2019-2020 CL General “…strong enough to prevent accidental release of the model, shall be worn during all flights of Control Line events except all Racing events.”
No, Rich, I don’t think Neal is a long lost relation, though we both apparently share misgivings about the safety thong rule.
I’ve seen it happen! It could be a problem!
At the time the “safety thong rule for all” was initially proposed, there were no infamous incidences of stunt planes in contests being released and causing harm. Sure we’ve all heard of the flyaway combat ship, or the sport flyer “letgo”, but stuntships in a contest situation being released? None that I knew of. Was this something that came down from AMA HQ?, I don’t think so, or something from the Controlline Contest Board?, maybe. There was nothing in the news, AMA or PAMPA about handle release problems. Maybe at that time there was a Nats racing incident where one flyer tripped and fell (not sure if he let go of the handle). However, a rule proposal was submitted for safety thongs for all Controlline events.
We had read about in past times of the stunt contestant who had heroically stuffed his plane when a child wandered into the circle at the Nats. Some of my relatives came to see the Nats one year and unknowingly walked through the pits, tangling the 5 and 7 year olds tennis shoes into Bob Gieske’s lines. It really wasn’t their fault so much, they had never seen a controlline contest before.
Lines? Lions? There was no marker or barrier or roped off pit area. How were they to know?
Or the Indiana Nats where the circles drooped about five feet off the pavement into the grass and people walking from one circle to the other had to know to look or be beheaded.
When the Nats were at airbases, it always seemed that with just a little bit of planning could have resulted in a safer and more controlled event. My gosh, our local contests, with far fewer people involved as spectators, organizers, and contestants were better prepared for potentially dangerous contingencies.
What does that have to do with safety thongs, you ask? I agree that it is kind of a “left handed” argument to blame AMA for short comings in the area of safety against a ”safety rule” imposed on contest stunt flyers. But if we are going to make the contest environment totally safe, then there are a bunch of things that should be done first. If there is such a need to guard against the possibility of a contestant releasing the handle of his plane, then there are a lot of places where public safety could be addressed that I feel are more obvious and blatant.
At any rate, the proposal was submitted. At the time I thought it was improperly submitted, but that’s another story and I was wrong. There was no mention of it in Stunt News that I saw. I thought that it had not been seen by any PAMPA officers. I was wrong about that too. It had been seen by PAMPA and on the face of it PAMPA approved of it’s submittal. I’m sure the PAMPA district directors knew of the proposal, but at least in my district the word didn’t get out. As I found out it had been submitted to a vote of the district directors and I don’t think was a unanimous yea, most didn't vote. But, like I said, word of it didn’t necessarily get to the masses.
A cross proposal was submitted to provide relief for racing. I blame myself for not standing up at the time and calling for a public airing of the case “for and against” safety thongs in stunt, because by that time I did know something was happening. I wish I had, I sort of blame myself for the thong rule getting through. I’ve many times felt that we (PAMPA) need do a better job of getting important issues out for public review. But, as Rich said, I did try (and failed) to get it removed from stunt.
The safety thong rule did precipitate a couple of other rule changes. Come to find out, it takes time to put the safety thong on the wrist. At the time we had a “bonus 5 points” for starting and takeoff within one minute. Well this was a problem now. A couple of prominent flyers incurred some “hand in the prop” accidents, purportedly due to rushing to get the engine started and to the handle in time. This required an emergency proposal, as I recall, in order to deal with this unintended consequence.
I’m sure that if I wore a football helmet when I drove, that I’d be safer and less likely to incur a head injury in case of an accident. There’s nothing stopping me from doing that, but that’s like the seat belt argument, I’m protecting myself. True the safety thong is protecting other people from me. But I just don’t think we had a problem, racing lobbyists were effective and stunt and combat didn’t even try to avoid the rule change.
Shall we safetywire the motor to the bellcrank? I’ve seen it happen! I threw a brand new $200 Plettenberg right out of the plane and onto the edge of the circle, by gosh, if anyone had been standing there it could have put their eye out.