I've actually had a bumpier flight than that since this video. It was my first cross country. I guess you just had to be there. it probably isn't much compared to some, but it felt like it to me. Thanks for watching.
@@beans-wi3wi I disagree! When he approached the river at 22:42 he encountered some fairly intense turbulence. Definitely enough to make the ass pucker.
scared me, I wouldn't want be swinging around up there in the wind like that suspended by cloth and wires, I am sure thoughts pass through your mind about the construction of the craft, easy to criticize from the safety of home
Years ago when I learned to fly hang gliders (1980), my instructor told me that if air was visible, there's no way anyone would want to fly through it. I think he was right. I remember the first time I ever went over the falls in a booming Arizona thermal, and boy did It scare the crap out of me! I was coring the thermal and the next thing I knew my wing was pointing almost straight down. Thanks to the reflex our wings have built into them, it really wasn't that dangerous. Going over the falls isn't uncommon in big air, and I actually got to where I enjoyed the ride. It's kind of like going down that first big hill on a roller coaster. But I can tell you the most dangerous thing I have encountered and witnessed in my 40+ years of flying dacron and aluminum wings is a dust devil near the ground. I hit one in Flagstaff on landing which was invisible since there was no dust for it to pick up in the area, and it put me into an almost 90 degree bank, and I was less than 40 feet off the ground. Somehow I managed to pull it out and was unscathed. I was also a eye witness when Dan Buchanan was killed flying a hang glider while performing at the Mountain Home AFB airshow in 2018. The likely cause was determined to be an invisible dust devil (it was a very hot day with big dust devils in the area). So my point is be very careful during strong thermic conditions while flying close to the ground. I've found it's best to be on the ground wishing you were flying rather than being in the air wishing you were on the ground.
I’ve watched invisible vortices nearly push large SUVs off the road. The August heat here in Wyoming seems to be when they are most prevalent. When the do hit a dust patch or alkali flat, they rocket the dust into the sky!
As I was reading your post before getting half way through I was thinking ‘Dan Buchanan’ and then you added you weee there. That accident really took the wind out of my sails …total pro, high airtime pilot, boom..he’s gone. I only saw him fly once at an airshow in Grand Junction. I happened to be one of the ‘early bird’ hang glider pilots back in The 80’s hot towing behind a vehicle in Hobbs, NM using the harness tow method.
40 years ago I went up in a Terratorn Tierra with my 9 year old daughter. The only reason we are alive is I had the prudence to buy a BRS ballistic chute. I am a believer. I will never fly without one.
If I had a ballistic parachute I might have kept my ELSA. But they cost 5000 and FAA requirments are to be inspected every 2 years i think at around 1500. @@FLYNRYAN1978
I am thinking about a ultralight for retirement and you gave me a new perspective of what else there is than just flying and having fun. Thank God you came through this ok but, again, thanks for showing me there are other things to think about other than taking off and landing.
You’re welcome. Admittedly I may have overreacted in my situation but until that flight I’d never experienced turbulence for that long of time. I recommend this type of aircraft to anyone. Thanks for watching and commenting.
You should have flown in and around Dublin GA, The turbulence you experienced was a normal day for me. I finally sold the ELSA rotax 670 high performace engine. Unbelievable power. I could never get used to wind gusts trying to flip my ELSA over. The worst trubulence was flying in the pattern and trying to burn base to final fighting really bad turbulence like drops of 20 feet or fighting the wing being blown on one side. I remember being blown so hard I ended up landing in the grass next to the runway. I had Tundra tires. The ELSA was designed for grass landings. @@FLYNRYAN1978
@@FLYNRYAN1978 From ground view or overhead view it looks less scary. But i flew trikes over 12 years and had my own scary moments, while ground viewers say ,, your wing was perfect and straight level, and i was shaking in the trike unit.🤗
I know this is completely irrelevant, but this video reminded me about my great uncle. He used to have an ultralight very similar to yours and he got to land it on the USS Yorktown CV-10. It was done as a Vietnam War memorial. He was drafted into the army. I wish I could have seen that in person, but it happened about 20 years before I was born.
