http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=33404
Rapid parachute deployment
Dave Hopkins - 2015/09/14 16:48:48 UTC
My rotor has a carbon back plate and side mount chute. I can see the same scenario happening. A failed back plate is likely to seriously deform and compress the chute container. The price we pay for performance?
No. The price we pay for shoddiness, shit engineering, stupidity.
Jim Gaar - 2015/09/14 17:23:25 UTC
NMERider - 2015/09/12 04:47:26 UTC
There is nothing wrong with the current reserve deployment systems. The thing that is wrong is twofold:
1 - Too few pilots do enough practice tosses on a regular basis.
2 - Too many pilots freeze when it's time to toss their reserves.
We fly hang gliders
You never have been or ever will be any part of any we I'd ever be part of.
We take on the risk that accompnies the sport
Get fuckd
There is no perfect solution unless we don't fly!
Goddam! You're right! I'm gonna get me a three thousand dollar racing harness which disables my thousand dollar rapid deployment parachute whenever I tumble and hit those thermals as hard as I can. Parachutes that work when we need them to are for girls and faggots.
NMERider - 2015/09/14 17:40:02 UTC
That's not a great person to not treat like total shit, Jonathan.
NMERider - 2015/09/14 17:44:40 UTC
I agree that increased risk often comes with increased performance...
Yeah - OFTEN. A Falcon 4 ain't always gonna beat a T2C in the survival gain and the risks to which we subject ourselves need to be MANAGEABLE. And a parachute ONLY comes into play after a situation wasn't or couldn't have been managed.
That parachute configuration is TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE. Fuckin' moronic to pay a permanent cost, weight, and drag penalty for a system most likely to fail in the one situation a competent pilot is most likely to need it to stay alive.
...but a lot of risk goes with lack of funding to perform testing and development of higher performing systems that are also safer.
Yeah? Jeff Shapiro apparently found the time and resources to engineer a totally bogus solution to the problem. "This harness will still jam your parachute in a tumble but if you have a mile of air under you at the time and are able to use it to pry the parachute out of the container as you're passing 250 miles per hour this will greatly reduce the likelihood of you being converted to a jellyfish by dropping the opening shock from 20 Gs to 19.995 Gs!"
http://www.ushawks.org/forum/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=992
Continuing Saga of Weak Link and Release Mechanism Failures
Warren Narron - 2012/03/06 02:26:04 UTC
Tad, used to post about as nice as anyone, and nicer than some. Remember?
Blowback... You put in a thousand plus hour$, tooling, te$ting and documenting safety issues for the masses and have it ignored and suppressed by people, for whatever reason, and you would get testy too.
You're fairly snarky as it is, and you haven't done the work...
I worked my fuckin' ass off for years developing, testing, refining, documenting...
http://www.chgpa.org/forums/viewtopic.php?f=2&t=3347
Tad's barrel release tested
Janni Papakrivos - 2008/06/30 15:35:44 UTC
Tad showed me the release system he installed in Hugh's glider. I was amazed at the quality and complexity of the system. Being able to tow and release without ever having to take your hands off the base tube is wonderful and much safer.
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?t=12587
weak links (here we go)
Patrick Halfhill - 2009/06/21 23:22:23 UTC
You and I met at the ECC a few years ago. We spent 45 minutes or more together going over your system. I saw it first hand. I was quite impressed with the quality of engineering and the time you spent on it.
...the best goddam aerotow release system this planet will ever see which could be built into any factory hang glider for less than the cost of a VG system and less than the slap-on garbage that comes out of Quallaby and Lockout. And it WOULD SELL like fuckin' hotcakes. And I tried to GIVE IT AWAY and just had it and me ignored and pissed all over. And so far there've been at least five people who've died and a shitload more crashed and mangled for its want.
A lot of safety features in other consumer products evolved from racing and competition and even from military.
Whereas in hang gliding we tend to get bare basetubes, pro toad bridles, Davis Links, and parachute disabling harnesses.
There is so little profit to be made in hang gliders and our equipment that the funds simply don't exist to perform all the R&D we all like to enjoy the benefits of.
I did the R&D like nobody has before or will again. But Jim Keen-Intellect Rooney won't pull homemade gear, funky shit, or test pilots. He'd much rather be breaking John Claytor's neck locking him out on Industry Standard gear in a gusty fifteen plus mile per hour ninety cross on an improvised runway.
People are paying fortunes for comp equipment and opportunities to fly it. Trust me, they'll fork out an extra three hundred bucks if that's what it takes to get a USEABLE parachute system on a racing harness. But the industry isn't admitting that it has a deadly problem and would rather spend it's efforts providing a shoddy bogus fix for the deadly problem it doesn't have.
These harnesses are being developed and sold to give tiny performance advantages to dickheads who have crossing finish lines twelve seconds ahead of other such dickheads as their primary purpose for flying hang gliders. And the meet heads are trying to present a facade of valuing safety to the participants, sport, and general public.
http://ozreport.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=31052
Poll on weaklinks
Jim Rooney - 2013/03/04 19:31:36 UTC
I still won't tow people with doubled up weaklinks. You don't get to "make shit up". I don't "make shit up" for that matter either.
We all play by the same rules, or we don't play.
Morningside decided that they were happy with 200lb weaklink. They changed their tug's link and they don't just pass the stuff out either. If you'd like to know more about it... go ask them.
The law of the land at comps was 130lb greenspot or you don't tow. Seriously. It was announced before the comp that this would be the policy. Some guys went and made their case to the safety committee and were shut down. So yeah, sorry... suck it up.
So...
- "No parachute, no participation. (We don't give a flying fuck whether or not you have a parachute that has any chance of working in an emergency (hell, we MANDATE use of releases we KNOW can't be operated in any emergency situation), we're just requiring that you have one.)"
- CIVL should OUTLAW these harnesses for all sanctioned competitions beyond spot landing contests on the dunes. But as things are competitors are rewarded for flying no-parachute-option harnesses just as they are for flying without wheels or skids.
- If we can get to the smoldering wreckage sites before the official investigative teams and recover a few videos of popular hotshot comp pilots frantically and futilely attempting to pry parachutes out of jammed deployment ports, maybe sue a harness manufacturer or two back into the Stone Age, we'll see things move in a good direction. But nothing less is gonna do the trick.