I just think i'm too old and in bad physical condition, now, but how I enjoy flying, gliding, some years ago! I'm 73 YO now, and I miss gliding, but it's all over now !. You, lucky friends, always able to fly, have a little think for me, and I wish you nives flights !. Be safe, and enjoy long years of pleasure !... Charles.
Thank you C9 for these condensed launch analyses. I think we can all learn a lot from these launches. Especially from the starts that are not quite perfect. One thing I personally learned last season: Backward starts are not always the best technique. You have to practice both forward and reverse starts to be able to choose the right technique for the current conditions. Only when you have trained both can you really choose freely.
Thank you for your comment! Yes there are so many takeoff techniques, and each one has its strenghts for various conditions. The more you know, the safer you become.
Probably I'll do one in the future 😅👍 this summer I collected lots of material. For the meantime you can watch these compilations 😁 >> th-cam.com/video/PCSDu5kd3Cc/w-d-xo.html th-cam.com/video/TlaCFTOcZPo/w-d-xo.html
Thank you for your comment! Your are right that there is a lot to improve in many takeoffs here! However, there is not a single trainee in this video. They are all fully licenced pilots. If they were trainees, I think they would do better. Why? Because trainees do practice, they know it's important to try to get better. This is something pilots tend to forget once they got licenced. Some of them are just happy if they manage to get airborne somehow, forgetting about the fact they are relying on luck to at least some degree, and that it needs some small efford to improve with every launch.
Each pilot has his own individual ground handling and take off style. I usually try to do several seconds stop between wing rising and takeoff moment to be sure that it is safe to take off and no one pilot fly close to me.
90% of the people in this video skip the CONTROL PHASE... just run and hope for the best... thats is how accidents happen. NEVER skip the control phase !!!!
I'm not shure if it's 90% But you are right of course, control phase is very important! This video doesnt show how it should be done, it just shows reality.
Nice video enjoyed the entire thing! I'm new to paragliding and so I wonder, it looks like most pilots are too hard on their breaks as they start, and run against the wing to start. It seems like less break would be more comfortable, easier to fly off.
you're probably right I'm new too, but as I understand it from very explicit instructions from top pros (live training, videos, articles, books, and FFVL exam material), the proper brake sequence after inflation is - control phase: stop the surge, risers should be 90° from the SLOPE (not from vertical) - acceleration phase: (progressive) hands to the pulleys, progressive loading of the wing, progressive acceleration - takeoff: once the lift and loading are enough (this depends of the wind), gentle brake to "flare" off the slope Mixing up those 3 phases is suboptimal, and there seem to be a lot of this in the compilation I'll quote Chrigel: "in most activities you train a lot, in pg people want to fly but dont want to train"
When the wing comes above your head, you need a certain amount of break to sync its speed with yours. The calmer you inflate the wing, the less break you need, which is a good thing, because then its less likely to lift you of the ground involuntary. Still in most cases its ok to use like 50 to 70 % of brake, which gives you time for checking if everything is ok and for the decission for takeoff or abort. Once you start accelerating, you should release the breake slowly as you increase your speed, but keep some little pressure so you can feel what is going on and can react if the wing overshoots for instance. Still, every launch is different and there might be some variations needed. Practicing ist the key to success and progression. The best thing to do is go ground handling and kiting your wing in various conditions on flat or slightly increasing fields. Its the best training and also lots of fun! Yes, some of the pilots here really shoud do that too. Or better still: Anyone should practice ground handling, as you can allways improve your skills, regardless what level you already reached! The sky is the limit ;)
tres interessant ! it had been nice to insert the site names....they are so attractive! i only recognized Castelluccio , Cornizzolo , Canazei , ifonche, Kronplatz....colli san fermo?
Most sites are in the south east part of the alps. Some are more south in Italy (Umbria, Abruzzo, Lazio, ...) Some weeks ago I added the locations in the subtitles, so you can itentify all of them now ;) Thanks for watching! :)
பூமியில் இருப்பதும் வானத்தில் பறப்பதும் அவரவர் எண்ணங்களே நெஞ்சினில் துணிவிருந்தால் நகைச்சுவை நடிகர் திரு நாகேஷ் அவர்கள் பறந்து சென்று பாடல் பாடி வந்த காட்சி நினைவுக்கு வருகிறது வாழ்த்துக்கள் வாழ்க வளமுடன் ஃ
Because its not working. They tried it in the early days. In case of turbulence, the wing will not collaps, but it can shoot very fast in unpredictable positions, leading to severe accidents. The collaps of the wing actually is not a bug, its a feature, it stops the wing in strong turbulences. Even though you allways try to prevent the wing from collapsing, when it happens its easy to handle in most cases if you did your homework. Anyways, if you have a big collapse, its a sign for 1) you are flying in too turbulent air 2) you need more training to fly your wing proper 3) you are flying a wing that is too demanding and you shoud step down to a more save / beginner wing, or 4) more than one of this factors.