Excellent story, I’ve been to the Yorktown several times and plan to go again later this year. Hopefully you can go to honor him and the flight he made. Cheers
It’s a Skycycle They were made by a guy named Trike Mike out of Chattanooga. He passed away a couple years back. They are very similar to the Northwing mavericks . Where are you Soloing? I fly at Jackson Co airport in Gainsboro. You should check it out sometime.
Yep, I owned a ELSA with a Rotex 670 engine. That engine had so much power that one could not step on brakes and apply full power on the concret, the engine would push the trike across the apran. I flew for two years. Trained in Jackson County Ga, close to SC border. The air for the most part was okay up there. I had some turbulence. When I flew the ELSA down to middle GA 130 miles, the turbulence was bad. I mean it was really bad in Dublin Ga. I could count on 1 hand the smooth flights. My turbulence looked like what this guy went through ALL THE TIME. And, I was in the air at sunup with calm winds reported. 800 feet off runway, I would get thrown all over the place. I often wondered if I could make it through the pattern without going down. It was always a struggle landing. Right where Dublin Ga is we have the warm fronts from Fl meeting the colder air from North Ga. The 40 mile stretch of land was always volitile. I never could get use to flying in the turbulence and sold the aircraft. Mine was a 2 seater. So I had to have a LSA license by the FAA. I had to take 20 hours training, complete a cross country to three airports using a sectional map, fly with an FAA examiner and take a written exam at an FAA office in Atlanta. I also had to pass an oral exam from the examiner. This guy did not have to train at all as he was in a single seater. I dd notice he was flying over a mountain range. Had he been trained, he would have avoided that as the rotor turbulence on the leeward side of the mountains will take you down fast.
I have some training as I am an H2 rated pilot back in 2019 and trained for around 6 hours in a two seater in North Carolina. So I didn’t train all by myself as I’m crazy but not on that level of crazy lol. I was around 27to 2800 MSL at the time and usually once you get around 2500 or better things start to smooth out significantly however I believe I ran into a cold front starting to move in as the weather said it would be smooth the rest of that late evening however as we all know the weather isn’t always accurate as I found out lol. Also I couldn’t fly anywhere if I had to avoid mountains where I fly as you can tell in the video my airport is right beside one lol. Thank you for watching and commenting.
I've had days where the air was smooth as glass until I hit that first bit of moderate turbulence and then it seems to follow me all the way back to the airport. Then when I look at the windsock it's just hanging limp and I have to think to myself, "Seriously, what the heck?"
Now thats real flying, and getting a real feel of some wind/turbulence. Well handled. When i encounter heavy turbulence i just add power. Pull the bar slightly and try to punch through. Circling the bar and just keeping calm. It always feel worse than it is. I also convince myself its only the cart swerving. The wing has got this👌🙏😄
Yeah You really have no choice but to stay calm . If you can’t you have no business flying. Panic makes you make bad decisions lol . Thanks for the support and thanks for watching.
I just do a quick dump in my pants… Bail the craft, dragging frantically at my Parachute before doing another quick dump in my pants… And then crash land somewhere over some power lines minus my Phone, shoes, craft, pants and my dignity… 🪂
Scary stuff, great video! Would you be okay with me featuring some of it in my series Weekly Dose of Aviation? Of course you will be credited both in the video and in the description.
Absolutely. That’s why I share content. I love showing others the beauty and sometimes scary side of flight . Thank you for commenting. Appreciate your support.
Yes, updrafts and downdrafts from the hilly terrain with maybe some added wind to make it even more interesting. Ultralights will be affected more than heavier aircraft. You should be okay if you don't exceed your maneuvering speed. You did well when you reduced your throttle. Just ride it out and be prepared to quickly add lots of throttle if you get into a downdraft.
