launching

General discussion about the sport of hang gliding
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://www.kitestrings.org/post11674.html#p11674
Yeah, good call considering "Bobby didn't give me the rope, thankfully".
Get that one carved in granite. And compare/contrast with:

http://ozreport.com/9.177
Another bad launch off the cart
Davis Straub - 2005/08/28

And another good outcome that we can learn from.

http://www.flickr.com/photos/meaneyman/sets/788578/
Bad launch good recovery

http://www.flickr.com/photos/meaneyman/35642942/
Image
http://www.flickr.com/photos/meaneyman/35642828/
Image
...

Tim Meaney has published a series of photos which show a poor launch by an Exxtacy pilot at the 2005 Big Spring Open. The Exxtacy's right wing has come up while the pilot is still on the cart. In addition, the right wing has come up so high that the right side of the control frame has also come off the cart and isn't being held horizontal. This means that the spoileron on the right side isn't deployed, or deployed as much as it would be if the pilot had held (or been able to hold) the control frame onto the cart. If the spoileron had been deployed, the right wing would have had a tendency to come back down. In this case, it didn't.

In the second frame the left wing is dragging on the runway and the weaklink has broken. This is a good thing. The pilot is in trouble and you want that weaklink broken so that he isn't dragged down the runway. Notice that he hasn't moved his hands at all, and doesn't throughout this sequence of photos. The weak weaklink does the heavy lifting for him. Use a properly sized weaklink!
Also from Big Spring (fourteen years ago) by the way.

http://www.kitestrings.org/post9056.html#p%209056
Releases would be a close second for me.
Nah, releases are totally negligible issues. It's the weak link that's the focal point of a safe towing system.
If it wasn't previously obvious...
Image
...there is likely no similar situation where Davis will try to release.
Image
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident2.jpg
http://ozreport.com/pub/images/fingerlakesaccident3.jpg
Image

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/skysailingtowing/message/6726
Weaklinks
Peter Birren - 2008/10/27 23:41:49 UTC

I know about this type of accident because it happened to me, breaking four ribs and my larynx... and I was aerotowing using a dolly. The shit happened so fast there was no room for thought much less action. But I wasn't dragged because the weaklink did its job and broke immediately on impact.
A total dice roll.
But really superb risk mitigation plans.
30-2114
http://farm1.staticflickr.com/292/18084234884_9e9889f1e0_o.png
Image
...with Davis's release.
Cheap easily stowable bent pin crap excuse for a release.

These u$hPa / Flight Park Mafia serial killing motherfuckers have put untold tens of thousands of copies of their criminally negligent fatals happening and waiting to happen into circulation. And they know what they were doing five minutes after the beginning of time. And the more quality stuff that gets into circulation the more likely they are to get sued out of existence and thrown into prison where they belong. So there's no way in hell they're gonna tolerate anything that or anyone who smacks of reform, fixes, competence, integrity.
---
P.S. - 2019/08/16 21:15:00 UTC

Just as I was about to post what was above Brian (correct me if I'm wrong) in an effort to amend his 2019/08/16 16:21:54 UTC post (the one in "launching" just prior to this one) with a couple P.S. notes but inadvertently created a duplicate post with the amendments. So I preserved his amendments, amended them where intended, replaced his text with mine, made a note that it was mine, changed the author attribution appropriately. (That last bit took me a while 'cause I was rusty with respect to the procedure.

Responding to the PSs...
PS- Thanks for embedding that, I failed several times.
Sure, no prob. For any future issues along those lines you can just find an example somewhere, log in as me, click "EDIT" access the text and coding to use as your model.
PPS- I see Davis couldn't hit any tires.
Or, unfortunately, any concrete. But I still haven't been able to figure out the "tires" reference.

http://www.kitestrings.org/post11676.html#p11676
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<BS>
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Re: launching

Post by <BS> »

(correct me if I'm wrong)
No, that's what happened. I couldn't embed that video, so I assumed you had. I hit quote to see what had been done that I hadn't tried. Never did see what it was. Maybe it was just a glitch. Anyway, in the quote mode I added the PSs and submitted. Then I edited out my quotes, not realizing I had just duplicated my post and added the PSs. :roll:
log in as me
Thanks, but I'm likely never to feel comfortable doing that or moderating.
click "EDIT" access the text and coding to use as your model.
I can see that coding by clicking "QUOTE". The odd thing is I didn't see anything I hadn't tried. Anyway, thanks for straightening that out.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

Never did see what it was.
I dunno. I really like things standardized and there's about a zillion weird YouTube formats out there whose purposes I don't understand. The standard one has the prefix:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=

plus the unique code for the individual video - as in:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lohIHeyx-qU

And I always knock the "s" (secure) off the "http" of all addresses 'cause it's not needed to get there and the platform will put it back in upon arrival. So:

http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lohIHeyx-qU

which always works for embedding here. Your original format was one of the really weird ones.
Thanks, but I'm likely never to feel comfortable doing that or moderating.
But I so do enjoy rubbing Emperor Bob's nose in the levels of shared power and trust our little Kite Strings nominal dictatorship enjoys. We have four Moderators who've never once even posted. (What's that say about the relative qualities of our memberships, Bob?
I can see that coding by clicking "QUOTE".
Yeah, I know. That's what I do to harvest material from enemy sites when I'm in under fake IDs. I forgot you could also do that here 'cause I'm always logged in as a Moderator and never use the quote button. And the quote button scares me - 'specially on enemy sites - 'cause it's easy to make the mistake you did.
Anyway, thanks for straightening that out.
No problem. I'm actually glad that happened 'cause I really needed to relearn the drill for the fix.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://shga.com/forum/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6085
Kevin in Hospital
Joe Greblo - 2019/11/20 15:52:33 UTC

Kevin Kader is at Holy Cross Hospital at 15031 Rinaldi St., Mission Hills, after an unsuccessful launch at Kagel on Monday. He is in good spirits and expected to fully recover but his stay may be a couple of weeks. His injuries include a couple of broken bones in his neck, some broken ribs, a broken nose, and a crushed lower eye socket.