2 ปีที่แล้ว
Really nice to see so many lunches in quick succession, but so many are really sloppy. Won't wait for parachute, hands allower, jumping to start???, but nice to learn too, some are really nice. But it bothers me that so many fly with sloppy starting tehnike. Are those mostly trainees?
Thank you for your comment! Your are absolutely right that there is a lot to improve in many takeoffs here! However, there is not a single trainee in this video. They are all fully licenced pilots. If they were trainees, they would do better. Why? Because trainees do training, they know it's important to try to get better. This is something pilots tend to forget once they got licenced. Some of them are just happy if they manage to get airborne somehow, forgetting about the fact they are relying on luck to at least some degree...
It's called pod harness. Yes it is warmer and more efficient due to less aerodynamic drag. Here you have some more information th-cam.com/video/zmIpeqo2wCM/w-d-xo.html
Je serais curieux de voir nos "djeun's, décoller, voler et poser avec les voiles de notre époque, au moins des Astérion ITV, qu'on se marre, par exemple .... ;))
Yes, he did. Fortunately he resisted the comon reaction to cling to the harness but did the only thing that most likely saves your life in this situation, which is to put up the arms completely in order to let go the harness and the glider before you left the ground. After that, he was standing there quietly, looking back at his glider for several minutes, because he immediately understood how close he had been to a fatal incident.
Basically - nearly all takeoffs in this compilation that ended with being airborne, was luck... The lack of control over the wing and bodyparts was really eyeopening.
I just think i'm too old and in bad physical condition, now, but how I enjoy flying, gliding, some years ago! I'm 73 YO now, and I miss gliding, but it's all over now !. You, lucky friends, always able to fly, have a little think for me, and I wish you nives flights !. Be safe, and enjoy long years of pleasure !... Charles.
Thank you so much! I hope you can relive some of your joy by watching! All the best! :)
Thank you C9 for these condensed launch analyses. I think we can all learn a lot from these launches. Especially from the starts that are not quite perfect. One thing I personally learned last season: Backward starts are not always the best technique. You have to practice both forward and reverse starts to be able to choose the right technique for the current conditions. Only when you have trained both can you really choose freely.
Thank you for your comment! Yes there are so many takeoff techniques, and each one has its strenghts for various conditions. The more you know, the safer you become.
First ever TH-cam video I favourited was a base jumping video with just some great progressive music. Love this too much.
Awesome, thank you!
I love takeoff ! When the magic happen. And also a instant resume of pilot skill, sensitivity.
Your are so right! Thank you for your comment! ✌️😊
Nice videos from different locations. Safe fly to all gliders.
Nice to see 100s of launches and the do’s and don’ts
Glad you enjoy it! :)
I'm thinking I need landing compilations now :D
Probably I'll do one in the future 😅👍 this summer I collected lots of material.
For the meantime you can watch these compilations 😁 >>
th-cam.com/video/PCSDu5kd3Cc/w-d-xo.html
th-cam.com/video/TlaCFTOcZPo/w-d-xo.html
Let me re-introduce you to my good friend - Mr. Groundhandling. If your launch sucks - it's probably because you've been ghosting him.
Yes, he's a really handy guy! ;D
Why dont people kite for a second before launching? they're always in a hurry
Most in the video are beginners
Thank you for your comment! Your are right that there is a lot to improve in many takeoffs here! However, there is not a single trainee in this video. They are all fully licenced pilots. If they were trainees, I think they would do better. Why? Because trainees do practice, they know it's important to try to get better. This is something pilots tend to forget once they got licenced. Some of them are just happy if they manage to get airborne somehow, forgetting about the fact they are relying on luck to at least some degree, and that it needs some small efford to improve with every launch.
Each pilot has his own individual ground handling and take off style. I usually try to do several seconds stop between wing rising and takeoff moment to be sure that it is safe to take off and no one pilot fly close to me.
@@Avrora707 it shows and practices control
Because they don't know how to kite 😂
Great video ! For us still improving our technique this is brilliant. Well done.
Great to hear! Thank you youtischia! :)
Two of my favourite things. Drum and bass and paragliding 😃 🪂
Three favorite things then👍🏼👍🏼Saluti 🍻🥂
@@TheMechas56 hahaha i suppose so! Happy flying 🍻
Thanks for the video. Learn so much
you are welcome, and thanks for your comment! :)
Totally enjoyed this (totally addicted!) Thanks for the fix!
Thank you, I'm glad you like it. Did you check out the other Kaleidoscopes?
90% of the people in this video skip the CONTROL PHASE... just run and hope for the best... thats is how accidents happen. NEVER skip the control phase !!!!