To avoid thermals, do not pass over darker colored ground cover. It's tough around airports but rising heat from dark colored ground cover will toss you around like a hackysack
I'm sure it's really scary in an open cockpit configuration such as an ultralite. I've had summertime turbulence in a Cessna 152 that lifted me off the seat and bounced me around. Yes, I did not have my lap belt on but the cross belt was on. Just know thermo turbulence does not happen over water. That river would be a great place to fly down her or up her and not have the affects of thermo turbulence. Wind turbulence is different, but on relative calm or cool days, you won't have that.
I sure did. That's why it was so surprising to me . Best I can tell it was a pop up gust front that I ran into . I seen it in the distance but didn't know which way it was heading, now I know lol. Thanks for commenting and watching.
Turbulence... It looks like similar situation I experienced in the past during my paramotor flight. Sometimes the weather is unpredictable... Great job Ryan!
It’s definitely unpredictable. Sometimes they say it’ll be gusty and it turns out to be the smoothest air ever and other times the exact opposite. Thank you for commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978I didn't mean to minimize your experience, I've never flown an ultra light and I'm assuming turbulence affects them more than heavier aircraft. I used to fly out of an area that would routinely have smooth air in the morning but the thermals coming from uneven surface heating would always make the afternoon air rough. Strictly speaking the FAA defines light to moderate turbulence as bumpiness with temporary changes in altitude and/or attitude. Severe turbulence causes violent changes of attitude and altitude with periods of loss of control. I once had a situation where I could hold my altitude within 1000 feet of my desired altitude, yet the turbulence was reported as moderate. I'm curious, what was the wind speed, temperature and time of day?
@@keithcanfield3251 It was late afternoon and really smooth until I ran into that gust front to my left . It was really surprising. I’ve hit some bumps before but nothing that continued for that long all the way back to the airport.
We would fly The Columbia River Gorge, when flying from southwestern Wa State to North Idaho. In a bad storm we had 250ft+ elevation drops and gains in a Cessna 6 seat going thru the Gorge. We flew that way to Idaho all the time,, and went thru some doozie storms in the Gorge. Hood River in the Gorge is or was a very popular sailboarding spot,,and a high turbulence area. Sometimes that turbulence extended quite a ways up in elevation. You did the best you could when riding a kite, chop the power and turn around, be ready with the power after the turn. Be ready for the back flip if you get a monster updraft or headwind., God Forbid.
Hi Ryan, It was interesting to watch your response to the turbulence and the more it kicked you, the more you pulled on the bar. The extra speed from tensing and pulling the bar in will make the turbulence feel much more pronounced. If it does get a bit rough just slow the wing down as well as just damping it out. I did make a video on fly in turbulence but this is all about your channel. Being confident in your machine comes with time, experience and knowledge of how to make it easier and less stressful for you. Keep flying and a good pilot never stops learning. Fly safe :)
Thank you for your support. It’s instinct to pull the bar in lol. I have to get away from that I know. You are definitely one of my favorite channels to watch and learn from . Thanks for watching and commenting. Happy flying!
Ryan was it rotors coming off the hills/Mechanical Rotors? Or Thermal? or Both. And the flight over was smooth until it wasn't, but you seem to turn back right away, I would have thought that It would have gotten better going back from where you came??? Was there a front coming in?
It was very calm for the first 15 minutes or so . Yes I think it was a front because I fought it all the way back down to the landing. The weather didn’t predict this for sure lol . There were some darkish clouds forming to my left but I didn’t know which way it was heading and thought I was far enough away to fly a little further. Next time I’ll listen to my instincts.
Actually some good exsperience for you. The hills i see and the calm water tell me it wasnt mech rotors. You came into a shear and turbulant edies. Prob generated by the weather you had on a distance. But you maintained control and flew the wing. Good job
Like a flip of a switch - buttery smooth to crap just like that - what time of day? Just curious as I fly a paramotor trike and confined to morning and evenings. This sport intrigues me and want to pursue.
