I've seen maybe two exchanges along those lines.
All the bullshit messages that we send to people coming into this stupid sport...
Do this so you can assume you're hooked in on launch.
Do that so you can assume you're hooked in on launch.
"Just prior" means no less than five and no more that thirty to sixty minutes.
A weak link is perhaps the most important safety device in the whole operation. It is intended to limit the ultimate towing forces in a towing situation and obviously must be very reliable.
But we don't use them 'cause they're a royal pain in the ass and we got tired of wasting time and crashing.
If they differ by more than ten percent you do not have a reliable and predictable weak link system.
The weak link at the glider end must have a breaking strength that will break before the towline tension exceeds twice the weight of the hang glider pilot and glider combination.
A weak link is an integral part of any towing system in order to prevent overloading and lockouts.
The biggest fallacy in towing is that a weak link will protect you from a lockout.
...
Glad SOMEONE enjoyed it.
Aw, c'mon. A third of the club members who bothered to vote pulled the keep lever. That's pretty good considering:
Your posts are destroying our club.
and the majority is totally evil anyway.
And I'm almost positive that even Martin who, unaccountably, voted to get rid of me enjoyed my participation a whole lot more than his 2010/01/17 winch tow "landing".
The Cortland stuff is designed to break at a specific tension.
Yeah. We just saw how well that worked out, didn't we? (Prepared to apologize in the event your batch of "200" turns out to be from a counterfeit Chinese knockoff.)
I don't know much about sailing...
Work on that. Sailing is about a thousand times better a model for hang gliding than hang gliding is. The glider manufacturers figured that out a long time ago.
...but from what I've read about leech line it's not supposed to break so I wouldn't think it would be made targeting a specific breaking point.
1. You haven't been hanging out with Rooney, have you?
2. No, sailing lines aren't supposed to break. They're made to hold, not stretch, and be thin and light. And the manufacturers would all be thrilled if they were infinitely strong. But they're damn near all made to pretty tight specs and they're damn near all gonna be pretty predictable.
Perhaps just for the benefit of anyone tuning in late...
The ONLY reason we're concerned with accurate predictability concerns the primary/secondary weak links spread and getting as much edge as safely possible in the event of a primary bridle wrap. Otherwise we're just trying to get way the hell above 130 pound Greenspot while staying below the point at which the glider starts feeling serious pain. That's a HUGE target and you're pretty safe anywhere inside of it.
Other than that ALL of the people who obsess about accuracy, batches, types of knots, and Dragonfly engines and throttle settings are TOTAL IDIOTS.
http://ozreport.com/3.066
Weaklinks
Davis Straub - 1999/06/06
A few weeks later I was speaking with Rhett Radford at Wallaby Ranch about weaklinks and the issue of more powerful engines, and he felt that stronger weaklinks (unlike those used at Wallaby or Quest) were needed. He suggested between five and ten pounds of additional breaking strength.
Ya shoot for one and a half Gs and if you're off half a G either way it's not that B an FD.
In hang gliding '205' is always mentioned but I have no idea what that means.
Pound.
And I don't know if the stuff is made by different manufacturers...
I've ONLY seen it come from Bainbridge International - formerly Howe & Bainbridge - Aquabatten Dacron Leechline, 5/64 inch, E335. (And trust me, I did a lot of panicky searching after getting caught short when my wonderful little Viking Boat Supplies closed its doors five years ago.)
...as the only place I've seen it sold is Mojo's (without any reference to manufacturer).
http://www.fisheriessupply.com/productdetail.aspx?iid=H/B%20E332&cid=14982
I got a thousand foot spool from them for seventy bucks early 2007. (At this point I'm guessing it's gonna last a lot longer than I will - especially since Ridgely decided it really didn't wanna split it with me after all.)
I note they're specifying a 225 pound tensile strength but it's still E332 and I'll wager a couple of hundred feet that it tests the same.
How do I know my stuff breaks at the same point as yours?
Still got my address?
Given my preference for a little more margin over the top, how about Tens instead?
Nines. 125 percent. That's a BEAUTIFUL spread. Don't mess with beauty. It's so cool watching a bridle wrap (which yours won't) and KNOWING that you won't hafta do anything and be off before you can blink.
And just to put things into perspective...
Let's say the Bridle Link ten pounds before the Primary Weak Link - which we're calling 260 pounds.
Your potential problems can't even begin until the towline tension hits 435 - that's WELL over three times normal.
You're probably never gonna see that. I've beaten the 130 pound Greenspot well into a HORRENDOUS lockout even with a pretty sluggish response.
And if you're flying behind a Dragonfly you're probably gonna have the rope well south of that point anyway. Even 130 pound Greenspot clones pull that trick often enough.
If you DO blow the Bridle Link the Primary Bridle's gotta wrap. I'd call that probability remote - probably WAY less than one in a hundred. (If you reversed ends I'd call it just about impossible.)
If you've made it through those hoops you've still got your hand in the trigger loop of a release that I think is gonna be a lot more effective than Matt says it is in the owner's manual.
You've got way better things to keep you awake at night than all those things lining up - 'specially since there are still hundreds of morons out there with cheap crappy bridles regularly using their secondary releases as backups and undoubtedly a few still using them as primaries - and we're not hearing about them crashing and burning.