I'm not shure if it's 90%
But you are right of course, control phase is very important!
This video doesnt show how it should be done, it just shows reality.
@@cloudnineparagliding I agree - almost ALL takeoffs was luck and no skills.
@CR-ul6nx are you a paragliding pilot?
@@cloudnineparagliding ay sir.
Super Video und der Sound ist ganz nach meinem Geschmack!
Danke, freut mich! :)
Binge watching material. Thank you
Welcome! :)
Magnífico vídeo !!!!!
Thanks for the Vds...
Glad you like them!
Great launches, so many to watch very much enjoyed.
Thanks so much!
That's gotta be fun!
love it ... fly safely
Nice compilation!
Thanks a lot!
Wow very good compilation
Thank you very much!
Лепота и красота 👍😍
My Brave Lovely teenager,. second flier. God bless you.
Esporte é vida
6:40 9:53 Elegant 👌
Nice video enjoyed the entire thing!
I'm new to paragliding and so I wonder, it looks like most pilots are too hard on their breaks as they start, and run against the wing to start. It seems like less break would be more comfortable, easier to fly off.
you are new to paragliding ;-)
you're probably right
I'm new too, but as I understand it from very explicit instructions from top pros (live training, videos, articles, books, and FFVL exam material), the proper brake sequence after inflation is
- control phase: stop the surge, risers should be 90° from the SLOPE (not from vertical)
- acceleration phase: (progressive) hands to the pulleys, progressive loading of the wing, progressive acceleration
- takeoff: once the lift and loading are enough (this depends of the wind), gentle brake to "flare" off the slope
Mixing up those 3 phases is suboptimal, and there seem to be a lot of this in the compilation
I'll quote Chrigel: "in most activities you train a lot, in pg people want to fly but dont want to train"
@@PhilippeLarcher 23:33 flare off the slope like this ?? or is this more like almost deep-stall off the slope ?
@@karlapaiz7638 I didn't see a flare at this timecode 😅
When the wing comes above your head, you need a certain amount of break to sync its speed with yours. The calmer you inflate the wing, the less break you need, which is a good thing, because then its less likely to lift you of the ground involuntary. Still in most cases its ok to use like 50 to 70 % of brake, which gives you time for checking if everything is ok and for the decission for takeoff or abort. Once you start accelerating, you should release the breake slowly as you increase your speed, but keep some little pressure so you can feel what is going on and can react if the wing overshoots for instance. Still, every launch is different and there might be some variations needed.
Practicing ist the key to success and progression. The best thing to do is go ground handling and kiting your wing in various conditions on flat or slightly increasing fields. Its the best training and also lots of fun!
Yes, some of the pilots here really shoud do that too. Or better still: Anyone should practice ground handling, as you can allways improve your skills, regardless what level you already reached! The sky is the limit ;)
tres interessant ! it had been nice to insert the site names....they are so attractive! i only recognized Castelluccio , Cornizzolo , Canazei , ifonche, Kronplatz....colli san fermo?
Very good, they are all present in this video.
Some weeks ago I inserted the locations in the subtitles. Check it out ;)
20:50 very dangerous take off. That pilot was extremely close to get ass fracture😁
37:06 most interesting start.
37:51 long awaited actual controlled backward launch.
Hehe, thank you for your comment! :)
Which launching sites are shown mainly? Some look teally great.
Most sites are in the south east part of the alps. Some are more south in Italy (Umbria, Abruzzo, Lazio, ...)
Some weeks ago I added the locations in the subtitles, so you can itentify all of them now ;)
Thanks for watching! :)
Super
good job...
Thank you! Cheers!
So many Andvance! :)
Glider brands appearing in the video: Advance (48), Air Design (10), airG Products (2), Bruce Goldsmith Design (15), Gin Gliders (15), Gradient (3), Icaro Paragliders (8), Mac Para (4), Niviuk Paragliders (5), Nova (44), Ozone (20), Papillon Paragliding (6), Phi (22), Sky Paragliders (6), Skyman (2), Skywalk Paragliders (38), Supair (5), Swing Paragliders (9), UP Paragliders (11), U-Turn (10)
Nice video:)
Thanks!
Awesome !
great
47:52 lol my dog in the background :D
9:55 is beautiful
Das war ein Fluglehrer-Anwärter beim Training für die Prüfung. Hat er natürlich bestanden. 😃👌
பூமியில் இருப்பதும் வானத்தில் பறப்பதும் அவரவர் எண்ணங்களே நெஞ்சினில் துணிவிருந்தால் நகைச்சுவை நடிகர் திரு நாகேஷ் அவர்கள் பறந்து சென்று பாடல் பாடி வந்த காட்சி நினைவுக்கு வருகிறது வாழ்த்துக்கள் வாழ்க வளமுடன் ஃ
Yea.!
