And when's the best time to max out that healthy level of fear, Bob (or anybody ('cause I don't think Bob is ever gonna really get this))?
Associated Press - 2003/09/24
A hang glider pilot will be tried for manslaughter after a tourist plunged 200 metres to her death during a tandem flight over a New Zealand alpine town, a court has ruled.
Stephen Parson, 52, of Canada, faces up to 10 years in prison if found guilty.
Eleni Zeri, 23, a civil engineering graduate from Athens, died on March 29 after slipping from his hang glider near Queenstown on South Island.
The Queenstown District Court was told Parson had failed to attach Ms Zeri's harness to the glider.
Cragin Shelton - 2005/09/17
You are not hooked in until after the hang check.
George DePerrio
1926-1988
Mont Saint Pierre, Quebec
Advanced, 10 years experience
Vision
After completing his hang check, backed off from launch to wait for better conditions. Unhooked and forgot to hook up when he stepped back to launch.
Rick Masters - 2011/10/19
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.
Sam Kellner - 2011/11/07
Preflight, Hangcheck, Know you're hooked in.
Tommy Thompson - 2011/11/29
A hang check just prior to each launch is my routine.
What's my secret?
Know your ABC's and visually check as you say...
A = Already hooked in
B = Both hang loops
C - Carabiner locked
1991/09/19
Mark Kerns
41
Advanced
Airwave Magic IV
Wasatch State Park
Experienced pilot simply forgot to put legs through leg straps of cocoon harness. He could not get his foot into the boot after launch (which has saved other pilots), was able to hold on for several seconds, but slipped out of the harness and fell 200 feet. Died instantly.
bobk - 2011/11/19
If this is the top of your game, then you should pick another game that doesn't involve telling new pilots that they should be lifting their gliders into a turbulent jet stream just to verify something that they checked 10 seconds ago.
Dave Hopkins - 2011/10/04
Also if we are not hooked in we should be aware that the glider has flown too high and we can let go of it before we get into the air or going to fast . I teach this on the training hill. we should let the glider fly off our shoulder and be very aware that the strap is tight . If the glider keeps going up let it go.
Marc Fink - 1998/04/29
I ran aggressively, and when I was going very fast I leaned forward to prone out while gently easing out on the basetube. I remember thinking for a split second how unusual it was that I was sinking fast towards the ground, despite the tremendous speed I had. The next second was something of a blur...
Mark Johnson - 2008/08/31
We all watch in horror not believing this was happening. Kunio was hanging on to the downtubes flying away from the mountain.
William Olive - 2010/01/28
Phil Beck did this twice (or was that three times?) in a day at Hexham (New South Wales) one time while foot launch aerotow testing gliders. Of course, with a swag of gliders to test fly, Phil would unclip from the glider he'd just landed, then clip into the next one to be tested.
Except, at least twice, he didn't clip in.
Bridle goes above the bar, tension on the line makes it as strong as steel. The tug cannot stop and the glider immediately assumes a high AoA and climbs rapidly. The pilot has no pitch control and is lifted by the basetube rising with the lines. You have a pico second to decide to release before you are at 100' plus, and faced with no palatable alternatives. Phil was quick on the trigger...and lucky to boot.
Lessons learn't? Treat the glider and harness as 'the aircraft'. Do a proper hang check each and every time you front up to fly.
Eric Hinrichs - 2011/05/13
I went to Chelan for the Nationals in '95 as a free flyer. They were requiring everyone to use the Australian method, and you were also not allowed to carry a glider without being hooked in.
This was different for me, I hook in and do a full hang check just behind launch right before I go. I was also taught to do a hooked in check right before starting my run, lifting or letting the wind lift the glider to feel the tug of the leg loops.
So I used their method and I'm hooked in, carrying my glider to launch and someone yells "dust devil!" Everyone around runs for their gliders (most of which are tied down,) and I'm left standing alone in the middle of the Butte with a huge monster wandering around. I heard later that it was well over 300' tall, and some saw lightning at the top. After that it was clear that no one is going to decide for me or deride me for my own safety methods, someone else's could have easily got me killed.
