldn't just rely on your infallible and distraction proof memory and go fifteen minutes from an ACTUAL check - so let's really sock it the ol' nanny state and royally gut this thing.

...and that they can demonstrate it by saying "I know I am hooked in because I did a hang check and a hook-in check and my hands have been on the down tubes ever since".

Yeah, sure.

With each flight, demonstrates a method of establishing that the pilot is hooked in just prior to launch or distinctly remembers doing a hang and hook-in check and has kept his hands on the downtubes ever since.

Now I'm not saying that's the best "method", but at some point we must rely on some degree of MEMORY or pilots shouldn't be flying. I've flown airplanes which are regulated by your often-referenced FAA. The FAA regulations implicitly accept the notion that a pilot can REMEMBER what they've done and what they haven't done in preparing for a flight. When you're sitting on the runway with the yoke in one hand and the throttle in the other, you must be REMEMBERING that you've checked the fuel for water because you remember that you went through the check list. You don't have to perform that check (and dozens of other checks) AS YOU ARE TAKING OFF. You know that you've performed all of those checks based on your memory so you can keep your hands on the yoke and throttle ... rather than on the carb heat and fuel selector valve!!

bobk - 2011/10/25

If you can convince him that he should be teaching "lift and tug" instead of "turn and check", then you'll get my vote of support.

1. Kinda like when you're on the ramp you don't need to and shouldn't be repeatedly turning and checking to see that the carabiner is fully, rather than partially, engaging the hang strap - 'cause you took care of that as part of your PREFLIGHT procedure BEHIND the ramp?

2. Can you think of any circumstances between the tie-down area where the pilot performed his preflight checks and the downwind end of the runway which would cause him to get out of his plane and add water to his fuel tanks?

3. Can you think of any circumstances on a launch ramp that would give the pilot cause to unhook from his glider?

4. In the REAL world, which is faster and easier to perform - a lift and tug or check of the fuel for water?

5. Would you rather be in the cockpit of a Cessna with a sputtering engine or hanging from the basetube of a hang glider?

Now there's nothing wrong with lift and tug, and it's probably the best method out there ... when the pilot believes that it's safe to do so. But if the pilot believes (for whatever reason) that it's not a safe tradeoff, then we must allow the pilot to make that decision.

Yep, let's make sure we keep reality subservient to the Pilot's Sacred Beliefs and Feelings.

1. A loop of 130 pound Greenspot is the ONLY acceptable weak link / lockout preventer for ANY glider - regardless of its flying weight - and puts it at 1.0 Gs, the ideal rating.

2. A weak link blows at much lower tension if it's shock loaded than it does if the tension is gradually increased.

3. If you're having trouble penetrating away from the ridge turn somewhat parallel to it to present a reduced profile.

4. Backup suspension is installed on gliders to protect against primary suspension failure.

5. When you're surface towing in a crosswind crab the glider to stay straight behind the truck.

6. If you anchor your release at the carabiner you need to turn it around backwards so the gate won't be pulled open.

7. You are not hooked in until after the hang check.

If that means interpreting "just prior" as 15 seconds or 15 minutes (with a solid memory of nothing having intervened)...

bobk - 2011/10/26

We are human beings. That means we can make mistakes.

Yeah, great.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ls2QiDtSO7c

Let's encourage people to rely on their solid memories.

...then that's how it must be interpreted in the context of that launch and in those conditions.

Yeah. Fifteen seconds, fifteen minutes... Whatever the pilot FEELS and BELIEVES. And whatever the Pilot FEELS and BELIEVES are dangerous, marginal conditions. "If I lift the glider just prior to launch I'll get an extra two seconds of ultraviolet radiation in my face and I might get skin cancer. So I'm gonna skip the hook-in check 'cause I JUST DID a hang check."

I will make one more comment here. We are human beings. That means we can make mistakes.

Which is why we need strict rules to follow when we go into deadly environments with which we're not very well evolved to cope.

But it also means that we have judgement. You (and our current "nanny state") tend to lean toward removing our judgement and replacing it with some set of "hard rules".

You mean like in REAL aviation?

