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#1
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I just ran across a fascinating video of a paragliding pilot that gets
into trouble, makes the right decision and gets on the ground safely with his reserve. Things sometimes go very wrong in the air, so for all their contraversy, I for one would love to have a similar option and have BRS style emergency chutes installed on planes I fly. http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...380066&q=crash Watch it till the end - it gets even more exciting in the last few seconds :-) -Aviv |
#2
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Did this guy enter into some type of spin?
On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 22:09:11 -0400, Aviv Hod wrote: I just ran across a fascinating video of a paragliding pilot that gets into trouble, makes the right decision and gets on the ground safely with his reserve. Things sometimes go very wrong in the air, so for all their contraversy, I for one would love to have a similar option and have BRS style emergency chutes installed on planes I fly. http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...380066&q=crash Watch it till the end - it gets even more exciting in the last few seconds :-) -Aviv |
#3
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Many years ago my flight instructor advised, "If it's not regulated by
Pt 91, don't fly it." Aviv Hod wrote: I just ran across a fascinating video of a paragliding pilot that gets into trouble, makes the right decision and gets on the ground safely with his reserve. Things sometimes go very wrong in the air, so for all their contraversy, I for one would love to have a similar option and have BRS style emergency chutes installed on planes I fly. http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...380066&q=crash Watch it till the end - it gets even more exciting in the last few seconds :-) -Aviv |
#4
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Wow! Interesting video. Can't tell exactly what happened but it
sounded like he hit some strong lift - at that point, a guess would be either that he manuevered to stay in it and did a stall/spin (not unknown in certificated gliders), or the flexible wing 'collapsed' in some way that he was not able to recover from. When I glided in sailplanes (part 91 type) I wore a chute but never used it thank god. I have tree landed and pulled 2 others out of trees. The end of this one brought back many memories. Thanks. Aviv Hod wrote: I just ran across a fascinating video of a paragliding pilot that gets into trouble, makes the right decision and gets on the ground safely with his reserve. Things sometimes go very wrong in the air, so for all their contraversy, I for one would love to have a similar option and have BRS style emergency chutes installed on planes I fly. http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...380066&q=crash Watch it till the end - it gets even more exciting in the last few seconds :-) -Aviv |
#5
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Was that a Stall Warning horn we can hear? I don't know anything about these
things. His problems started right after the horn went crazy. Strike that, his problems may have started when he strapped that thing on him. ron -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
#6
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![]() "Ron Snipes" wrote in message ... Was that a Stall Warning horn we can hear? I don't know anything about these things. His problems started right after the horn went crazy. Strike that, his problems may have started when he strapped that thing on him. ron -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com I think that is a thermal indicator. They beep faster as you gain altitude in a thermal. ------------------------------------------ DW |
#7
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Darkwing wrote:
"Ron Snipes" wrote in message I think that is a thermal indicator. They beep faster as you gain altitude in a thermal. That is correct. An "audio variometer" might be the term to use. Glider pilots call it "the audio". The increase in volume and rate indicates a quickly increasing and sustained rate of climb. He hit a strong thermal concurrent with the upset that brought him down. It's not uncommon, though sloppy, for gliders to stall as they pitch up to enter and circle in a thermal. I have no familiarity with flexible wing aircraft. I wonder if a 'sharp edged' thermal can momentarily increase the wing's angle of attack to the stall angle since the delta between forward speed and the thermal's vertical speed is relatively small. A strong thermal can easily have a sustained vertical speed of 10knots, and I'm guessing a flex wing aircraft can have a minimum forward spped of 15knots or less (?). |
#8
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Ron Snipes schrieb:
Was that a Stall Warning horn we can hear? I don't know anything about these things. His problems started right after the horn went crazy. Strike that, his problems may have started when he strapped that thing on him. Oh yeah. When pedestrians, journalists and other kinds of lower spezies think aviation is dangerous, they are ignorant. But those same pilots who know everything about aviation act exactly the same when it comes to flying apparati they don't know anything about. BTW, what you've heard is an acoustic variometer (vertical speed indicator). The increasing beep rate means he's entered a thermal and is gaining altitude. Stefan |
#9
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On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 22:09:11 -0400, Aviv Hod
wrote: I just ran across a fascinating video of a paragliding pilot that gets into trouble, makes the right decision and gets on the ground safely with his reserve. Things sometimes go very wrong in the air, so for all their contraversy, I for one would love to have a similar option and have BRS style emergency chutes installed on planes I fly. http://video.google.com/videoplay?do...380066&q=crash Watch it till the end - it gets even more exciting in the last few seconds :-) -Aviv Oh My God!!! What a video. You'd think this happened to this guy everyday the way he never had any inflection to his voice. Thanks for sharing. z |
#10
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![]() "zatatime" wrote in message ... On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 22:09:11 -0400, Aviv Hod wrote: I just ran across a fascinating video of a paragliding pilot that gets -Aviv Oh My God!!! What a video. You'd think this happened to this guy everyday the way he never had any inflection to his voice. yeah, I was waiting for the obligatory "oh S#!+" |
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