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brakes are fully applied. Avoid landing directly out of a turn or wing-over since the momentum
of the pilot will be much greater due to the pendulum effect.
Due to the long brake-travel it is possible to warp the brakes once around the hands to
increase the flare-effect.
Attention
:
After touching down do not allow the glider to dive overhead and fall in front of you. If the
leading edge hits the ground hard the structure of the cell walls may become damaged. As well
do not pull the wing over ground. This may damage the sail.
i.
Towing and winching
When towing or winching, the glider must be above the pilots head before starting.
In the initial phase the tension should not be too high
–
a pilot climbing at a flatter angle has
more control.
Tension of more than 90kp is not allowed. In any situation, the maximum permitted tension on
the line must not exceed the pilot’s weight.
The pilot must be informed and aware of the national requirements for towing. This includes
matter such as; tow/winch licence requirements, qualified tow operators, suitability of glider
for towing, if winch and towing-links are certified etc.
In general, the regulated and enforced regulations must to be followed.
j.
Asymmetric and frontal collapses
As with any para
glider collapses can occur. “Active flying” as described in
point “f” can
help
avoid deformations.
You should always maintain course and direction by weight-shifting away from the collapsed
side. This can be reinforced by pulling the brake on the opposite side to the deflation. If the
collapse stays in, the glider can be re-inflated by pumping the brake on the collapsed side in a
firm and smooth manner. Be aware that the brake travel is shorter when the glider is collapsed
and the glider can stall with less brake input.
To assist in the reopening of a frontal collapse the pilot should pull both brakes equally at the
same time. This also reduces the dive after the glider reopens.
Should a collapse happen with trims open then the reopening is slower.
NOTE
: Pulling too much brake during a frontal collapse recovery can stall the glider or cause
the glider to revert from the frontal collapse directly into a deep-stall.
k.
Reopening a cravat
In extreme conditions it is possible that the wing tip(s) can become trapped between the lines.
In general, this would happen only after a big uncontrolled collapse or during extreme
manoeuvres.
If this cravat occurs, in the first instance use the techniques described for releasing asymmetric
collapses.
If it fails to release, take hold of the stabilo line and pull hard towards yourself until the
trapped section of the wing is released.
Summary of Contents for RIDE 3
Page 1: ......
Page 5: ...4...
Page 27: ...26...
Page 38: ...37 3 Technical Data...
Page 53: ...52...
Page 54: ...53 A ANHANG ANNEX a bersichtszeichnung Overview...
Page 55: ...54 b Leinenplan line plan...
Page 56: ...55...
Page 57: ...56 c Leinenl ngen Line Length Line lengths measured under a tension of 50 N...
Page 58: ...57...
Page 59: ...58...
Page 60: ...59...
Page 61: ...60 d Tragegurt Riser...
Page 65: ...64 Korrekte Verbindung zum Tragegurt Correct connection to riser...
Page 68: ...67 C EBL DDP...
Page 73: ......