I have took note that the right release matters in the type of towing you are doing.
1. It's not so much the release that matters - panic snap, spinnaker shackle, barrel, Koch, three-string, Linknife - we've never had much in the way of problems with the mechanisms themselves. It's the means of actuation and, in the case of the crap that you get from the flight parks, the "engineering" of the assembly.
2. Aside from bridle configurations and connections, it doesn't matter what type of towing you're doing. It's ALWAYS better to be prone with both hands on the basetube and the ability to blow without moving either one of them.
The pilot, or student must know how to release himself from the tow before being put in a towing situation.
The problem is not not knowing how - the problem is not being able to...
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.
...without losing control...
John Dullahan - 2006/02/06
With winds of 10-12 mph I waited for a few minutes for a lull before giving the takeoff signal. Liftoff from the cart was nice and level, but at about ten feet the right wing was suddenly and violently lifted (Paul said a strong thermal came through just as I left the cart and pilots had to hold down their gliders). Almost immediately the glider went into a lockout and the weak link broke just as I hit the release. The high right wing put me into a left turn, so I committed to making a complete 360 back into the wind as the best option. At the 180 point I was about twenty feet over the ground and flying very fast downwind, so to avoid a downwind stall I pulled in slightly then pushed out to gain a little altitude before completing the 360. I almost got it around but couldn't quite pull it off, so the left corner of the control frame dug into the ground taking out the right downtube and fractured a small bone in my wrist (the ulnar styloid). I got a small soft cast which allows use of the hand for driving etc.
The incident demonstrated the few options available when towing in winds of 10-12 mph and a wing is suddenly and violently lifted close to the ground - a lockout often ensues very quickly and the glider is pulled into a turn before either the pilot can release or the weak link breaks, and a dangerous situation ensues (flying downwind close to the ground).
Every year people are injured or killed by incidents like this. Glider comes off the cart crooked (or gets crooked shortly after) and proceeds to a lockout situation very quickly before the pilot has time to release. These are generally advanced pilots towing from the shoulders in rowdy conditions.
...in time...
Carlos Weill - 2008/11/30
On June of 2008 during a fast tow, I noticed I was getting out of alignment, but I was able to come back to it. The second time it happen I saw the tug line 45 degrees off to the left and was not able to align the glider again I tried to release but my body was off centered and could not reach the release. I kept trying and was close to 90 degrees. All these happen very quickly, as anyone that has experienced a lock out would tell you. I heard a snap, and then just like the sound of a WWII plane just shut down hurdling to the ground, only the ball of fire was missing. The tug weak link broke off at a thousand feet, in less than a second the glider was at five hundred.
...or period.
You knew perfectly well how. The problem was that it was a physical impossibility.
The releases must be accessible at all times...
British Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association Technical Manual - 2003/04
On tow the Pilot in Command must have his hand actually on the release at all times. 'Near' the release is not close enough! When you have two hands completely full of locked-out glider, taking one off to go looking for the release guarantees that your situation is going to get worse before it gets better.
Steve Kinsley - 1996/05/09
Personal opinion. While I don't know the circumstances of Frank's death and I am not an awesome tow type dude, I think tow releases, all of them, stink on ice. Reason: You need two hands to drive a hang glider. You 'specially need two hands if it starts to turn on tow. If you let go to release, the glider can almost instantly assume a radical attitude. We need a release that is held in the mouth. A clothespin. Open your mouth and you're off.
Accessible SUCKS. Accessible stinks on ice. People have been getting killed for decades because of accessible releases. I've personally known two of them - Joel Lewis, my roommate at Kitty Hawk Kites, and Frank Sauber, my student and longtime road trip buddy.
Pin-out-when-in-doubt...
That philosophy has gotten a lot of people killed. Lose it.
Manned Kiting
The Basic Handbook of Tow Launched Hang Gliding
Daniel F. Poynter
1974
"The greatest dangers are a rope break or a premature release." - Richard Johnson
That was true in 1974, was still true in 1981, is still true in 2011, and will still be true when hell freezes over - despite what all the idiots, quacks, and frauds in this sport keep telling and teaching everyone - themselves included.
A preponderance of evidence must exist that A-release, B-release, and C- hook knife, is going to do its job, if the pilot has time to reach a knife things sometimes go wrong real fast.
1. There is ZERO reason or excuse for a release failing.
2. In aerotowing a two point bridle has to feed through a tow ring. The ONLY purpose for a secondary release is to handle a situation in which it doesn't and - with a proper bridle design - my assessment is that that situation is virtually nonexistent anyway.
3. Anybody who tells you that a hook knife is a component of a towing system is a total idiot. Hook knives are never of any use to real pilots until after crashes - and real pilots seldom have the kinds of crashes in which hook knives are of any use.
...if the pilot has time to reach a knife...
He only has time to reach a knife when he's so high that nothing matters anyway. In an emergency situation he's already been dead for a while.
Most pilots may freeze up in an Oh- Hell Situation.
1. No. That's just something tow operators always put in reports after they kill the student or pilot with the crap gear they've sold them.
"Yeah, he just froze. I don't understand it.
Joe Gregor - 2004/09
2004/06/26
Mike Haas
Advanced
53
Moyes Litesport 147
Hang Glide Chicago
There is no evidence that the pilot made an attempt to release from tow prior to the weak link break, the gate was found closed on the Wallaby-style tow release.
He was locking out to the left and the Wallaby-style tow release lever was right there on his right downtube. Just froze. But a REAL pilot would've been just fine in that situation so come on back to Hang Glide Chicago and let's go FLYING! And just this weekend Wallaby-style releases will be on sale for ten percent off."
2. Nobody says "Oh Hell!" when the s*** hits the fan.
Maybe if pilots do what Paul Voight and Ryan say to do...
...they're gonna die at even higher rates than those of the slaughter of the past thirty years.
Break the weak link yourself by pushing out may save a lot of lives in their eyes...
If you go up with a release which can't be actuated instantly and in any worst case scenario you don't deserve to live. (Asterisk - If you're a student you deserve to live but your instructor doesn't.)
That maybe hard to do if...
As long as you're not on a payout winch it's EASY to do no matter what you're using for a weak link. What's hard or impossible to do if you don't have lotsa altitude...
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=fnrh9-pOiq4http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=F_n5B3-MIC4...is survive the involuntary aerobatics that are gonna accompany your newfound freedom from tow.
Any sonuvabitch that tells anyone to push out in a tow emergency or that a weak link is a safety device oughta have his tongue pulled out and his fingers chopped off to limit the damage to the sport to what he's already done and get the other morons to think about thinking a little bit before going on the record.