Personal Journals about Hang Gliding

Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Rick Masters » Sat Aug 09, 2014 10:08 am

Letter to a British journalist
August 9, 2014: I will spare you the inevitable, unending outrage from paraglider pilots by sending you this email rather than posting a comment. Bill Young is the 1252nd global paragliding fatality that I have verified. The actual number is surely much higher. The underlying cause of the majority of these fatalities is the collapse of the soaring parachute in turbulence. This is the "freak gust of wind" so commonly attributed to collapse incidents -- but turbulence is a normal state of the atmosphere and there is nothing unusual about it. The same thermal turbulence that a hang glider so eagerly seeks out to gain altitude can sometimes collapse a paraglider and send its occupant plunging to his death.
In the late 1970's and early 1980's, I worked with a hang gliding manufacturer in California as part of a wave of activity to certify new designs to emerging safety requirements for dive recovery and structural robustness. In only a few years, this certification process brought about the reduction of yearly fatalities from a peak of over 70 to perhaps less than a dozen worldwide. The remaining fatalities were mostly due to pilot error which can be reduced through training. We were proud of this accomplishment.
Over the past 28 years, however, the paragliding industry and your own British free-flight organization has made a mockery of such efforts, claiming vast improvements in safety in the face of no apparent change at all -- as evidenced by the 52 global paragliding deaths I have verified so far this year. The root of the problem is the screamingly-obvious lack of a rigid structure to maintain the shape of the airfoil in turbulence. This is exactly the problem we solved in hang gliding and since 1979-80, no hang gliders that failed certification have been successfully marketed.
But the national free-flight organizations around the world made a huge exception to these critically important safety efforts when they embraced soaring parachutes. This was unconscionable. Paragliding should have remained under the purview of skydiving but soon the ranks swelled with new paragliding enthusiasts and hang gliding was reduced to a minority influence worldwide. In other words, paragliding took over the existing infrastructure of all national hang gliding organizations (in much the same way a new company will acquire a shell corporation) and threw out the hard-won safety requirements because they could not be applied to soaring parachutes.
Family and paragliding associates will always say "He died doing what he loved," but I suspect that, in his last moments, Bill Young felt betrayed by the paraglider that killed him. But this may have been his saving grace because collapsed paragliders, more often than not, create enough drag to almost kill their occupants, leaving them with injuries so horrible that only the most severe tortures of the Spanish Inquisition seem comparable.
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Mon Aug 11, 2014 9:36 am

From an email message titled: "USHPA Landing Zone - Spring/Summer 2014", received on June 26th, 2014:

Mini-Wing Program Takes Flight

The Mini-Wing Program has launched! Mini-Wings are considered a special skill under the Paragliding program, available to pilots holding at least a P2 rating. These special skills can only be issued by a Mini-Wing Instructor. Clinics are already being held so that Advanced Paragliding Instructors can be trained and appointed as Mini-Wing Instructors. Once appointed, Mini-Wing Instructors can be found on the website: List of Mini-Wing Instructors

For more information about the requirements for the Mini-Wing 1 (M1) and Mini-Wing 2 (M2) special skills, refer to Sections E & F of SOP 12-02.19.

Please be advised that USHPA, under its authority from the FAA under exemption #4721, does NOT currently authorize using mini-wings or tandem mini-wings for tandem flights. Additional information on the moratorium will be provided once a full review has been completed.

Please contact the USHPA office if you have any questions about the new Mini-Wing program.


Safety Advisory

The Accident Reporting Committee would like to remind all USHPA pilots of the dynamic risks associated with spring and early summer conditions. In 2013 there were two paragliding fatalities with springtime thermic turbulence as potential contributing factors.

This year we are sad to report two additional fatalities early in the season with turbulence as a potential contributing factor. Both these events appear to have involved pilots on mini wings in strong winds and/or thermic turbulent conditions. Mini wings are relatively new and their reputation for stability as a result of high wing loading may be masking the potential for dramatic collapse - which is particularly dangerous near the ground. If conditions are strong enough to soar a mini wing, then mechanical turbulence, if present, will also be very strong and potentially lethal.

Pilots are reminded that spring and early summer can present some of the strongest and most turbulent thermic conditions of the year. Pilots face the temptation to fly in strong conditions after a winter of little or no flying. Spring and early summer are when our skills are at their weakest while conditions can be the most challenging and changeable - a potentially dangerous combination.

Recommendations:

  • Make conservative launch decisions. Avoid mid-day thermic conditions unless your skill level and recent flight proficiency are strong.
  • Maintain very active piloting focus and execution at all times. This is extremely important when flying under 400ft AGL (launching, scratching, low level ridge soaring, and landing)
  • Fly with others and encourage, model and support conservative launch decisions.

Fly High, Fly Far and Fly Safe

David Norwood
USHPA - Accident Reporting Committee Co-Chair (Paragliding)


USHPA Fatalities: 2014 Year to Date (May 1, 2014)

February 10, 2014 - Paul MacDonald

Paul MacDonald (34), achieved his P3 rating in 2006 but was not a current USHPA member at the time of the accident. He launched in cloud conditions at a familiar site and suffered fatal injuries after contacting power lines.