Davis Straub - 2005/01/01
Well, very simply we could make a new rule for competition. If you are seen in your harness but not hooked into your glider you are automatically disqualified.
bobk - 2011/11/09
Your 5 second time limit between hook-in check and launch is unreasonably short - especially when attached to the consequences that you've listed. This would preclude, for example, the "turn and look" hook-in check that Joe Greblo teaches because 5 seconds would easily elapse between that check and getting the glider back into position to launch.
Luen Miller - 1994/11
Just before launch he reached back to make sure his carabiner was locked. A "crosswind" blew through, his right wing lifted, and before he was able to react he was gusted sixty feet to the left side of launch into a pile of "nasty-looking rocks." He suffered a compound fracture (bone sticking out through the skin) of his upper right leg. "Rookie mistake cost me my job and my summer. I have a lot of medical bills and will be on crutches for about five months."
FormerFF - 2009/08/25
Roswell, Georgia
I'm not sure what you thought was going to happen to Alan's connection to the glider in the ten feet between where Gordon had hang checked him and where he launched.
Chris McKee - 2005/10/03
The sad thing to say is I caught Bill unhooked on launch at the Pulpit Fly-In and made him do a full hang check before I would wire him off.
I really hope this is a wake-up call to all of us old and new pilots alike and that you realize you are mortal. Spend more time preflighting and making sure you will take off and return to terra firma safely.
Mick Howard - 2010/11/06
I really hope this is a wake-up call. This could have been disastrous at any other flying site. Why wasn't a hang check performed? A hang check must become a ritual immediately before every launch.
Zack C - 2010/11/07
While Mick is right in that this should be a wake-up call, it's the second wake-up call we've had this year. I don't think the first one changed much, and this concerns me.
Holly Korzilius - 2005/10/01 13:19:55
I don't have many details at this point, but I just got a call from Scott. Bill Priday launched from Whitwell without hooking in. Scott indicated there was about a hundred foot drop off from launch. Bill's status is unknown at this time. Please pray for him!
Holly Korzilius - 2005/10/01 13:38:40
Scott just informed me that Bill didn't make it.
Scott Wilkinson - 2005/10/02
I saw Bill launch. I watched him pick up his glider, answered his radio check, and watched him move up to launch. I saw him pick up his glider, yell clear, run, and drop from sight below the edge. I ran up to launch, along with several other people, just in time to see Bill's glider do a graceful hammerhead---fly straight up, almost back to launch. At that point I thought Bill was in the glider. Then glider fell off to the side, and I saw an empty control frame...a sight I'll never forget...and a sick feeling of dread filled my stomach.
Scott Wilkinson - 2005/10/05
We visited Steve Wendt yesterday, who was visibly choked up over Bill's death. For Steve, it all comes down to one thing: you've got to hook in. Period.
Scott Wilkinson - 2005/10/05
For Steve, it all comes down to one thing: you've got to hook in. Period.
Scott Wilkinson - 2005/10/13
Steve Wendt (Bill's instructor) has already talked about instituting preflight hang checks (meaning literally getting down on the ground and hanging in your harness, just like you'd do in the mountains) for all of his students at the flight park - just to get them into the habit of doing it - even if they don't need to do it for a towed launch.
Steve Kinsley - 2005/10/02
When Bob Gillisse got hurt I suggested that our local institution of the hang check is more the problem than the solution. I still believe that. It subverts the pilot's responsibility to perform a hook-in check.
Doug Hildreth - 1991/04
Werner Graf, a Long Beach, California pilot was vacationing in Switzerland on October 1990. He prepared to launch, but unhooked to adjust his camera.