Ive had worse than that in a fixed wing single seater Glider being caught in the tail end ot a Rotar. Not nice.High winds from 360 degrees. Alttitude about a 1000 ft. Thank God I managed to do a 90 deg. turn and get the hell out of there
I flew with a friend on his trike, and another buddy took off with us out of Double Eagle near Albuquerque New Mexico in 2008, I was invited to drive there for a trike fly-in group I was part of when I took up flying them using my LSA fixed wing experience as hours so I could learn to fly trikes with mechanical, comms and especially meteorology experience (my College minor was Earth Science and Major was Social Science) . On our trike flight near KABQ, everything was nominal--nice smooth air, our engines were well warmed up, and we looked forward to an hour long flight, and we headed west, away from the city, knowing the high mountain range to the east, the southern tail of the Rockies, could churn up dangerous turbulence. What we did not see, or see on the radar, was the hidden gust front moving in from the east from behind the mountain range. It came upon us suddenly, making us feel like the wind wanted to separate our wing from us. We declared an emergency, and tried to warn our friend on the radio, who had flown faster out ahead of us, but we could not reach him and there was no operational tower at Double Eagle at that time. So with me and my friend both working the trapeze trying to stay cool thru the chop--just flying through it and not trying to overpower the trapeze, we made it to the longest runway at the field, about a mile long, coming in crabbed but touching down shaken, but not stirred. During the flight my friend shouted to me "r u alright?" and I gave a thumbs up, since his helmet probably would have not let him hear the answer, even on radio with noise cancellation, because of the heavy wind. Funny thing, I was fine, more worried about landing so I could visit that place we need after a flight on an aircraft with no "facilities" since I had had several cups of hot chocolate that morning. My fixed wing teacher taught me how to be unflappable in a crisis--his attitude is "one way or another, you'll kiss the planet earth again" so he prepared me and coached me well for emergencies before offering me a solo, only four lessons in my fixed wing training though I only flew trikes with a partner, because it was like camping, since trikes can land by streams and rivers and we could catch fish for our lovely ladies waiting for us at home. Only advisory about this video--find a helmet, the only landing u can walk away from is one where your head does not have to be velcroed back on to your body.
Thanks you I enjoyed reading your comments. I have several helmets and I don’t disagree that it’s probably better to wear one than not to but if I land that hard that I need a helmet it’s probably only going to be good for identification purposes only lol .
@@atticushexcel9567 So correct. On any ulltralight, a must. I was run over crossing at a crosswalk in '19, the car that impacted me was going 35 mph, and I rolled under the SUV and flew 10 feet, landing upright. Soo lucky, the police said I was the only person they'd seen who'd survived such an accident, and I was out of the hospital 24 hrs later with just a concussion and bruises. Of course I did not have a helmet, pedestrians usually do not, but I was wearing my heavy jacket I always use for trike flying, since it was cold that night. My padded arms cushioned the blows the tires and suv axles made to my face, and I had jeans on. So I recommend motorcycle style wear in addition to a helmet when flying an Ultralight--since my impact speed in my pedestrian accident was quite similar to what one might expect in an ultralight landing upset by a freak wind gust.
As one who has hit the ground at speed many times, the helmet becomes one of the few things you actually prefer to lead with. While an aircraft impact could be too severe to matter, it could also be sort of an out of control landing type crash that resembles motorcycle style/type smacks/tumbles. Anyway, having been knocked out with a helmet on, I’ve never been a fan of testing the ground with my bear naked skull.
You thinking living to be 90 years old when you barely can walk or pisses and pooping your parents all the time is worth it? Live ain't that serious..dying isn't that big of a deal really..we are just scared of hte unknown is what fear comes from
@@FLYNRYAN1978yeah I been kiting for cpl years myself, got all the goodies now to start hang testing n motor practice! I'm ready for spring for sure!!!
I was praying to JESUS all the way back and thanking HIM for a while when I landed safely. I’m not religious either sir and am totally against religion as a whole. As a Christian though it’s about a relationship with our Creator and Savior. Thank you for commenting Patrick .