I'm sure he'd welcome lots of visitors. Let me know if you’d like some company when you visit him.
Greg Angsten - 2019/11/20 22:31:36 UTC

Kevin this sounds awful. I'm really sorry to hear this. Good luck with your recovery and we hope your mug returns to its former beauty.
George Stebbins - 2019/11/23 00:04:46 UTC

Heal quickly, Kevin!
http://shga.com/forum/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6087
Kevin has changed hospitals
Joe Greblo - 2019/11/23 17:39:49 UTC

He's now at Kaiser Hospital on Sunset Blvd in south Glendale.
http://shga.com/forum/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6085
Kevin in Hospital
Larry Chamblee - 2019/11/23 22:31:34 UTC

Kevin -
I'm so sorry to hear about your accident. Hope you have a fast recovery.
- A FAST and FULL recovery. I have no idea what's taking so long as it is. After all, this launch was only "unsuccessful" - it's not like it was a total disaster like the ones we see in towing all the fuckin' time. It's the simplicity of the free flight foot launch that keeps things from getting really out of hand nearly all of the time. Just ask Rick Masters if you don't believe me.

- And be sure not to trouble us with the slightest detail of this incident beyond the fact that it was "unsuccessful".

- Delighted to hear that he's "in good spirits". I should probably give an unsuccessful launch like that at Kagel a go 'cause I'm pretty much never in good spirits. And I shudder to think what kind of spirits he'd be in if his launch hadn't been unsuccessful.

- Monday...
-- Not so much as even a:
--- morning / midday / afternoon / evening narrowing down of the time frame
--- hint regarding:
---- conditions
---- glider model
-- So maybe no other glider people but was he launching alone, unassisted, unobserved? I doubt all of the above.

- I'm guessing he was attempting to tow launch off the top of Kagel. It's the complexity of tow launching that makes it so much more dangerous. Hard to imagine he'd have sustained so much as a skinned knee if he'd been up there solo just running off the slope.
Joe Greblo - 2019/11/23 17:39:49 UTC
Safety is a book, not a word
Michael Robertson
Yeah Joe. You and Michael can suck my dick. One of your guys gets half totaled off of your backyard high site; all we get is the date, launch, and wishes for a full and speedy recovery; and there's not the slightest interest in the least detail of anything that went wrong. The conditions were ideal and Kevin was doing everything 100.00 percent right - as usual. He just happened not to be "successful" this time. Happens to the best of us every now and then.

And I guess that's what you and Mike are making clear to all your Day One students.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=36599
Launch Ramp Redesign (opinions requested)

Twenty post to date Jack Show discussion on engineering, constructing a ramp to enable practical, safe, efficient, high volume, long term foot launching off a slope, cliff, escarpment. And one doesn't need to search long or hard to find other such discussions within the worlds largest hang gliding community.

http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=27793
Now this is a ramp!

Henson Gap radial ramp is hard to beat and that one was a MAJOR project. Compare/Contrast High Rock which is a tilted slab on the edge of a cliff with a nose man platform. Lots of exploitable mountain regions are totally devoid of Jockey's Ridge / Hyner / Ed Levin flavor open, safe, easy launch options and you're gonna get lower incident/disaster/kill rates on the more highly engineered structures.

09-1101
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1541/24815708260_a24d0b0186_o.png
Image
Image
http://c2.staticflickr.com/2/1538/25085002006_846f9e9402_o.png
12-1521

Karen Carra - 2015/11/08 - would've been OK at the McConnellsburg Pulpit ramp the next ridge upwind.

Another point that tends to get overlooked in these simpler-equals-safer bullshit discussions.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://shga.com/forum/phpBB3/viewtopic.php?f=3&t=6085
Kevin in Hospital
Vrezh Tumanyan - 2019/12/02 01:28:25 UTC

Kevin went trough several surgeries in different hospitals, had some rough times, pretty serious matters.
No shit.
But it's finally over.
No it's not. It will never be over.
They fixed him good and send him home.
They fixed him as best they could. But they didn't fix him.
Still long way to recovery...
He'll never fully recover.
...but he is in good spirits...
While he's putting on the show.
...and getting better every day.
And then he'll reach a point at which he won't.
He is a tough guy...
Just not tough enough to get a glider safely airborne at an easy foot launch site with nothing worth mentioning going on.
...he will put himself together in no time.
Bullshit.
Speedy recovery, Kevin!
Good freakin' luck.
Kevin Kader - 2019/12/02 20:08:34 UTC

I'm finally back home and wanted to say thank you for all the prayers and well wishes.
Funny that with all those prayers and well wishes you won't ever again be airworthy.
Thanks to all who visited me at the hospital.
Must've been using...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/31 09:25:57 UTC

Only later, when we're visiting them in the hospital can they begin to hear what we've told them all along.
...a Tad-O-Link. (Did you begin to hear what they'd told you all along at that point?)
My injuries are such that my Physicians told me I can't go back to flying;
Why? You weren't injured as a consequence of flying.
...another neck break would likely be a terminal event.
- Lotsa neck breaks are terminal events.
- This WAS a terminal event. It ended your flying career.
I missed death by one inch according to my surgeon.
A rather meaningless statement in this context.
I'll be happy to drive when needed and you'll see my happy face around the park...
So it sounds like your flying career wasn't really all that important to you.
...but if I ever suggest I might go up again, someone, anyone has my permission to give me a good swift kick in the rear, lol.
Are you gonna stop riding bicycles too? 'Cause you can sustain the same kind of injury in a bike crash and go that extra inch.
I can't drive for at least twelve weeks but i'm going to try and make it to the Christmas Party. Hope to see you all there.
And I'm guessing that at the Christmas Party the issues which precipitated this one will be as much Level Zero interest as we've seen everywhere else we've looked.
Bob Kuczewski - 2019/12/04 21:57:52 UTC

It's always great when these kinds of topics trend toward descriptions of recovery. The accelerating advances in medical technology remind us that we should never say "never" on what the future brings.
I have a pretty good never. No one will ever again see an Ivory-Billed Woodpecker. There may have been a couple sightings 2005/04 but things didn't pan out and that magnificent bird is gone forever 'cause we humans annihilated all of the old growth Cypress forests in which it evolved and thrived.
I still remember the worldwide media coverage of the first heart transplant. A buddy of mine got a new heart in the last year and it didn't even make the local news. Never say never.
Arys Moorhead's family will never get their kid back.
I hope it's not too soon to ask...
It's way too fuckin' late. We needed to know a lot more about what went wrong on this one than we did that he'll be able to drive for people in another three months.
...but are there any lessons to be learned from the incident?
No. He didn't invent a new way to crash a hang glider and there's no technique for foot launching one that hasn't been around since Otto Lilienthal Day One.
The only thing worse than seeing one of our pilots take a hit ... is seeing it repeated by someone else.
It will be.
Thanks in advance...
I'd wait until we actually get a crumb or two before going nuts with gratitude. This stinks a fair bit. There's a natural inclination for people to talk about issues that factored into incidents with significant negative outcomes. And in my humble opinion there oughta be significant negative social consequences for individuals who withhold information on these.
...and best wishes in your continued recovery.
At some point in the near future his recovery is gonna totally cease continuing. And he will never again have the body and quality of life he had when he was moving his glider to launch position on 2019/11/18. And that's really sad.