What you'll find is that those "hard rules" can often be very brittle. I've spent most of my professional career trying to get computers to exhibit some of the more flexible characteristics of human thought using techniques known as "Neural Networks". Why? Because we've found that brittle logic (at which computers excel) often fails in the real world.

Not in this of the real world. Not hooked in - zero. Hooked in - one.

It's simply not robust under all of the conditions that we encounter in the real world. By your own admission ("Minus folk like Zack what physically can't do it ...") you have someone who's not physically capable (I don't know why) of doing a lift and tug.

Geometry of person/glider combo and straps adjustment. If hang gliding wanted to it could modify the equipment such that we wouldn't have to allow for exceptions. And I guarantee you that if you Zack and I did a body swap for an hour or two I'd find his needle and dental floss have a fix before the return flip.

So your brittle little absolute rule is already broken!!

1. Again - It was NEVER my brittle little absolute rule. It was NEVER my brittle little absolute rule as recently as:

Tad Eareckson - 2011/10/24

Some people are physically incapable of lifting and tugging in light or nonexistent air. But EVERYBODY can do SOMETHING to check connection status within five or ten seconds of launch.

See if you can get that to sink in this time.

2. Not for the people who can do it - whom I'm pretty sure represent the overwhelming majority.

3. And then we make allowances and compromises. Zack says to a nearby pilot or wuffo, "Unhooked", gets a response of "Hooked", and clears and goes.

So rather than try to make absolute rules and force everyone to obey them...

1. Like happens in the REST of the Pilot Proficiency System - particularly the spot landings...

2. Whenever we go flying there WILL BE absolute rules - which USHGA doesn't make - which everyone WILL BE forced to obey. And lots of these rules have penalties which make Texas look like Amsterdam.

...how about if you use your writing talent to put together a persuasive manual that convinces people of the best practices in hang gliding?

Bill Cummings - 2011/10/26

Very fine effort Tad.

1. So you've read my Aerotowing Guidelines? Just kidding.

Ridgerodent - 2011/08/31

Zack figured it out. Well done Zack! Enjoy your vacation.

Kinsley Sykes - 2011/08/31

Well actually he didn't. But if you don't want to listen to the folks that actually know what they are talking about, go ahead.

Feel free to go the the tow park that Tad runs...

2. Your typical hang glider pilot is a TOTAL MORON with a ten second attention span in whom no amount of explanation, reasoning, logic, or common sense will make the slightest dent. He will do WHATEVER his first day instructor tells him to or latch on to what all the EXPERTS are doing and there is is NOTHING you can do to change him afterwards.

If Steve Wendt tells him to do a hang check in the setup area to be positive he'll be hooked in a half hour later that's what he will do for the rest of his hang gliding career (which, if he's Bill Priday, may be extremely short).

If Pat Denevan tells him to lift and tug the last instant before committing to launch he will go through his entire career doing just that - blissfully ignorant of the danger to which he's exposing himself launching alone in marginal conditions.

You could build an on-line site featuring videos of people not hooking in.

And that would impress them so much more than going down to the Tennessee Tree Toppers Team Challenge and watching the first glider to launch reappear in front of the ramp without its pilot. Yeah, you can bet people started taking the "just prior" thing seriously after that one.

I think that would save far more lives than trying to force our organization into forming rules intended to replace good judgement.

1. I'm not trying to REPLACE good judgment. I'm trying to instill it. Committing to launch based upon your MEMORY of a procedure when the cost of final moment verification is something from a tiny bit above to well below zero and the penalty for lack of verification can be near certain death is ALWAYS poor judgement.

2. I can't FORCE "our" organization to do ANYTHING 'cause right now and for the foreseeable future "our" organization is you.

If you do a good job, then we might even ... make a rule ... requiring people to review the material and possibly even take a test as part of their rating. But our rules should NEVER remove a pilot's ability to exercise their own good judgement when THEIR LIFE is on the line.

