Hook in failure in New Zealand
I DO say the fear will help me. I was scared shitless of launching unhooked from the moment of learning of the phenomenon through a foot launch flying career spanning over a quarter century.Jim Rooney - 2006/09/24 21:19:29 UTC
You might say that the fear will help you...
Steve Kinsley...
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=1153
Hooking In
...says it will help him. He didn't have a blade of grass growing on the neuron path through the tangle of Alzheimer's plaque well over eight years ago any more than he did eighteen years ago. And I really doubt he has one now.Steve Kinsley - 2005/10/06 22:57:44 UTC
But I did have an incident where I failed to hook in. At High Rock. Eddie Miller saved my sorry butt. Sure woke me up. Too bad Bill did not have a scare like that. I now have a nice DSL line through the tangle of Alzheimer's plaque. That was at least ten years ago and there is still not a blade of grass on that neuron path. So that is not how I am going to die.
Rob Kells and his colleagues at Wills Wing...
...say that it will help them. And he had over thirty thousand flight split between five individuals in the way of data to support that position.Rob Kells - 2005/12
Always lift the glider vertically and feel the tug on the leg straps when the harness mains go tight, just before you start your launch run. I always use this test.
My partners (Steve Pearson and Mike Meier) and I have over 25,000 hang glider flights between us and have managed (so far) to have hooked in every time. I also spoke with test pilots Ken Howells and Peter Swanson about their methods (another 5000 flights). Not one of us regularly uses either of the two most popular methods outlined above. Each of us agrees that it is not a particular method, but rather the fear of launching unhooked that makes us diligent to be sure we are hooked in every time before starting the launch run.
Allen Sparks...
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=18876
Hang glider Crash
...seems to have done fairly well with it.Allen Sparks - 2010/09/07 01:03:18 UTC
Evergreen, Colorado
Oscar,
I'm very happy you weren't injured.
Helen,
Thanks for the Tad 'lift and tug' reminder.
I have launched unhooked and experienced the horror of hanging by my fingers over jagged rocks ... and the surreal result - i.e. not being significantly injured.
I am a firm believer in 'lift and tug' and the mindset of assuming I am not hooked in. It is motivated by the recurring memory of my own experience ... and the tragic deaths and life-altering injuries of good friends.
And lemme tell ya sumpin', douchebag...
For the people that get this issue, in the situations which render douchebags particularly vulnerable to unhooked launches - distraction, interruption, delays, stress, rushing, fatigue, equipment problems, adverse launch conditions - the fear level goes UP.
So you're an authority on MY instincts and what they will say. So where did you get qualified for that area of expertise? In the tug pilot training course where they teach you that a double Bailey Link on is perfectly OK on a tandem but a deadly threat to the tug on a solo?...but your instincts will say otherwise...
How 'bout NOT telling me what my instincts will say. 'Specially if your extrapolating from what YOUR instincts are telling YOU - 'cause my instincts, along with just about all the rest of my circuitry - are pretty much the polar opposite of yours.
I looked up "highlevel" in my dictionary. Couldn't find it. Is there some reference you can send me to so's I can get up to speed on this?...(the fear is highlevel...
1. The capacity for high level thought was obviously the first thing that got tossed out of YOUR brain - undoubtedly in utero as a consequence of your sainted mother hitting the bottle WAY too hard and often....thought, and highlevel thought is the first thing that gets tossed out of your brain..
2. I never thought that one needed much in the way of high level thought circuitry to be constantly scared shitless of ending up on the scree below the north ramp at McConnellsburg due to a common and easily made mistake that can hit one at any time from the setup area to the word "Clear."
3. But I guess you must be right because only the most intelligent 0.01 percent of hang gliding people ARE scared enough within the couple seconds prior to running off the ramp to do the most simple, effortless, speedy, effective, and critical of checks.
Consider THIS, shit-for-brains......else we'd never launch unhooked in the first place).
SOME of "us" AREN'T ever launching unhooked in the first place. And we really don't need to be lectured by assholes who HAVE launched unhooked in the first place and thus feel they're the top experts in the field. Maybe you should just shut the fuck up and see if you can learn anything from some of the weekend warrior muppets who started flying HANG GLIDERS when you were in diapers and never came close to screwing the pooch you did - with a paying customer on board.