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Like @Wayne said -- the wing is built for it. It was just the landing I was worried about and you nailed it. Come in as fast as possible is how I was trained for in choppy wind. Most of my training landings were high short approaches and pulling the bar in for a steep approach. This leaves no chance of needing your engine should it fail. The only engine-on approach the instructor chanced was at his personal field where he likes to come in low and long as his field is short. But the the approach is over low growth crops so not much to worry about. Get back up there my friend - humans where meant to fly -- evolution gave us the mind power to create aircraft to do it. Its just the fear we have to get over. Like from the movie Dune - "Fear is the mind killer" 🤣. Cheers
I’ve really wanted to fly an ultralight. I’ve got my part 107 and that made me go through PPL ground school andI’ve even been practicing in a flight sim quite a bit. One thing that really makes me wonder though… I made all the usual mistakes in the sim. Crashed many times, but one time even after I got the hang of it and was flying it in the sim regularly, I was flying in Arizona in the simulator and like you, came over a mountain ridge, and for some reason, was slammed into the ground. Almost like I lost all the air beneath me. My ultralight was flying perfect and the next thing you know I was diving into the ground. I’m not sure if it was a glitch in the sim or something I should consider before I start actually trying to fly one of these. I’m in Florida so it’s not like I have to worry about turbulent air around mountains, but still makes me wonder if that’s a reality that deserves consideration. I know turbulence is something that has to be dealt with, but how an ultralight handles it comparatively to maybe a Cessna 172 is another thing. I don’t have the experience to know the difference.
@@lycosa2000 ultralights like my Trike wing are tested to way beyond what you should ever be flying in , with that said anything can happen , but anything can happen anywhere you are and anything you travel in. It’s a calculated risk but the risk for me is worth the reward. You should always strive to make it as safe as possible for instance checking weather several days and the day of before deciding to fly. You should always do a good preflight. Always keep your head on a swivel and don’t get fixated on any certain object or direction. A Sim can only do so much . The more you fly and the more experience you attain the better you’ll become as a pilot. With that being said a lot of the time it’s the ones who have been flying for a while and get complacent are the ones who have accident’s. If it’s not calm out and I don’t know direction of the wind I tend to fly a little higher above the mountain ridges. Open air flying is limited to weather but it is by FAR the best type of flying. Thank you for watching and commenting and GODspeed on learning to fly whatever craft you choose .
Thank you for taking the time to respond. I do realize how important it is to actually start flying and gain experience outside in the real world. I’m getting close to making that decision. I’m close to having saved the money and go out and buy one. I have to admit it’s been bothering me about the experience in the sim. Everything went out of control really fast and I could not recover. Thankfully, I was safe in my desk chair so it’s not like it was traumatizing, but it just had me scratching my head. Could this happen out there while I’m flying? Could I just be thrown into the ground with little time to react? I also consider how each of us get into a car every day and every day, probably hundreds or thousands of times people don’t have time to react and find themselves in accidents and in varying degrees. Since we’re all used to it, we don’t think much about jumping behind the wheel and driving. I have to assume it’s a little like that. The more you fly, the more you gain confidence about your ability to fly and trust in the aircraft. Like you’ve said, complacency is dangerous and I certainly agree with that. At this point I can’t even imagine getting to the point of complacency. I’m more worried that I’m a little too apprehensive about it. I can’t wait to try it, but honestly, I keep second guessing it as well. I suppose that’s probably normal.
@@lycosa2000 I’ve never seen anyone thrown to the ground like you’re describing. You can hit what’s sometimes referred to as sink or maybe rotor close to the ground but you are usually ready and expecting anything as you speed up and focus on landing. As I’m sure you may have heard already if not you will that altitude is your friend. You have more of a chance to react if something should occur. When you begin training with someone most or all of what you’re asking will be covered. Turbulence is sometimes scarier than others because air as you know is invisible lol. If there is a little wind and you know which way it’s blowing you can avoid it for the most part like staying away from the leeward side of hills and mountains and or being well above them. If you get into Trikes you will love them or hate them as there’s usually no middle ground lol. The great things about Trikes are the glide ratio and ability to land slow and in most places other aircraft can’t land .