So we're gonna pull people in with USHGA ratings and tell them, "Ya know that 'just prior to launch' requirement that everybody ignores all the time and violates the crap out of? Just keep ignoring it all the time and violating the crap out of it 'cause Bob thinks it might be dangerous. Exercise your own good judgment which, because you have a USHGA rating, we are confident is SUPERB. (And brush up on your spot landings 'cause we're gonna cut the allowances in half so you'll be able to safely park it in a tennis court if you push your luck in an XC competition.)"

I don't have time to respond to the rest of your post, but I have read it ... and you're getting half a warning for language.

Great! Next time do I get a quarter warning? And after that...

I suspect you know that the word "bull..." is not acceptable, but you either don't know what you're saying (one form of pathology) or you can't resist saying it anyway (another form of pathology).

bobk - 2011/10/26

You (and our current "nanny state") tend to lean toward removing our judgement and replacing it with some set of "hard rules".

OR... I just don't like being told what I can and can't say and being diagnosed as pathological by my nanny.

Either way, this is yet another fair warning, so there will be no sympathy for your complaining when you end up confined to the "Free Speech Zone".

You got a consensus on that, right? Everybody on US Hawks is in full agreement with you?
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Re: FTHI

Postby Nobody » Thu Oct 27, 2011 1:51 am

With regard to the "lift and tug" - the example looks great, but that's a nearly no-wind situation. It's much harder to do that when you're in a situation near the margin of your ability to control the glider on launch.


Same dude.Notice the hang strap.

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=doe_sNB1wbg
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Re: FTHI

Postby miguel » Thu Oct 27, 2011 10:06 am

TadEareckson wrote:
Why keep belaboring the point?

Zack C - 2011/08/26

Wow. The irony. The ARROGANCE. And people call TAD arrogant...I can see why you have so much contempt for this guy, Tad.

'Cause every once in a while somebody ELSE sees why I have so much contempt for that guy. And hang gliding makes a tiny bit of progress against stupidity, evil, and corruption.


Nope, while you think you are fighting a valiant fight, the audience sees pig wrestling in the mud.
Image
“Never wrestle with a pig—you get dirty and the pig likes it”

If I fly somewhere where there is a nice laminar breeze, I will.

TadEareckson wrote:1. So you've never actually done it?


Yes, I have. I used to have a short control frame glider that I launched with a tight strap. It was done every flight in addition to the normal routine.

TadEareckson wrote:2. And you would never in a thousand years consider doing it in conditions lacking a nice laminar breeze?


Nope, I have a large control frame glider.

Rob Kells - 2005/11

Always lift the glider vertically and feel the tug on the leg straps when the harness mains go tight, just before you start your launch run. I always use this test.

TadEareckson wrote:3. And you're assuming that Rob either flew only in nice laminar breezes or was insane and extremely lucky getting away with this dangerous procedure in nasty nonlaminar breezes for as long as he did?


Rob does what works for him. No problem with that.

a. helmet strap is secured (forgot that once and helmet blew off on final so that is checked before launch.)

TadEareckson wrote:1. Meaning it wasn't a full face. I don't have real strong feelings on this but one time I had a rather mild crash on the dunes, kissed the basetube, and got some stitches in the lip I wouldn't have with something in front of my mouth besides aluminum tubing.

2. On what percentage of your flights have you needed a helmet?


1. Wrong. It was a full face helmet with a gimpy chin strap clasp. I got hit with a very strong thermal on final. It stopped the glider cold and blew the helmet off my head. I flew out of it and had a good landing.

2. I flew one other flight of my career without a helmet. It felt good until it was time to land. Then it got scary as I was thinking about the many ways I could bash my head open.

b. carabiner is locked...

TadEareckson wrote:Does a locked carabiner make you safer?


Depends if I am flying over water. I tend to leave it open for water flights.

d. hang check

TadEareckson wrote:1. In case your clearance has changed since last time.


It makes me feel warm and fuzzy inside, so I do it.

TadEareckson wrote:2. THAT'S part of turn and inspect?!?!?!


It is part of the launch protocol around here. The person escorting the glider to launch asks if the pilot wants a hang check.

As long as I am on launch, no need to recheck.