February 23, 2014 - Ronald Carter

Ron Carter (54), a P4 pilot and USHPA member since 2008, suffered fatal injuries after becoming entangled in his wing while practicing advanced maneuvers. Indications are that following the rapid inflation of his wing, which had dropped behind him, the subsequent surge sent Ron into his wing. He was unable to deploy his cut-away style reserve due to being entangled in his wing.

March 21, 2014 - Bence Pascu

Bence Pascu (34), a P2 pilot since August 2013, suffered fatal injuries after his mini wing deflated, apparently caused by mechanical turbulence while flying in strong winds.

April 23, 2014 - Eric Hill

Eric Hill (31), a P2 pilot since February 2013, suffered fatal injuries after a major collapse of his mini wing while soaring during mid-day conditions in close proximity to terrain.

June 20, 2014 - Kevin Smith

Kevin Smith (57), a P4 pilot since November 1997, suffered fatal injuries after a major collapse within a few minutes of launching. A spiral dive following the collapse resulted in the fatal impact with the steep slope of the hill.


I know that some of our US Hawks members are paragliding pilots (myself included). To borrow from Clint Eastwood's famous line:

    A man has got to know his limitations ... and the limitations of his wing.
Join a National Hang Gliding Organization: US Hawks at ushawks.org
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Every human at every point in history has an opportunity to choose courage over cowardice. Look around and you will find that opportunity in your own time.
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Rick Masters » Mon Aug 11, 2014 3:53 pm

I don't remember Clint Eastwood having a gun that turned into a noodle.
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Rick Masters » Tue Aug 12, 2014 2:48 pm

Deaths of soaring parachutists on North American mountain ranges in 2014

February 10, 2014 - Paul MacDonald (USA)
Collision with power lines.

February 23, 2014 - Ronald Carter (USA)
Collapse.

March 21, 2014 - Bence Pascu (USA)
Collapse.

April 23, 2014 - Eric Hill (USA)
Collapse.

June 20, 2014 - Kevin Smith (USA)
Collapse.

July 8, 2014 - Judd Feldman (Canada)
Collapse.

July 16, 2014 - David Norwood (USA)
Collapse.

Deaths of U.S. soaring parachutists on other mountain ranges

Bud Wruck of Damon, Texas
Collapse. Slovenia.

Deaths of U.S. hang glider pilots anywhere

ZERO.

I contend that hang glider pilots are destroying the future of their sport by accepting paragliding as a legitimate recreational aviation activity. They should forcefully condemn it. They should make it clear to newbies interested in free flight that PARAGLIDERS COLLAPSE AND KILL and hang gliders do not. Words mean things. Speak up. Actions mean things. Be hang glider pilots.
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Tue Aug 12, 2014 10:04 pm

RickMasters wrote:I don't remember Clint Eastwood having a gun that turned into a noodle.


:srofl:

Sorry, I was on the road all day yesterday and I didn't get a chance to respond until just now.

Also, please let me know if you'd like to port your previous accident lists to this topic. I can help you if you have the raw data.
Join a National Hang Gliding Organization: US Hawks at ushawks.org
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Rick Masters » Thu Aug 14, 2014 8:56 am

Embrace the tar baby!
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Thu Aug 14, 2014 10:54 am

RickMasters wrote:Embrace the tar baby!


I've been at Fort Funston this week (and in the past) urging them to join the US Hawks to protect their site from the PG takeover at USHPA. You'd be amazed at how much resistance there is to any alternative to USHPA.    :roll:
Join a National Hang Gliding Organization: US Hawks at ushawks.org
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Rick Masters » Sat Aug 16, 2014 7:21 pm

Also, please let me know if you'd like to port your previous accident lists to this topic.


Soaring parachutists are perfectly happy to be in the dark about their sport. And even if they wanted to know, other soaring parachutists would prevent the truth from reaching them. It's all about hiding the truth, lying to one's self and attacking the messenger, now. And a hang gliding forum is the wrong venue, anyway.

It's actually nice to clean my shoes of them and watch them slaughter themselves without any longer feeling a need to help or educate them. One can enlighten the ignorant but there's absolutely nothing to do for the stupid.

When I took Mythology of the Airframe down in 2012, I said to myself, "Not one soaring parachutist will ever ask to see the list again." I was right.
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Rick Masters » Mon Aug 18, 2014 7:14 pm

Image
Can you spot the real pilots?
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Re: Rick Masters: Superiority of Hang Gliders

Postby Bob Kuczewski » Tue Aug 19, 2014 12:56 pm

RickMasters wrote:When I took Mythology of the Airframe down in 2012, I said to myself, "Not one soaring parachutist will ever ask to see the list again." I was right.


I fly paragliders, and I would like to see the list published maintained. In fact, I'd like to see a similar list for hang gliders. There's a lot to be learned from mistakes in any wing. Our own "sampling" of the air is limited to our own experiences. Seeing the experiences of others allows us to gain experience that might take us hundreds of years to gather from our own flights.
Join a National Hang Gliding Organization: US Hawks at ushawks.org
View my rating at: US Hang Gliding Rating System
Every human at every point in history has an opportunity to choose courage over cowardice. Look around and you will find that opportunity in your own time.
Bob Kuczewski
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