You handled this like the Total Boss that you are! Outstanding! I have a question about a glider vs a chute. Assuming vfr as in you were familiar with ground and terrain features.. having flown neither... would the chute be easier or harder to maneuver?
Thank you for your kind comments. I am currently learning powered paragliding and from what little experience I have with PPG I think it’s a little easier for a hang glider . The plus with PPG though is how small it packs down and the portability of it. But the powered hang glider as long as you have a hangar is easier as you don’t have to inflate the wing . Thanks for watching and commenting.
the LSA is funner to fly. Both are suspectible to turbulence. Never flew paramotor but i understand situation from shifiting wings can cause wing collapse. A lot more people are killed flying paramotors than LSAs
@@FLYNRYAN1978that's the number one thing that puts me off from flying. My ass would have been twitching in that turbulence 🤣🤣🤣 does the sensation get easy to deal with the more you fly?
@@tourbike yes it definitely gets easier the more you fly but at the time I had been flying 4 years and this one went from butter smooth to rowdy in an instant with the forecast not showing anything but smooth air. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Did you intend to fly with turbulence in order to learn how to deal with it or keep your skills fresh, and what are the safety margins when its safe to fly and when it is not?
No the weather forecast for that afternoon was SUPPOSED to be calm . A little gust front popped up and I didn’t turn around when I should have and I got hit by it . I didn’t listen to my instincts lol. The wing so I’m told is rated to take much more than I experienced or that I could have physically controlled. I’m also still new to flying even though it was my 4th year at the time of this video. I’m sure there is a lot worse turbulence to experience and hopefully I can avoid it for the most part lol but it help to build skills and to realize first hand what the wing is capable of . Thank you for watching and commenting.
Andy was an experienced Paramotor pilot who never wore a helmet. His friends always gave him shit for not wearing one. Andy gave in and started to wear one. One day Andy went up and he ended up crashing while wearing his helmet. He was rushed to the Hospital but was in pretty bad condition. His best friend Amos went to see him in the Hospital. Amos walked into the emergency room where Andy was being kept alive by some machines. Amos was shocked to see what all was left of his best friend Andy. Andy had no body left at all! All that was left was his head being kept alive all hooked up with machines and hoses. Andy didn't have a scratch or cuts anywhere on his face or his head. Amos was in shock when he heard Andy greet him when he walked into the room. No body, only his head on a platter all hooked up to wires and hoses. Amos looked at him and said "Now, aren't you glad that you had your helmet on"?
Don't be discouraged because I am your God don't be afraid for you are mine I will protect you and I will give you strength I know that's not the exact words but that's the outline
Ryan you flew from a smooth air layer into a shear and turbulance. Notice how as soon as you crossed into that valley you dropped and then turbulant eddies. Good job fly the wing. Relax. Fly faster and change direction. Sometimes you can find smoother air at different altituides.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 nothing wrong with that. I fly big mountains in my soaring trike so i have to be even more carefull. I flew one of the highest peaks in my home of montana. Pretty smooth but then turning back to the airport got pretty rocky.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 reminds me of when my friend ultratrikepilot And i were flying over mt baldy in plains montana heading to hot springs . We both got in some serious sink at 9 thous and we both were floating in are seat belts. We both headed for home.
Great video. In 1997 i was part of a British Army/RAF team that flew two Microlight Aircraft across Canada from Torfino on Vancouver Island to Halifax Nova Scotia.