But some motherfucker - Joe Greblo would be a really good guess - qualified and rated Kevin to safely and reliably foot launch from Kagel. And yet he sustained major, career ending, life altering, irreparable damage and the only thing he did wrong was to be "unsuccessful". The whole Kagel foot launch game is just a dice roll - when your number's up it's up.

Just like AT launches. At some point in your AT career you WILL be in a lethal low level lockout just as your skills suddenly fail you and your only hope for survival will be the increase the safety of the towing operation provided by a single loop of 130 pound Greenspot Dacron fishing line - which...

http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=24846
Is this a joke ?
Jim Rooney - 2011/08/28 10:40:24 UTC

Is a weaklink going to save your ass? Who knows? But it's nice to stack the deck in your favour.
...may or may not work in time.
Joe Greblo - 2019/11/20 15:52:33 UTC

... expected to fully recover...
Obvious pure unadulterated bullshit. At worst you're generating it. At best you're deliberately relaying and propagating obvious pure unadulterated bullshit. Doesn't matter much either way to me. You're totally happy lying to us about this. What else are you totally happy lying to us about? Why should anybody:
- ever trust anything you have ever said, are saying, ever will say?
- be paying you a dime for any hang gliding instruction?

P.S. Currently closing on eighteen hours and zero response to Bob's post (which was inspired by Yours Truly in the course of a long phone conversation yesterday afternoon). Right. Nobody on the Grebloville wire has the slightest clue about anything relevant to this one.

P.P.S. And let's all hold our breath while waiting for Rick Masters to publish this one in his database of free flight mountain foot launch catastrophes.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=2434
Rethinking towing
Rick Masters - 2016/04/12 01:02:41 UTC

My research on towing clearly indicates the practice is one of the most dangerous things one can do on a hang glider.
A lot of people blame this on weight shift.
Weight shift certainly aggravates the problem but an awful lot of sailplane fatalities are also towing accidents, so there's more to it.
Essentially, the way I see it is towing may have its place as a last resort - for instance, where there are no hills within a couple hours drive.
Maybe advanced pilots can accept the risk, but I think they do it too easily.
Novices in training? H1s?? Hell, no.
Who talks a novice into towing? Commercial instructoes withtow operations, for the most part. There is a lot of money in it.
Who else benefits from tow training?
Why in the world are instructors training novices with towing equipment when training hills are within reach?
---------
Mark Forbes, (USHPA Insurance Chairman
Posted to HangGliding.org: Wed Apr 06, 2016 8:41 am
Post subject: Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
There was a fatal crash on Sunday at the training site in Tres Pinos, near Hollister. The H1-rated pilot apparently turned away from the line, locked out and failed to release. An investigation is under way to review the facts and produce an accident report. Please be careful out there. We have lost four pilots already this year; a towing accident in Florida, a mid-air at McClure, a speed wing at Jungfrau in Switzerland and now this training accident.
---------
1) Dying on a tiny paraglider is the end result of a death wish. It should eventually be expected. What should not be expected is the USHPA inviting speedflyers into a hang gliding organization. Parachute deaths reflect negatively and unfairly on the sport of hang gliding. Once that happens, there is no longer a genuine hang gliding organization.

2) January 28, 2016: Flying hang gliders with other hang gliders nearby requires skill and attention. It is relative work and the participants must be capable of doing it well. Causing the death of a fellow pilot is a horrible thing one will live with for the rest of his life. Mike Brewer told me, long ago, standing on the slope of Gunter in Owens valley while watching the 1981 XC Classic pilots launch into a huge gaggle, "If you're going to screw up, you shouldn't be here." That is the standard. Pilot error is avoidable.

3) February 2, 2016: Low-airtime pilot Tomas Banevicius traveled from New York to Florida, bypassing along the entire Appalachian Mountain Range to continue his hang gliding training in Florida with U.S. Hang Gliding, Inc's winter training operations. This makes no sense to me. But, boy, do these commercial towing operations rake in the cash by towing hang gliders to altitude. Hang gliding instructors have found a way to rake in cash and it is by towing - towing anybody.

4) The H1 who was killed near Hollister had no business towing. I would hardly expect him to understand why. It is the task of experienced pilots to keep novices safe. Putting them on tow rigs is insane, in my opinion. For God's sake, NO ONE who is not innately familiar and capable of flying a hang glider by instinct can be expected to use a hook knife to save his life when something goes terribly and so typically wrong during tow. This madness has to stop.
Rethinking towing
Thinking really isn't your thing, Rick. REthinking? Not a snowball's chance in hell.
My research on towing clearly indicates the practice is one of the most dangerous things one can do on a hang glider.
And you're totally full o' shit.

- While we tend to have pretty good numbers on towing 'cause commercial operations like Quest, Ridgely keep records we don't have, have never had, never will have any solid numbers on free flight launches. So we don't have, have never had, never will have any legitimate research results from which to draw legitimate comparisons between the two flavors.

- However...

-- We can make pretty good educated estimates of what's going on in the various scenes and when we do towing wins hands down.

-- Those of us who've actually BOTHERED to engage in both flavors will INSTINCTIVELY know what our margins are. And, again, towing wins hands down.

-- High wind free flight launches tend to be pretty safe 'cause you already have tons of airspeed just standing there. You're eliminating the foot from foot launching. But that often necessitates a proper ramp and a halfway competent crew.

-- Whenever you need to run a glider up to airspeed your safety margin goes down the toilet. For just about all towing you're launching platform or dolly. And NOBODY ever says, "No thanks, I feel a lot more comfortable foot launching. I'll give you a nod when I'm ready for you to hit the gas."
A lot of people blame this on weight shift.
Name two. I for one have no fucking clue what it is you're talking about. And you have even less.
Weight shift certainly aggravates the problem but an awful lot of sailplane fatalities are also towing accidents, so there's more to it.
100.00 percent of sailplane launches are tow. And 95 percent (made up number) of aircraft crashes are launch and landing when you're always near the hard stuff. So big fuckin' surprise. (Idiot.)
Essentially, the way I see it is towing may have its place as a last resort - for instance, where there are no hills within a couple hours drive.
- A couple hours. So Florida, Texas, the Midwest, most of Australia don't exist in Mastersworld.