TadEareckson wrote:Yeah, you're one hundred percent positive that you're hooked in and totally immune to the kind of on-ramp distractions that killed Dick Stark, Tim Schwarzenberg, and Werner Graf and three quarters killed Gil Aldrich so you can ignore the "just prior to launch" requirement, skip the deadly lift and tug, and set that example for everyone else.


The check occurs just prior to actual launch. You can connect the dots and carefully color inside the lines.

TadEareckson wrote:So where's the hook-in check?


See above

TadEareckson wrote:Summary...

Steve Kinsley - 2005/10/04

One last attempt.

We have now rounded up all the usual suspects and promised renewed vigilance, nine page checklists, hang checks every six feet, etc. Bob Gillisse redux.

A hang check is part of preflighting your equipment. You do it in the setup area - not on the launch or the ramp. When you get in line you are hooked in and ready to go. No going down for a hang check cum hook-in check. A hook-in check is a procedure that every pilot performs on his own.

JBBenson - 2009/01/25

I get what Tad is saying, but it took some translation:

HANG-CHECK is part of the preflight, to verify that all the harness lines etc. are straight.

HOOK-IN-CHECK is to verify connection to the glider five seconds before takeoff.

They are separate actions, neither interchangeable nor meant to replace one another. They are not two ways to do the same thing.

1. You're describing a bunch of preflight stuff, some of which is important, some of which is trivial or worse than useless.

2. There's no confirmation of your hook-in status - or your leg loops - JUST PRIOR TO LAUNCH and thus no distraction insurance.

3. If you maintain discipline your procedures will probably get you through a flying career without incident.

4. If ten or twenty people use these procedures somebody's gonna launch unhooked.

5. A hundred - somebody's gonna get seriously hurt.

6. Three hundred to a thousand - somebody's gonna die.


I could argue the semantics of this ad infinitum but will not.

Thanks for the clean presentation. :clap:
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Re: FTHI

Postby TadEareckson » Thu Oct 27, 2011 2:13 pm

Rick Masters - 2011/10/27

At an Owens Valley Comp (1982?), I saw, from a distance, Jim Lee, in a UP Pod, lift and tug, then launch. But Jim fooled himself and he fooled me. He had been clipped in by going around the outside of his down tube. When he launched, he immediately engaged in a struggle not to enter a spiral dive. I remember saying, "Throw your chute! Throw your chute!" But he made it to the Pitts and crash-landed in a turn that damaged his glider - but he survived.

Steve Kinsley - 2005/10/04

One last attempt.

We have now rounded up all the usual suspects and promised renewed vigilance, nine page checklists, hang checks every six feet, etc. Bob Gillisse redux.

A hang check is part of preflighting your equipment. You do it in the setup area - not on the launch or the ramp. When you get in line you are hooked in and ready to go. No going down for a hang check cum hook-in check. A hook-in check is a procedure that every pilot performs on his own.

JBBenson - 2009/01/25

I get what Tad is saying, but it took some translation:

HANG CHECK is part of the preflight, to verify that all the harness lines etc. are straight.

HOOK-IN CHECK is to verify connection to the glider five seconds before takeoff.

They are separate actions, neither interchangeable nor meant to replace one another. They are not two ways to do the same thing.

Lift and tug tells you that you're hooked in and have your leg loops...

Brian McMahon - 2011/10/24

Once, just prior to launch.

...at, if you wanna maximize your chances of survival, the instant you commit to launch.

It doesn't tell you that you're PROPERLY or SAFELY hooked in. That's what the PREFLIGHT is for.

My good friends Bob Dunn and Dave Butz both launched unhooked.

Christian Williams - 2011/10/25

I agree with that statement.

What's more, I believe that all hooked-in checks prior to the last one before takeoff are a waste of time, not to say dangerous, because they build a sense of security which should not be built more than one instant before commitment to flight.

1. Your good friends Bob Dunn and Dave Butz both - correct me if I'm wrong - typically used hang checks to confirm that they were connected to the glider and good to go.

2. Neither of your good friends - correct me if I'm wrong - skipped Jim Lee's lift and tug because he BELIEVED or FELT that he was on the very edge of his ability to handle the wind with no ground crew available and standing at launch and lifting the glider was NOT a good tradeoff.