Lauren Tjaden - 2005/10/02
He was really happy when we got Steve Wendt a cake celebrating his instructor of the year rating. Why? Bill was a nice guy. Was? How ridiculous. He should be here, with us. Isn't he here?
He landed so perfectly, every time. He told me how he had worked on his landings. He slammed the keel into the ground each one. He wanted a big margin of safety.
Jim Rooney
I run off mountains strapped to complete strangers and giant kites... for a living.
The Press - 2006/03/15
However, he took off without attaching himself.
In a video, he was seen to hold on to the glider for about fifty meters before hitting power lines.
Rooney and the passenger fell about fifteen meters to the ground.
Doug Koch - 2007/10/24
A longtime pilot from Southern California and recently Las Vegas named Bill Floyd was seriously injured in a hang gliding accident last week. He launched unhooked while towing at a dry lake bed in Vegas.
Bill fell about twenty to thirty feet from his glider and hit the dirt so hard that he broke both feet at the ankles and drove his shin bones out the bottom of his feet. He also broke his hips and nose, along with other more minor injuries.
Bille Floyd - 2011/10/27
The day i crashed on that Foot launched TOW; i had hooked into the tow bridle And the hang loop for the harness.
THEN
the wind died, and Stayed dead for 10 min.
So i unhooked from the glider and sat on the bace-tube, but left the Bridle attached.
The Wind came back up and i picked up the glider & made a mental pre-launch check. Remembering that i had already hooked in previously --
i deleted the, "lift the glider" part to check for tension on the harness.
and signaled for the driver to GO !!
Doug Koch - 2007/10/22
Normally, the other two hang glider pilots that tow here (myself and another), use a tow cart.
This pilot used a standing start method, and I haven't been able to talk to the person assisting him, so I don't know what, if any, checks he performed.
Oh well, here's my two bits.
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.
You can't safely launch all hang gliders with tight straps so it's ridiculous to require it.
With each flight, demonstrates a method of establishing that the pilot is hooked in just prior to launch.
What you do, if you are watching, is yell out if the idiot didn't hook in.
Mark Johnson - 2008/08/31
I stopped and looked and got my first glance at him. Then all hell broke loose. "He's unhooked, s***..." Guys yelling at him over the radio to throw his chute, "Kunio don't think, throw your chute throw your chute". We all watch in horror not believing this was happening.
Rick Masters - 2011/10/27
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.
After training and watching and yelling, launching unhooked assumes a Darwinian aspect.
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.
Hang Gliding - 1981/05
Just Doing a Hang Check is not Enough
Article and photos by George Whitehill
bobk - 2011/04/28
I've been having a good discussion with Tad Eareckson about hook in failures. The discussion has been mostly over the phone. Tad has some solid ideas about verifying hook in just prior to launch, and they're worth reading. Here's a link to some of his discussions on "KiteStrings":
http://kitestrings.prophpbb.com/topic9.html
Bill Cummings - 2011/11/21
NO DISAGREEMENT HERE.
Tad Eareckson - 2011/11/21
There has NEVER been a disagreement between Tad and Bill on this.
Ridgerodent - 2011/10/24
OK- how many times does he need confirm that he is hooked in? And when would be the best time to make that conformation?
Brian McMahon - 2011/10/24
Once, just prior to launch.
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.
bobk - 2011/11/24
http://www.nzhgpa.org.nz/docs/o_harepar ... report.pdf
That's a very good report on the March 2003 failure of a tandem pilot to hook-in his passenger (who fell to her death).
The Skytrek Operations Manual addresses the problem of distraction for pilots during the hang check:
"DO IT!! Do NOT be distracted by anything else going on at this point" (p. 13).
Rick Masters - 2011/10/19
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.
Sam Kellner - 2011/11/07
Preflight, Hangcheck, Know you're hooked in.
But it's a good report to read because it reminds us of our human vulnerability and raises (you're going to like this Tad) our fear that a similar thing could happen to each of us.
Christian Williams - 2011/10/25
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.
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