- Fuck you. A couple hours was what it took for folk in my neck of the woods to do the mountains. Ridgely was ONE hour. And at Ridgely you didn't have to sweat wind direction, hike-in, vehicle shuttles, retrieval, site maintenance... No-brainer.
Maybe advanced pilots can accept the risk...
Karen Carra was an Advanced pilot. At High Rock she got a very badly broken arm landing in high grass and killed launching. She never got so much as a skinned knee at Ridgely at either end of the flight.
...but I think they do it too easily.
It's a pity anybody gives the least flying fuck what you "think" about anything, Rick.
Novices in training? H1s?? Hell, no.
Hear that all you boys and girls who came up through the ranks exclusively through towing?
Who talks a novice into towing?
NOBODY. People don't show up at flatland operations expecting to slope launch.
Commercial instructoes withtow operations, for the most part. There is a lot of money in it.
Funny the way Fort Langley, Finger Lakes, Far View, Ridgely no longer exist.
Who else benefits from tow training?
People who wanna fly without some testosterone poisoned, has-been, dickhead telling them what they should and shouldn't be doing.
Why in the world are instructors training novices with towing equipment when training hills are within reach?
Ditto for sailplaning.
Mark Forbes, (USHPA Insurance Chairman
Posted to HangGliding.org: Wed Apr 06, 2016 8:41 am
Post subject: Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Mark G. Forbes - 2016/04/06 16:41:47 UTC
There was a fatal crash on Sunday at the training site in Tres Pinos, near Hollister. The H1-rated pilot apparently turned away from the line, locked out and failed to release. An investigation is under way to review the facts and produce an accident report. Please be careful out there. We have lost four pilots already this year; a towing accident in Florida, a mid-air at McClure, a speed wing at Jungfrau in Switzerland and now this training accident.
1) Dying on a tiny paraglider is the end result of a death wish. It should eventually be expected. What should not be expected is the USHPA inviting speedflyers into a hang gliding organization. Parachute deaths reflect negatively and unfairly on the sport of hang gliding. Once that happens, there is no longer a genuine hang gliding organization.
USHGA was NEVER a genuine hang gliding organization.
2) January 28, 2016: Flying hang gliders with other hang gliders nearby requires skill and attention. It is relative work and the participants must be capable of doing it well.
One of them was, the other wasn't.
Causing the death of a fellow pilot is a horrible thing one will live with for the rest of his life.
Yep.
Mike Brewer told me, long ago, standing on the slope of Gunter in Owens valley while watching the 1981 XC Classic pilots launch into a huge gaggle, "If you're going to screw up, you shouldn't be here." That is the standard. Pilot error is avoidable.
'Cept, of course, in towing. Then everything's just a huge high risk dice roll.
3) February 2, 2016: Low-airtime pilot Tomas Banevicius traveled from New York to Florida, bypassing along the entire Appalachian Mountain Range...
In which nobody's ever had the slightest problem hang gliding.
...to continue his hang gliding training in Florida with U.S. Hang Gliding, Inc's winter training operations. This makes no sense to me. But, boy, do these commercial towing operations rake in the cash by towing hang gliders to altitude. Hang gliding instructors have found a way to rake in cash and it is by towing - towing anybody.
- They didn't tow him to altitude. If they had he might have come off OK. Wouldn't have ended up any worse - in any case.
- US Hang Gliding, Inc. didn't survive that one either.
4) The H1 who was killed near Hollister had no business towing.
Bull fucking shit.
I would hardly expect him to understand why.
It was a her.
It is the task of experienced pilots to keep novices safe. Putting them on tow rigs is insane, in my opinion.
Fuck you, your opinion, the horses they rode in on.

- Half sanely managed scooter towing is about as safe as solo introductory hang gliding can get.

- Both Tomas and Nancy were thrown in way the hell over their heads on total crap equipment. If you throw a training hill fifteen flight One off a thousand foot ramp in strong gusty conditions on a wing with a hard left turn and something bad happens you don't blame the consequences on free flight foot launching.
For God's sake, NO ONE who is not innately familiar and capable of flying a hang glider by instinct can be expected to use a hook knife to save his life when something goes terribly and so typically wrong during tow.
Whereas someone who IS innately familiar and capable of flying a hang glider by instinct CAN be expected to use a hook knife to save his life when something goes terribly and so typically wrong during tow. We see these hook knife saves all the fuckin' time.
This madness has to stop.
And you're just the one to stop it. The only reason you're not able to make much in the way of progress is 'cause you've been banned from the Jack and Davis Shows.
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Tad Eareckson
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Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=2434
Rethinking towing
Rick Masters - 2016/04/16 18:52:24 UTC

Can we define "good enough?"
I can.
I've personally known over a dozen people, some close friends, who have died hang gliding - most on ultralights, but all were hang glider pilots.
- If they were flying ultralights they didn't die hang gliding.

- Real good bet that at least one or two of those died as consequences of engine failure inconveniences.

- We know at least one of them (Bob Dunn - 1982/07/31) was someone who always launched on the assumption that he was connected to his glider. Platform and dolly launched AT are pretty good environments for those types.
All were skillful, experienced, advanced pilots.
I rationalized every death and told myself I could avoid making the same mistake.
And...
- Please don't trouble yourself to provide any info on any of these incidents.
- I guess it wasn't worth looking into any crashes that:
-- didn't involve individuals whom you knew personally
-- had less than fatal consequences
By luck and skill, I managed to survive.
Great! So you didn't need to incorporate anything along the lines of judgment, competence, intelligence. What an outstanding match you made for the sport.
None of this ever involved towing.
Good job maintaining your godlike purity and never tainting yourself with the slightest degree of experience in the launch method from which all forms of hang gliding devolved. Otherwise you wouldn't have been able to speak with such divine and infallible authority on how totally unacceptable any flying involving any form of tow launch is.
I accepted and shared the general opinion of other hang glider pilots...
Really hard to go wrong sharing the general opinions of other hang glider pilots. That's exactly the path Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney trod so unerringly to achieve the levels of authority and greatness he did (without ever having achieved any degree of positive shit worth mentioning) in the sport.
...that, despite the inherent dangers, we were "good enough" to have a pretty high chance of survival.
Right. The whole game's really just a big dice roll and your best shot at long term survival is to go with general opinions and become "good enough". Also a good idea to totally quit flying decades ago while you're still ahead.
I still believe that.
What a total fucking Rooney caliber douchebag.
But new elements have been added to the hang gliding mix.
That have zilch compatibility with your personal belief system.
People who love hang gliding have found new ways to milk the sport for money.
Name one single individual who loves hang gliding and milks it for money. I'm trying to think of one and am coming up totally empty.
Instruction by towing leads the list.
Certainly wouldn't have anything to do with ease, practicality, speed, efficiency of getting gliders airborne - like at all other experience levels. That's not compatible with your belief system.
Yes, once you reach altitude and release, you are doing exactly the same thing.
Flying a hang glider.
Not really. The next three hours are tainted beyond redemption 'cause you spent three minutes getting to altitude behind a Dragonfly rather than all the hours of bullshit involved in getting your glider to and up a mountain.
But a huge part of the sport, for me did not even involve flying.
I was a creature of the Owens Valley.
And fuck anybody who doesn't have the Owens Valley in his backyard.
I would spend days on the sides of mountains, studying wind flows.
While not flying.
Katabatic downflows in the early morning.
- And where would hang gliding be without katabatic downflows in the early morning.

