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#1
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An annoying property of my Ventus 2C is that the safety harness does
not hold me into the seat. When encountering turbulance my upper torso leaves the seat and my head ocassionally hits the canopy. The position of the shoulder strap anchors aft of the cockpit is high enough that no downward force is exerted no matter how much the straps are tightened. The only thing this achieves is pulling the buckle up away from my abdomen. Are there any solutions or workarounds for this prollum? (Besides padding my hat?) ~ted/2NO |
#2
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Ted,
You did not say what system you have. If you have a four point, I would recommend upgrading to a six point harness. I did that on my Nimbus 2 and was the best investment I ever put in a glider. Will be doing the same in my Ventus this summer. I could run the ridge and near Vne final glides after that I was not comfortable before. Tim |
#3
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I had a 5th attachment point installed in my ship and it was a
considerable improvement over the 4 point original equipment harness. The crotch strap holds the lap belts in the proper position vertically such that, once they're tight, I don't move up or forward at all; very nice!. Ray Warshaw TTaylor at cc.usu.edu wrote: Ted, You did not say what system you have. If you have a four point, I would recommend upgrading to a six point harness. I did that on my Nimbus 2 and was the best investment I ever put in a glider. Will be doing the same in my Ventus this summer. I could run the ridge and near Vne final glides after that I was not comfortable before. Tim |
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#5
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Ian and others across The Pond,
I'd very much be interested in seeing the reports mentioned. Heck, I'd even be willing to pay for a copy (a novel idea I know). If anyone is willing to take this on, please contact me directly. Erik Mann LS8-18 (dedicated "6-pointer") |
#6
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I wandered around the web sites for Schroft, Gadringer, Davis and
Pacific Scientific today. For aircraft, they only appear to offer 3, 4 or 5 point harnesses. None of them offered 6 point harnesses for aircraft. Schroft does indeed make 6 point harnesses, but these harnesses are intended for motor racing and only carry FAI certification, not LBA or FAA certification. Wouldn't it be a violation (in the USA) of some FAR to fly a type certificated aircraft with a safety harness that didn't carry either FAA or LBA certification? -John |
#7
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Eric, from a pevious posting on r.a.s. I turned up the following:
Title of paper: Four and Five Point Glider Seat Harnesses - Static and Dynamic Tests Authors Dr Anthony M Segal, Lasham Gliding Society, UK Leslie P Neil, Senior Engineer Impact Protection, UK DERA Graham A Reece, Instrumentation Engineer, UK DERA Philip G Murtha, Impact Test Track Engineer, UK DERA (DERA = UK Defence Evaluation and Research Agency) This paper was presented to the gliding scientific organisation OSTIV during their meeting at Bayreuth, Germany, in August 1999 and no doubt will be available in full from OSTIV (OSTIV = Organisation Scientifique et Technique Internationale de Vol a Voile). The paper is 20 pages long but para 5b is worth quoting in full (QRF = Quick Release Fastening, that is, the harness release box):: "5 b) Observations After the Impact Test When a 5 point harness was being tested, both with the harness tight and with the harness slack, the lap straps remained in the correct position over the hip bones. The QRF also stayed in the correct position. When a 4 point harness was being tested, both with the harness tight and with the harness lose, the lap straps were seen to have moved up over the abdomen until they were jammed tightly under the lower rib margin. The QRF had moved upwards until it was in the epigastrium (the "pit of the stomach"). This is very serious, because severe, even fatal injury may be caused to the internal organs in the upper abdomen. This is considered to be the most important finding of the entire test. Following the impact test, with a 4 point harness, the shoulder straps were seen to be hanging loosely between the seat back and the pilot dummy's shoulders. This was due to the upward movement of the lap straps and the QRF." Finally, the conclusion includes the following words: "A 5-point harness is superior to a 4-point harness in an accident impact situation and also under conditions of negative-g. This is especially so if the harness is slack." It also goes on to say: "The 5th strap should be fitted to new gliders and be retro-fitted (where structurally feasible) to gliders in current use". -------- end of quotes -------- Hope this helps Ian Strachan |
#8
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I have a 4-point system. What's involved with getting a 6-point
harness? Ray: how do you reconcile a crotch strap and a pilot relief system? |
#9
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I use a "condom" style catheter with a collection bag strapped to my
leg; no spills and a large capacity. It's sold on-line by an outfit called Stadium Pro. The fifth strap, if the attachment is correctly placed, doesn't touch your privates; it's sole function is to keep the lap belts in proper (low) position. I expect the fifth strap would interfere with a pee bag or funnel system, though. Given my somewhat plump body habitus, I'm highly (largely?) unlikely to submarine under the lap belts. Someone more svelt might want to consider the physics of having one's forward motion stopped largely by that fifth strap, however. Ray Warshaw 1LK |
#10
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Flying a Ventus C with a 5 point system and an external catheter
linked to a dump tube exiting on the lower gear door. When I need to use the system I unlock the gear to lower the doors, and loosen the crotch strap. When finished I blow out the line with a longer tube tee'd into the dump line, raise the gear, and tighten the crotch strap. Works fine. Bob On 24 Apr 2006 17:28:53 -0700, wrote: I use a "condom" style catheter with a collection bag strapped to my leg; no spills and a large capacity. It's sold on-line by an outfit called Stadium Pro. The fifth strap, if the attachment is correctly placed, doesn't touch your privates; it's sole function is to keep the lap belts in proper (low) position. I expect the fifth strap would interfere with a pee bag or funnel system, though. ... text deleted Ray Warshaw 1LK |
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