Peter Birren - 2011/11/27
I'll say again what I said then, that the more complex the system, (A) the more that can go wrong with it and (B) the less it'll be used because of the hassles of setup.
bobk - 2011/11/27
This is all true. General aviation combats this complexity by adding a lot of overhead to the process (requiring an A&P mechanic to do almost any repairs on an aircraft). The more complexity we add to our aircraft, the greater the burden of maintenance to ensure that it's all working.
Ya know what I'm not hearing here? I'm not hearing that this complexity, overhead, and maintenance burden contributes to systems being LESS safe or reliable. And I'm guessing that BECAUSE the general aviation establishment supports the complexity, overhead, and maintenance burden that the PRECISE OPPOSITE is true. Or do you have some other explanation?
So there's a cost-benefit tradeoff, and we allow our pilots to make the choices of which additional complexity (and costs) are worth which additional benefits.
Right. If they don't wanna pay for an FAA approved fuel pump for the 'ol Cessna they can hop on over to Lockout Mountain Flight Park and get Matt to cook up something...
GT Manufacturing Inc. (GT) and Lookout Mountain Flight Park Inc. (LMFP) make no claim of serviceability of this tow equipment. There is no product liability insurance covering this gear and we do not warrant this gear as suitable for towing anything. We make no claim of serviceability in any way and recommend that you do not use this aerotow gear if you are not absolutely sure how to use it and or if you are unwilling to assume the risk. Towing and flying hang gliders is inherently dangerous.
...out of surplus coffee cans, clothes pins, inner tubes, coat hangers, and paper clips.
I am 100% behind allowing our pilots to make that choice.
NO SH*T!!! REALLY?!?!?! Who'da thunk?
If properly used, there is a minimum of three ways to release from the towline. Do not depend on any of these ways by themselves and fly with a back up. The first release is the primary release which under certain situations may fail, second, is the secondary release that works most of the time, if all is set up correctly, and third, the weak link which will break under the right load. You should also fly with a hook knife that will allow you to cut the line if need be.
GT and LMFP Inc. assume no liability for the function and serviceability of this equipment. If you are uncomfortable with the risk of using this tow gear you will need to get gear that you are comfortable with or do not tow. There is an inherent risk in towing hang gliders that you must assume if you want to use this gear and you want to tow. Learn and understand the risk and the use of this gear. Your safety depends on it.
Tad, if you want to convince people to use your system, then maybe you should focus on telling us about your system rather than trying to bash everyone who points out (A) and (B) as Peter has done.
1. I tried that. When it started working I got blacklisted by the Flight Park Mafia and my flying career was ended. Besides... bashing everyone who points out (A) and (B) as Peter has done provides an absolutely indescribable amount of fun!
2. Who said anything about me wanting to convince people to use my system anyway? The vast majority of hang gliding people I know I want using Peter's, Matt's, Davis's, and Bobby's systems. The few people I DO want remaining in the gene pool don't need any convincing from me. They've seen what happens to the people who use Peter's, Matt's, Davis's, and Bobby's systems.
Furthermore Tad, you must know of some pilots with brains larger than "half the size of a walnut". Why don't you convince them to use your system to get the ball rolling?
You mean like Antoine?
2011/10/14
Tad,
you will laugh.. some voices ask to impose your barrel release for the French Championship 2012 in the flats near Poitiers. And we will invite the Brits in a FAI cat2 event..
Not really sure it will happend but stay tuned..
I know of manufacturers that you quote with a high degree of respect. Why don't you convince them to incorporate your system?
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/25
It's only a mystery why people choose to reinvent the wheel when we've got a proven system that works.
Zack C - 2011/08/26
Maybe because they're tired of releases that don't work under tension, releases they have to relinquish control of the glider to activate, stalling near the ground because of weak links breaking for no reason, instructors telling them to intentionally break weak links in an emergency when they can't get to their release, hook knifes being considered an acceptable release option, secondary releases on a V-bridle being considered a backup for the primary release, bridles wrapping on tow rings, tugs having weaker weak links than gliders, disagreement among even professionals over what a weak link is for, tow operators not having a clue what line tensions break their weak links...
In my opinion, we have a long way to go.