- I don't think you get katabatic downflows in the early morning. You get katabatic downflows when warm air is cooled by a cold sloping surface. This typically sets up as the sun goes down and stops heating a westward face. In the morning everything's cold and stable and the surface heats up before the air does.
The moment of stillness that set in when expanding air from the desert offset the drainage winds.
The ravens and raptors testing the budding thermal activity as the rising sun heated the canyon walls.
And in the flatlands the ravens and raptors hafta keep flapping all the time if they wanna stay up and go anywhere.
Then the big thermals would come, rising out of their sheltered pockets, roaring like freight trains up the sides of the canyons.
Carrying along dust and light debris, shaking the bushes within a defined area while other vegetation stood still.
Monster thermals lifting flying insects to altitudes they could never achieve on their own - chased by sparrows to 14,000 foot mountain crests.
Sparrows aren't known for chasing insects at altitude - idiot.
All this was an intimate part of footlaunch hang gliding.
For you maybe.
It was critically necessary to understand this to fly the Big Air safely.
How very odd then that the world distance records of a bit under 475 miles were set out of Zapata without a single contributory puff contributed by anything in the way of a slope.
Towing offers none of it.
So no sailplaner ever has or ever will be able to achieve any tiny fraction of your level of expertise and magnificence because 100.00 percent of sailplane launches are towed.
Back to "good enough."
Why? You'll never be there.
In the past, hang gliding in the USA and also Australia has been fortunate enough to experience a few years of zero fatalities.
Yet, in the last 12 months, ten or more hang glider pilots have died here.
What has happened to our progress in safety?
Who gives a flying fuck? The sport's a dickhead magnet and - free and/or tow launched - the dickheads who've flocked to it won't ever permit any fixes to be implemented.
40% of these fatalities were towing accidents with the tow line attached.
Tad-O-Links and people trying to fix bad things 'cause they don't wanna start over.
20% involved joyriding (Jean Lake) and the death of a child.
20% involved novices who, in my opinion, had no business whatsoever on a tow line.
Another fatality involved a novice flying into a cliff.
Must've been tow launched. A free flight foot launcher would never fly into a cliff.
Perhaps Wingspan33 can help me out here,
Was Scott Trueblood trained by towing?
Undoubtedly. Otherwise he'd have had a proper understanding of the potential downsides of flying into cliffs.
I have a deep suspicion that people trained by towing have been fast-tracked for profit at great risk to themselves.
How very odd. 'Cause everything I've ever personally experienced and seen in the sport has been geared towards retarding progress to the maximum extent possible so instructors can keep milking students as long as possible.

When I got my Three in 1982 there was a minimum airtime requirement of two hours. Now it's ten. What was the justification? One can only conclude that instruction has gotten five times crappier 'cause if it were getting better the minimum airtime requirement would've been reduced.
If this is the case, we...
We who? Who's permitted to participate in your lofty circle of we?
...need to step back from such a high acceptance of towing and stop novices from towing until we can develop a better method...
Right Rick. Towing the world over is totally homogenous and has evolved as far as possible without intervention and reformation by a bunch of mountain-only dickheads who've never once in the past half century lifted a finger to implement any fix of any degree in tow launched flight.
...OR realize that towing IS AN ADVANCED TECHNIQUE.
- That's the obvious ticket. Don't permit anyone under a solid Four within a five mile radius of a Dragonfly, platform rig, or scooter.

- Kelly Harrison was a fuckin' Greblo certified Five with merit badges and experience coming outta his ass and flying a tandem Falcon with a little kid passenger who would set a new world record for youngest individual ever killed on a hang glider. Tell me how a new Two as Pilot In Command could've done any worse if the objective had been a double fatal.
Like I've said, to me, towing is a different sport.
Good. Stay the fuck out of it and keep your stupid fundamentally incompetent mouth shut regarding it.
Right up there with speedflying.
As in Jack SG Axaopoulos?
But I don't really expect anything to change until the RRG is wiped out.
Pretty safe bet considering the only evolutions in towing since the early Nineties have been backwards.
User avatar
Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9149
Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC

Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=2434
Rethinking towing
Rick Masters - 2016/04/12 20:04:03 UTC

I am not calling for no towing, ever.
Bull fucking shit.
Advanced, experienced, skilled pilots can evaluate the risk.
- Tell me how someone from Edinburg, Texas ever gets to be an advanced, experienced, skilled enough pilot to be able to evaluate - up to your personal sterling competency standards - the risk of towing.

- We don't do "risk evaluation" in this game. It's a total load o' crap. If your chances of getting killed are 0.1 percent for each flight in your particular flavor you stay on the ground. Otherwise you're playing Russian roulette odds just before you clear 167 flights. And typical large scale AT operations - which are invariably run by total incompetent and criminally negligent douchebags using the shoddiest and most dangerous excuses for equipment possible - typically run tens of thousands of launches before or between serious consequential incidents.

- You don't need shit in the way of advancement, experience, skill to evaluate the risk of your flavor of flying. Both Zack Marzec and Jeff Bohl proved that beyond the slightest shadow of reasonable doubt fairly recently at Quest a little over three years apart. They went up with uncertifiable illegal Industry Standard total crap for equipment, decertified their gliders, were unable to control their flights when their situations went rather mildly south shortly after launch. I can take a halfway intelligent junior high kid who's never been anywhere near any flavor of aviation and teach him everything he will ever need to know about conducting all flavors of towing with bulletproof safety margins. He won't have the physical skill to pull all this stuff off on the actual glider but he'd be able to:
- act as a solid competent launch director
- pull off the flying stuff after fifteen or twenty sessions on scooter and/or the dune
I fit that description and I have chosen never to tow.
- So you're obviously the go-to person from whom we should get all information on why we shouldn't tow.