Question: why do paraglider not have a rigid - yet light-weight - structure at the front to prevent the sail collapsing in case of wind turbulence?
Because its not working. They tried it in the early days. In case of turbulence, the wing will not collaps, but it can shoot very fast in unpredictable positions, leading to severe accidents. The collaps of the wing actually is not a bug, its a feature, it stops the wing in strong turbulences. Even though you allways try to prevent the wing from collapsing, when it happens its easy to handle in most cases if you did your homework.
Anyways, if you have a big collapse, its a sign for 1) you are flying in too turbulent air 2) you need more training to fly your wing proper 3) you are flying a wing that is too demanding and you shoud step down to a more save / beginner wing, or 4) more than one of this factors.
Really nice to see so many lunches in quick succession, but so many are really sloppy. Won't wait for parachute, hands allower, jumping to start???, but nice to learn too, some are really nice. But it bothers me that so many fly with sloppy starting tehnike. Are those mostly trainees?
Thank you for your comment! Your are absolutely right that there is a lot to improve in many takeoffs here! However, there is not a single trainee in this video. They are all fully licenced pilots. If they were trainees, they would do better. Why? Because trainees do training, they know it's important to try to get better. This is something pilots tend to forget once they got licenced. Some of them are just happy if they manage to get airborne somehow, forgetting about the fact they are relying on luck to at least some degree...
Name of the Wing in the video cover? The green, White black and Pink Wing? Thx
The brand is Sky Paragliders, a czech manufacturer. The model I think is a Anakis sky-cz.com/en/anakis-3
Que bela imagem
Welcome to Nepal bro
There are people who take off and then put their feet in the bag. Are they cold?
It's called pod harness. Yes it is warmer and more efficient due to less aerodynamic drag.
Here you have some more information th-cam.com/video/zmIpeqo2wCM/w-d-xo.html
Song name begining at 17:50? PLS, must have this masterpiece
BTW EPIC VIEWS!
Love the video
Sorry, I can't tell you that. Its a mixtape I used for this video and I don't have the tracklist...
Thank you very much, I'm happy you enjoy it! :)
15 / 5000
Výsledky překladu
crack relax
😏 ouais ! Il y a vraiment des cas 😂 travail au sol est courses appui ventrale !!!
Je serais curieux de voir nos "djeun's, décoller, voler et poser avec les voiles de notre époque, au moins des Astérion ITV, qu'on se marre, par exemple .... ;))
From the guy in Norma they should immediately take the licence and he should play golf 🙂
Everyone can get better with some training 😉🤙 I always thought golf was only invented for us so we have some nice landing sites 🤣
10:23 is that in Sillian?
Yes, that's Stalpe in Sillian! Maybe, if I finde some time, I'm gona prepare some subtitles indicating the locations.
Thanks! Great memories, did a week of flying there in 2004, some time ago but recognized the spot.
37:02 epic moment! :D
37:10 Did this person try to fly without being pinned?
Yes, he did. Fortunately he resisted the comon reaction to cling to the harness but did the only thing that most likely saves your life in this situation, which is to put up the arms completely in order to let go the harness and the glider before you left the ground. After that, he was standing there quietly, looking back at his glider for several minutes, because he immediately understood how close he had been to a fatal incident.
❤️👍
10:12 suave
👍também achei! Tranquilo demais!
Bello
1:11 Monte Cassini? 🤔😁
Yes, very good!
Now I added the locations in the subtitles so you can identify all the takeoffs ;)
Video sponsored by Advance Paragliders
That's a gag? Anyway a good one !
Sadly no sponsoring ;)
Glider brands appearing in the video: Advance (48), Air Design (10), airG Products (2), Bruce Goldsmith Design (15), Gin Gliders (15), Gradient (3), Icaro Paragliders (8), Mac Para (4), Niviuk Paragliders (5), Nova (44), Ozone (20), Papillon Paragliding (6), Phi (22), Sky Paragliders (6), Skyman (2), Skywalk Paragliders (38), Supair (5), Swing Paragliders (9), UP Paragliders (11), U-Turn (10)
😀👍👍
For God's sake that I look like that before I got smooth with a paraglider how embarrassing.
Yes it takes a lot of work to get a safe and controlled pilot. Its a joyfull path that never ends. I'm happy you are on your way! :)
💘💘❤❤💕💕
Thank you
😀😀
Basically - nearly all takeoffs in this compilation that ended with being airborne, was luck... The lack of control over the wing and bodyparts was really eyeopening.
It's always good if you can learn something :)
@@cloudnineparagliding absolutely, as I said - EYEOPENING! Im gonna practice MUCH more G.H. :)
@@CR-ul6nx perfect, ground handling is so important - and fun! 😃👍👍👍
Im
Terrible "Music"
This video is about the images, not about the music. Just mute it and turn on your favourite music. Enjoy :)