@@BikerBloke600 Hey thank you. That sounds really awesome. Eventually I’d like to fly cross country from small airport to small airport and see the country side . Thanks for watching and commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 thanks a lot for your fast answer, i live in italy and i really like a loooot flying but here is alittle more complicated because you need a licence etc.. just for my own curiosity, last questions i promise : are you from usa ? do you need a licence to fly it ? your contents are nice and inspiring btw
@ you’re welcome. Yes i live in the US No license required because my craft falls under part 103 of our regulations as it is light enough and not a two seater. Thanks you for your comments and for watching.
Yes, I became a paramotor Pilot this year and after my first solo I decided to stick with Trikes . I liked the idea of how portable they were, but I like a structured wing a lot more lol.
Awesome view. Yea that turbulence can be real scary. Sad part is ya can't see it till ur in it. Seems it messed up the camera view. Thanks for sharing the trip.
nice flight, that turbulence would have been interesting to feel. i learn that if you crab (duirng skydiving) it is minimized at attitude. speaking of crabbing, looks like you had to do it shortly before landing. does this model have an altimeter.
Mine had an altimeter and a speed gauge along wiht a com setup for driver and passenger and a radio for contact with other aircraft in the pattern. The weird thing about crabbing is I can remember flying up wind parallel to the runway with my wing pointed at least 40 degrees sideways but kept going parallet with runway. Wing always wants to point towards the wind. It is a strange sensation as you feel like the aircraft is going to turn around backwards. I can also remember crabbing on final and the last 100 feet, the wing always straightened out. Then you only had to deal with oscillation control and not dropping out of the sky. My instructor insisted I pull the bar back for max speed. "speed was your friend" this meant very small corrections were required. If you came in to low, apply more throttle but keep bar pulled in. Some would push the bar out and stall thus falling out of the sky.
Great to watch I fly a FLPHG and would kill power and turn in the lift for that situation making the most of the unstable air .I have thermaled to inversion layer only to bounce under it that felt like every bolt would shake undone it terrified me .latter after landing I asked other pilot how he broke through inversion he said stay with it until a stronger thermal can punch you through inversion to were the lift is like silk .mabe you were at an inversion layer ?
I've got to give it to you, Ryan, you've got to have some pretty big balls to fly such a craft. Great video! Turbulence at 15:45 and onward was terrifying for me to watch; I can only imagine how you must have felt. I am learning to fly a Cessna 172S with Garmin 1000 avionics in a flight simulator (X-Plane 12). That is scary enough for me, thank you very much!
@@ጠቅላላ_እውቀት_Knowledge I would recommend buying a used one and reverse engineering it . The wing however I would buy from Northwing or some other reputable manufacturer. Thanks for commenting
They are tested to several G’s . I am not specifically sure at the moment but they are tried and true and have been out for a long time or I wouldn’t be flying one lol.
"Let it wobble", as told to me by my instructor on numerous occasions in my early flexwing flying days. Only attempt to correct it if you're blown off course, or descending or ascending significantly. You just have to get used to it but its no fun feeling like youre in a washing machine😬 Btw, when backtracking you should be on the right-hand side of the runway. Fly safe and enjoy it 😁
Don't fly in much thermic conditions? The terrain can rip thermals and cause mechanical turbulence. I could see you just wanted to get down :) and I went through your channel, HG pilots have a good bump tolerance. You didn't pursue hang gliding after H2 or something?
I’ll start by saying that yes I’ve hit some significant turbulence before however I think I ran into a cold front moving in and it was fairly rough for an extended period pretty much all the way back to the airport as shown in the video. I know that some pilots say that it was mild to nothing but it wasn’t or didn’t feel like nothing to me lol. First time my cameras were moved around while flying. Yes I stopped flying hang gliding as an H2 but not due to turbulence I was just impatient and didn’t care to hangwait as it was called . I was also fairly high for it to be mechanical turbulence off the hills . I also passed several hills before that and it was butter smooth until I got closer to those darker clouds starting to form . Thanks for watching and commenting.