- And you also chose to stop mountain flying decades ago before your number could come up. So you're also the go-to person from whom we should get all information on why we should only mountain fly.

- Fuck you and the horse you rode in on. A REAL hang glider pilot is gonna jump at every opportunity to fly every flavor of legitimate hang glider aviation he can get his hands on. That's what I did - dunes, beaches, hills, buttes, ridges, slots, cliffs, ramps, winch, static, boat, truck, trailer, AT, balloon, hand, thermal, cloud dive, rain, snow, XC, RLF, trainers, single surface, double surface, topless, aerobatics...
Others who I respect choose to tow pretty regularly.
Really? I don't respect anyone who does stupid dangerous shit on hang gliders. And I don't mean loops or low level aero in smooth air. I mean flying bent pin pro toad releases and Standard Aerotow Weak Links. And it's a pretty good bet that anybody whom an asshole such as you respects I don't in the least.
They figure they can deal with whatever goes wrong.
With their easily reachable Reliable Releases and Infallible Weak Links what's the worst that could happen? A slightly bowed downtube would be my guess.
We each look at the same thing and come to different decisions.
Then at least one of you is WRONG.
Nobody who thinks the way I do has ever been killed towing.
Case closed then. Also nobody who only ever flew at Ridgely ever got killed at High Rock cliff launching or at Hyner View clipping a tree after trying to line up for final.
But an awful lot of people who think the opposite are no longer around.
Name one. Nobody in the modern history of modern hang glider towing ever got scratched without having done something stupid. Granted, one of those stupid things is trusting the wrong individual on the front end but the vast majority of shit is back end.
Mike, I completely disagree with you about cliff launching.
First, cliff launching is a choice.
Not so much if you want to fly and a cliff is your only really viable option.
Like towing, you don't need to do it to fly.
- Lucky you.
- But you haven't flown for decades so this is pretty academic.
But when a pilot launches from the ground, be it cliff launch or slope launch, he makes all the decisions.
And tow launches are all from outer space so we can ignore those issues.
He decides when the wind is right and when it is safe to launch.
And those windows a virtually always way narrower when foot launching - free or tow.
I taught my wiremen to open their fingers to make sure I was flying my wing 100%.
Only then would I yell, "Clear!"
I thought you said you make all the decisions. To whom are you yelling, "Clear!" Wire crew? Then don't they have to then decide whether or not to comply with your command?
But every tow pilot places his fate in the hands of others for an extended and dangerous period of time.
Then why are you using wire crew? That's a usually a committee of two to four individuals exerting way the hell more control over the aircraft into which you're (presumably) hooked than you'll ever be able to muster. If a guy on a sidewire feels like really fucking you over (the way I do just about all the time) he won't have the least problem doing so. Ask me for help sometime if you don't believe me.

And I don't hear you telling us all about how wire crews are for fags - the way a lot of you California guys do. Whatsamattah? Is the memory of what happened with Craig Pirazzi just trying to move his glider to launch position still too fresh? And still nothing on Kevin Kader beyond being "unsuccessful".
It's an entirely different game.
Yeah. Your wire crew can fuck you over a lot more effectively and easily than your tow driver usually can. On tow things hafta be lined up just right for some douchebag like Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney to fix whatever's going on back there by giving you the rope. And that's about the only nasty arrow an AT driver has in his quiver. He's gotta get his own plane safely off the runway and all you gotta do is follow him. And unless there's something extremely nasty and rare going on with the air I can safely abort the tow any time I feel like it.
I would go so far as to say towing is a different sport.
The launch method doesn't define the sport. If you see my glider six thousand feet up at cloudbase in the Chattanooga area you'll have no fucking clue as to whether I launched from the Lockout Mountain Flight Park ramp with a wire crew or runway behind a Dragonfly. And, generally speaking, once you've cleared the two hundred foot kill zone you're immune to tow related safety issues. And you clear the kill zone in a rather small fraction of a minute. And if you start the clocks running at the back of the launch ramp and the second the dolly starts rolling you clear the AT kill zone a lot faster, easier, safer than you clear the ramp kill zone.

You want simpler/safer?

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A maximum of two individuals involved in the actual AT launch. (No cart monkey has ever been involved enough to be able to fuck things up.)

You wanna count this:

http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TTTFlymail/message/11545
Cart stuck incidents
Keith Skiles - 2011/06/02 19:50:13 UTC

I witnessed the one at Lookout. It was pretty ugly. Low angle of attack, too much speed and flew off the cart like a rocket until the weak link broke, she stalled and it turned back towards the ground.
That wasn't a tow launch crash. That was a free flight landing crash which happened ONLY because the focal point of her safe towing system kicked in to increase the safety of the towing operation.
One that belongs in the USHPA alongside speedflying.
Yeah, why don't you use your vast influence with u$hPa and get that codified.

And while we're on that subject... Let's take a look at the Special Skills. Cliff Launch and Surface, Platform, Aero Tow are all Two level. Assisted Windy Cliff Launch and Restricted Landing Field are all Three Level. And nobody's ever questioned or found the least fault with those rankings. And that doesn't lend a helluva lot of credence to your position, does it?
User avatar
Tad Eareckson
Posts: 9149
Joined: 2010/11/25 03:48:55 UTC

Re: launching

Post by Tad Eareckson »

http://ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=27&t=2434
Rethinking towing
Rick Masters - 2016/08/21 16:49:45 UTC

Towing adds additional risk to hang gliding.
Of course it does.
Whereas there are no risks whatsoever that can be associated with any elements of mountain launches: unimproved launches - slots - cliffs - ramps - crews - trees - boulders - katabatic flows - rotors - freight train thermals - first landing option a thousand feet down and a mile out...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=34243

Scroll down to ziggyc's post and those that follow.
Fatal HG crash in Tres Pinos CA 4-3-2016
Page 14
2016/08/18 22:08:22 UTC
Reading posts of instructors on hanggliding.org turns my stomach when they place blame on a novice.
- There's very little that DOESN'T turn my stomach on The Jack Show.