Do you think for a nanosecond that for twenty years people have been velcroing Wallaby, Quest, and Lookout crap onto their downtubes 'cause Steve Pearson is too stupid to be able to run a string up a downtube to a mechanism capable of reliably letting go of another piece of string?
There's a reason that that hasn't happened and won't and it's the same reason the teaching of hook-in checks is practically nonexistent and will remain so. There are too many people too heavily invested in making sure things keep getting done wrong.
Peter, I do think you should pretty much ignore Tad at this point.
I KNEW Peter could count on you! He was really getting beat up bad and guys like you need to stick together and stay on the same page if you have any hope of staying on top.
Furthermore, I believe Tad is motivated more by some sort of twisted revenge than by any desire to actually improve the sport.
I just never can figure out why you keep assuming that these are mutually exclusive hobbies and that one should be denied the joy of doing both.
Tad's single-minded pursuit of revenge combined with his abundance of free time may end up being the downfall of the US Hawks forum if we don't figure out a way to deal with it. I'm open to suggestions.
C'mon, Bob. You know EXACTLY how to deal with it. You just wanna assemble enough of a base of support to create the illusion that you're acting fairly and with justification.
bobk - 2011/11/27
I have flown with a prototype VG system that jammed. When pulled too tight it locked itself into the full-on position. I tried and tried to get it to "relax", but it would not. I ended up landing with full VG. It wasn't the worst experience of my life.
But as soon as you removed three of the pulleys and routed the lines outside of the downtubes it started working just fine, right?
Compare that to a release system that locks up.
No. That's not the comparison.
You pulled the VG system "too tight" (for what I have no idea) and it locked itself into the full-on position. That's exactly what a release system is supposed to do. You can try and try to get it to "relax" all you want and it won't reconnect to the tug.
That might be the worst (and last) experience of one's life.
JD Guillemette - 2009/02/13
New Lookout Release--preliminary test
Sweeeet!!!! Looks good to me.
I like the bent gate bar, as Marc suggested that should make release force many times less than tow force, if not nearly independant of tow line force.
Nicely done Lookout! Elegant solution!
As in most cases, the simplest designs work best.
Zack C - 2011/11/07
Yeah, I've had to pull the loop twice sometimes...and that's with the newer release I exchanged my old one for last July.
And I recently learned one of our guys using a Lookout release (I think the only one who uses one besides me) had an in-flight failure of his. Don't know the details but something broke and it no longer released. He contacted Lookout and they said there was a bad production run having that problem and offered to replace it.
Great record these things have...
"In my opinion, the LINKNIFE is exceptionally brilliant! It seems to solve most of the problems associated with release systems without increasing the complexities. I cannot think of any major weaknesses or objections that you did not address. Please send me four Linknife releases as soon as possible.... They are still the best releases I know about. Some of my flying buddies are needing releases and I have run out of spares."
--Donnell Hewett
Towing pioneer, author of the 12 Skyting Criteria, inventor of towline tension sensing and designer of the Hewett Center-of-Mass bridle.
Al Hernandez - 2010
I can't reach my CUT line 'cause I have both hands on the downtubes, and if I let go of the Coke bottle grip I will crash.
Peter Birren - 2008/10/27
So you pull whatever release you have but the one hand still on the basetube isn't enough to hold the nose down and you pop up and over into an unplanned semi-loop.
Yeah? Well I'm not having any trouble getting my Rube Goldberg system to work when the s*** hits the fan - but all these marvels of simplicity always seem to need the supplements of half G weak links and the interventions of loving gods for the pilots to stand a snowball's chance in hell.
Now I'm not saying that your system is "bad" Tad, but you asked for a single example and I gave you one.
Not by the most convoluted stretch of anyone's idiot imagination. That VG system malfunctioned because it was poorly engineered and inadequately tested. Complexity didn't have a goddam thing to do with it.
I'm sure you'll try to find a way to discount my example...
What example?
...but that doesn't make it go away.
It never existed. It didn't any more exist than any of those totally imaginary incidents of gliders being blown off launch because of people allowing their wings to float up into turbulent jet streams that you fabricated to justify gutting hook-in check rules.
And that's the BEST you can do? Dealing with this kinda crap I lose more brain cells through atrophy than I do guzzling my morning bottle of bourbon.