Bob held on to his base tube all the way down from Plowshare. The impact split his skull and he suffered terribly until he died during the night, alone.

But the IMPORTANT thing is that he died doing what he loved, free from the nanny state tyranny which restricts the meaning of "just prior to launch" to something under a quarter hour or so.

But he made it to the Pitts and crash-landed in a turn that damaged his glider - but he survived.

Bob held on to his base tube all the way down from Plowshare. The impact split his skull...

1. Lazy Jim, who deliberately skips the hang check which would've almost certainly caught the misrouting problem - but not as easily or effectively as a walkthrough - uses a lift and tug which AT LEAST verifies that he's connected to the glider.

2. Hang checker Bob (for reasons unknown) forgets the hang check and uses no at-launch verification that he's connected.

3. Compare the consequences.

4. Hang check or hook-in check - which is the more critical procedure?

5. At your friendly neighborhood ramp - which procedure is most likely to be skipped?

Dave pulled himself onto his control bar and rode the glider down from the high Santa Barbara launch.

When he launched, he immediately engaged in a struggle not to enter a spiral dive. I remember saying, "Throw your chute! Throw your chute!" But he made it to the Pitts and crash-landed in a turn that damaged his glider - but he survived.

1. Dave, who's not connected to his glider at all, makes a heroic and miraculous climb into his control frame, gains full control of his glider, makes a normal landing in the LZ, and comes out smelling like a rose.

2. Jim, who IS connected to his glider and can easily climb into his control frame but doesn't, crash lands and damages the glider.

3. If Jim stays prone and throws his chute a couple of hundred feet over the LZ he probably damages the glider less.

My sincere thanks to Carlos Miralles and Bill Dodson for teaching me the ONLY way.

Really?

NOTHING substitutes for a hang check immediately before take off.

1. But that's NOT what you DO.

Before lifting the glider, I would lay down and check my distance from the control bar. I always did this. It was part of my unalterable routine. It just took a moment and then I would shoulder the glider. I would stand and allow the wind to lift the wing. I would stand and fly the wing with gentle tension on my hang strap. Then I would identify the neutral lift attitude where the wing weighed nothing - and hold it.

At that moment, I would banish all concern about launching unhooked. I had taken care of it. It was done. It was out of my mind.

Now I would look downslope. I would verify that the bushes or trees below were waving slightly. If they were, I knew that I would encounter lift during and at the end of my run.

Now I would look to one side to see how wide the lift band was AND to see if there was approaching traffic. Then I would look to the other side. If bushes and trees or flags were moving about the same far to either side, I could be assured that I was in uniform ridgelift or in the center of a large thermal updraft. In the event of a large thermal updraft, there is no time to delay because it will not last and you must launch into the first half as it approaches launch.

Now you look to your wireman. His fingers should be "O's" around your nose wires and not touching them. Now you have met all conditions. Timing is of the essence. You yell "Clear!", the wire man dives to the side and you run, holding a neutral angle of attack.

That bears no semblance WHATSOEVER to what you do.

2. It is physically IMPOSSIBLE for ANYONE to do a hang check IMMEDIATELY before a foot launched takeoff. At a very minimum he needs to regain his footing, engage his shoulders in the control frame, stand up with the glider, and trim it in roll and pitch.

3. And I don't know a whole lot of people who will go down for another hang check if they've been poised to launch for a couple of minutes waiting for a good cycle.

4. Yeah. There IS something that substitutes for a hang check - however long it takes before takeoff. Something a lot easier and BETTER, in fact.

Hook in, do a walkthrough, check your leg loops, turn around, check your connection and suspension for security, routing, and twisting. Then move onto the ramp and start assuming you're not hooked in and don't have your leg loops.

I know. I'm still here.

Yeah. I feel the same way about the five packs of Marlboros I've been smoking every day since I was fifteen. And I haven't been killed a single time since I moved my release actuator from the base to the down downtube so that's where it's staying. I've been doing this stuff a long time and am quite familiar and comfortable with my processes.
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Re: FTHI

Postby Rick Masters » Thu Oct 27, 2011 3:28 pm

I'm not going to repeat it but you can re-read it.
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