- You won't acknowledge the existence of Kite Strings 'cause you know that we can and frequently will tear your stupid balls off and shove them down your stupid throat. And that holds true for the rest of this shit-hole of a sport. If what we're saying over here were the slightest bit illegitimate a legitimate mainstream would be quoting and dismembering it all the fuckin' time. And that's NEVER happened in the course of our nine year history.

- There's extremely little one is exercising in the way of pilot skill in any flavor of towing down in the kill zone. You're coming off a cart or a dolly already proned out with both hands on the control bar just holding the pitch at around trim and preventing - as opposed to initiating and coordinating - turns. And if these are students this is being done in smooth air. Compare/Contrast free flight foot launching and foot landing. If instructors are dumping on the victim here they're also the ones covering all the free flight issues - with the possible exception of foot launching - exactly the same as the hill, dune, beach guys. So what's that tell us about the sport at large?
It is the responsibility of instructors to protect novices.
That's not what the u$hPa waiver says.
Novices should never be put in situations where they can kill themselves in a moment of fear or confusion.
- Since the sport is fundamentally aeronautically incompetent it's virtually always in fear and/or confusion mode.

- Remember...

http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=795
AL's Flight At Packsaddle 10-04-11
Al Hernandez - 2011/10/07 07:32:23 UTC
...
The thought of a high flight was kind of a shock, since I haven't flown altitude since last year, so, fear and confusion was doing the Macarena in my head.
...
I flew the HG, but didn't know how to land a hang glider or I forgot about landing and busted my left leg.
...
I didn't sleep that night, trying to remember how to turn a glider, the inputs, plus I had not flown in a month or better... I tossed and turned in my bed that night, this will be my last day on Earth.
...
I was feeling anxiety, not so much of flying the glider, but the turns, the turns, this is what I was worried about this was the part that was going to kill me... I have had payout winch tows, scooter tows, flying straight patters and I do fine with this kind of flying, but a mountain...
...
The Drive up the hill was killing me, as we were going up the rocky road to the top of Pac. I felt like I was going to puke. My turn was up the sand of time for me was running low, time to nut up, or shut up. Jeff had a big smile on his face watching me change colors from Brown to White...
...
I had not launched yet, because I was having an anxiety attack at the time...
That's all free flight - and I don't recall you participating in or commenting on that discussion.
Hang gliding instruction has lost its way and now threatens the future of the sport.
Tell me when its way changed. Hang gliding instruction was bullshit on Day One and it's been fairly steadily rolling south ever since.
There was never some magic point that hang gliding evolved to where towing became a necessary part.
- A rather odd statement given that originally hang gliding was 100.00 percent towing.

- Good freakin' luck in Texas - douchebag. Although in your particular case you'd have gotten exactly the same airtime there as you have in California over the course of the past quarter century.

- Seems to be a necessary part now - asshole. The sport's currently spiraling towards extinction and the manufacturers are more aware of that fact than anyone else. Wills Wing Demo Days sites I've been able to find so far...

Fifteen sites or operations:
Morningside, Ellenville, Ridgely, Manquin, Currituck, Kitty Hawk, Henson, Lockout, Quest, Wallaby, Wharton, Phoenix, AJX, Tres Pinos, Ed Levin, Funston
- Seven tow only: Ridgely, Manquin, Currituck, Quest, Wallaby, Wharton, Phoenix
- Four towing and slope options: Morningside, Lockout, Tres Pinos, Ed Levin
- Two slope no-breakdown turnaround: Kitty Hawk, AJX
- One top landable: Funston
- Two mountain or escarpment ramp only: Ellenville, Henson

That's probably a pretty good representation of where and how gliders are being most frequently and effectively flown - populated regions, heavy towing bias, low pain turnaround between flights. The Owens Valley bullshit isn't sustainable and never was - 'specially after aerotowing rendered it totally obsolete for high mileage XC.
It has always been optional.
Name something in hang gliding that ISN'T optional. Flames racing up the mountain's slopes from all directions but that never seems to happen in real life.
It has generally been regarded as a choice for advanced pilots.
- By the Board of Directors of the World Hang Gliding Opinions Clearing Association. Who the fuck are you to pronounce what anything in hang gliding has generally been regarded as? And you don't even make any distinction between glider-only and pilot-and-glider bridle connection.

- In hang gliding:
-- tension is generally regarded as pressure
-- a weak link is generally regarded as the focal point of a safe towing system
-- a hang check in the setup are is generally regarded as bulletproof assurance that one will be connected to one's glider as he runs off the ramp
-- Jim Rooney was generally regarded as having a keen intellect and the world's foremost authority on every aspect of the sport
-- it's a pretty good bet that worldwide the vast majority of legitimate beginning students start their training via tow

- Bull fucking shit. In the current u$hPa rating system with respect to Special Skills... Surface, Platform, Aero are Two and Assisted Wind Cliff is Three level. And I've never heard anybody take much in the way of issue with that structuring - 'specially you.
It only became popular when instructors and flight parks realized they could make a ton of money doing it.
Commercial flight parks? Name some commercial flight parks that were originally slope launch and later incorporated towing. Lockout Mountain Flight Park would qualify and maybe Kitty Hawk Kites with a big asterisk. The later started out mostly as a solo tourist ride factory on the dunes and much later got towing going at Currituck - 43 miles up the road. Morningside was originally slope and later was taken over by Kitty Hawk and began incorporating Dragonfly AT. But good freakin' luck with the vast majority of them which are AT flatland.

Furthermore... These operations make the money they can on tandem thrill rides thinly disguised as instruction in which the "student" never gets a hand anywhere near the control bar and the incident rate is pretty much nonexistent.

Baltimore/Washington area hang gliding got rolling in the Seventies and Eighties. People learned at area hills or down at Kitty Hawk and most of the airtime was racked up at High Rock, McConnellsburg, Woodstock. Ridgely opened up 1999 Memorial Day Weekend at a point when I pretty much totally burned out on the ridges and all the bullshit involved in flying them. People flocked there in droves. Set up next to your car, tow up to workable altitude for fifteen bucks, pin off, spend hours playing around with cloudbase, land next to your car. Explain that.

Consequential launch incidents save one were EXCLUSIVELY the results of Standard Aerotow Weak Links increasing the safety of the towing operation but there were no injuries associated with. The exception was John Claytor 2014/06/02 on total shit equipment when the douchebags were pushing their luck with crosswind at their annual pecker measuring contest. Neck, career ender.
It's sooooooo convenient.
Oh yeah?

http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=2467
weak links
Jim Rooney - 2007/07/22 22:30:28 UTC

Hahahahahahahahaha
Oh that's just rich!
Riiiiiight... it's my attention span at issue here....
and I'm the one that's arrogant!
HAHAHAHAHAHAHAAHAHA

No, I'm not being nice. No, I do not feel the need to be nice. You're trying to convince people to be less safe. I don't want to be on the other end of the rope when someone listening to this drivel smashes in.

I've heard it a million times before from comp pilots insisting on towing with even doubled up weaklinks (some want no weaklink). I tell them the same thing I'm telling you... suck it up. You're not the only one on the line. I didn't ask to be a test pilot. I can live with your inconvenience.

Please tell me again what's wrong with the wheel? Why you keep trying to reinvent it?

Yes, please fall back on the "I'm just saying they could be stronger" bull when you've made it quite clear that anything lower than cable (1200lb) is acceptable.

The simple fact is that you're not improving the system.
You're trying to make it more convenient and trying to convince yourself that you should be towing with a stronger weaklink.

Enjoy your delusion.
It SHOULD...
Dr. Trisa Tilletti - 2012/06

Trisa 1: You and I have flown sailplanes for almost as long as we have flown hang gliders. We own two sailplanes and have two airplanes that we use for towing full-size sailplanes. In all the time that we have flown and towed sailplanes, we have not experienced or even seen a sailplane weak link break.

Trisa 2: It's not that it doesn't happen, but it is a rare occurrence. Russell Brown, a founder of Quest Air in Florida and a well-known Dragonfly tug pilot, is also a sailplane pilot, tug pilot, and A&P mechanic for a large commercial sailplane towing operation in Florida. He told us that, like us, he has never seen a sailplane weak link break, either.
...be. And now that I think about it... Towing sailplanes can be no more dangerous than towing hang gliders in your particular book so if towing's the only way they can get up and they're NEVER breaking weak links...

Ridgely collapsed after the end of the 2015 season and area recreational flying took a devastating hit. And if you go to my old club's home page...

http://chgpa.org
Capital Hang Gliding and Paragliding Association
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The only ways you tell that wasn't a mountain launched flight are the by noting the piece o' crap two point Lockout release festooning the port control tube, bent pin backup release coming off his right shoulder, streaming bridles and by being able to identify RJD on the surface. They've been extinct for over four years now and Capitol still chooses that photo to represent, advertise, remember Mid Atlantic flying. And nobody's paying them or making a dime from it.
The prominent idiot who claims towing is safer than footlaunch leaves me speechless.
How I wish that were true.
You cannot pile on additional layers of risk and complexity to hang gliding (or anything else) and make it safer.
Bull fucking shit.

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Complexity's the word stupid useless twats like you use for engineering. The engineering's virtually all on the truck and that makes it possible for the two humans involved to do nothing but drive seated with both hands on the steering wheel and fly prone with both hands on the control bar... Compare/Contrast:

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150 percent the number of individuals involved in that one, Rick. Eliminate the u$hPa certified Launch Director and the flight goes off OK.
The historical record makes this obvious. Towing is dangerous. There are additional risks.
- Go fuck yourself.

- Name one.

- And of course none of the risks present at any point in the history of the practice of hang glider towing - Infallible Weak Link, Reliable Release, pro toad bridle, Birrenator, Dragonfly breakaway tow mast protector, Dragonfly based Pilot In Command, polypro towline - could ever addressed and neutralized. So much more fun to sit back, watch people getting needlessly mangled and killed, use them to support your hobby of pissing all over towing while not actually flying yourself or even contributing anything the hang glider free slope launch flying. Just a has-been stupid glider jock.
To some, such as myself, these additional risks are totally unacceptable.
Good. Stay on the ground and far away from the operations. They're plenty enough choked up with human total crud as things are.
Furthermore, towing is kiting, not hang gliding.
- Yeah, like 100.00 percent of sailplaning is done. So there's really no such thing as sailplaning. All they do is kite.

- 2012/07/03 Zapata. Dustin Martin and Jonny Durand fly eleven hours and 475 miles NNW setting a world XC record that will never be broken. But it was just kiting - not actual hang gliding - 'cause they spent three and a half minutes on tow behind Dragonflies to get started.

- Fuck the Owens Valley. It only had significance in the history of the sport before the advent of efficient platform and aero.
I don't recognize kiting as hang gliding.
Cool. I don't recognize you as anything more than a mouth with no brain attached anywhere.
To me, it is foolish and unnecessary and brings unneeded additional casualties to our sport.
And here you are still running your mouth. Where's an unneeded additional casualty to our sport when ya really need one?
Novices are endangered by this tow-centric commercialization of training.
John Seward didn't get endangered by this tow-centric commercialization of training. He got endangered by the only mountain site Texas used to have available for hang gliding. And Scot Trueblood would've been OK if a mountain hadn't gotten into some air he was trying to use.
A genuine national hang gliding association would not play a role in this commercialism.
And you'd be just the person this sport needs to get one of those going. Please let me know as soon as possible when that happens so I can stop holding my breath.
No endorsement. Maybe no comment would be wise.
So you're saying you'd be wiser if you'd shut the fuck up on this issue?
Any towing should be the responsibility of individual chapters.
Yeah. Just like:

http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=17&t=1081
Platform towing /risk mitigation / accident
Sam Kellner - 2012/06/29 13:59:51 UTC

This topic is generated to better understand safe platform/payout operations.
In accordance with USHPA, the accident report was submitted 6-16, the evening of the accident.
SWTHG forum is moderated. Please stay on topic. Remarks relevant to safety and accuracy in reporting are welcome.
False speculations and suppositions, as showed up soon after 6-16, only reflect, IMO, the insecurity of those individuals makeing them.
Sam Kellner - 2012/07/03 02:25:58 UTC

No, you don't get an accident report.
Why is it unacceptable on a national but OK on a local level? It's just OK to kill pilots locally?

This former USHGA rockstar total douchebag gets a near total free pass from both commercial and recreational surface and aero towing.

Yours Truly:
- learned to fly and racked up virtually all of his flights and airtime up to and through Four level on dunes, bluffs, hills, buttes, mountains, over-the-back
- loved the idea of towing from Day One
- jumped ship to tow-only as soon as the option became viable
- worked his ass off over decades to:
-- optimize and improve existing equipment
-- develop superior equipment
-- have legitimate SOPs complied with
-- debunk lunatic Hewett based towing theory
-- et cetera

And who gets the international coordinated attacks?
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