It was some sort of sheer, terrain can break thermals. Na, it looked quite turbulent especially the couple of negatives. About a month ago, I got sucked into a wave flying my hang glider and shot right through the CB at 5.5K and couple of minutes later was a couple of grand above clouds. The ride up was insane, being fully pulled in and climbing at over 2.5K ft/m. It was the ride down which I thought would break my glider mid air. Just a tumble weed. I made it but it loosened just about every bolt on the glider and small bits came off. I did see the turbulence followed you all the way down to the river. That's just how it is sometimes. Good stuff man, keep on flying and be safe.
@BariFPV yeah I care nothing for flying in those types of conditions. I know turbulence is part of the game and I’ve actually become more tolerant over the last couple years but I still hate the stuff lol. Happy flying!
@@FLYNRYAN1978 just have to build that bump tolerance hehe :) but nothing like flying in glassy conditions though if the air isn't spicy I get bored rather quickly lol
Oh, man... Been there...!! Attempted an approach to Woodland WA just as the north wind kicked in on final. SLAM BAM WHAM WHOA!!! IMMEDIATE ABORT!! Safe skies me brothah...
I have to ask. Is turbulence more dangerous in a trike than a fixed wing plane? I've hit way worse in my Vector, and aside from being uncomfortable, I wouldn't consider it scary. The only scary time was hitting a rotor from the side and having the plane bank to about 60 degrees in a second. Twice, lol.
I don’t think it’s more dangerous but it’s definitely more exaggerated as you cannot right the Trike with a stick and rudder. You control the direction with not only your weight but the weight of the Trike and gas you have on board. The cameras have pretty good stabilization so you’re not seeing the full effect of what was happening. My wing definitely banked and dropped several times on my way back to the airport. Thanks for watching and commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Your wing area & slow speed amplify the effect of turbulence. Minor bumps in high speed airplane might be severe to this craft. A little extra speed and keeping the faith helps a lot. Probably a front coming in. It started up at cloud base but kept bumping all the way down. As a hang glider and ultralight pilot of 50 years experience, smooth flights are boring but a nice time to wring out the wing. Most thermal bumps are fun to work. A front approaching or a horizontal wind shear is not so fun.
I have flown through exactly what you went through numerous times. It is scary and I believe the LSA is more dangerous and pronounced that a cessna or something. My aircraft weights 400LBS, wing was 150 plus gas and passenger weight. So I was around 800 - 900 LBS. My tank held 15 gallons@@FLYNRYAN1978
Maybe I missed something but I don't see how it was the scariest flight he ever had
I've actually had a bumpier flight than that since this video. It was my first cross country. I guess you just had to be there. it probably isn't much compared to some, but it felt like it to me. Thanks for watching.
Its called "clickbite" 🙂You see - it works 😀
Click bait garbage
@@beans-wi3wi I disagree! When he approached the river at 22:42 he encountered some fairly intense turbulence. Definitely enough to make the ass pucker.
scared me, I wouldn't want be swinging around up there in the wind like that suspended by cloth and wires, I am sure thoughts pass through your mind about the construction of the craft, easy to criticize from the safety of home
Years ago when I learned to fly hang gliders (1980), my instructor told me that if air was visible, there's no way anyone would want to fly through it. I think he was right. I remember the first time I ever went over the falls in a booming Arizona thermal, and boy did It scare the crap out of me! I was coring the thermal and the next thing I knew my wing was pointing almost straight down. Thanks to the reflex our wings have built into them, it really wasn't that dangerous. Going over the falls isn't uncommon in big air, and I actually got to where I enjoyed the ride. It's kind of like going down that first big hill on a roller coaster. But I can tell you the most dangerous thing I have encountered and witnessed in my 40+ years of flying dacron and aluminum wings is a dust devil near the ground. I hit one in Flagstaff on landing which was invisible since there was no dust for it to pick up in the area, and it put me into an almost 90 degree bank, and I was less than 40 feet off the ground. Somehow I managed to pull it out and was unscathed. I was also a eye witness when Dan Buchanan was killed flying a hang glider while performing at the Mountain Home AFB airshow in 2018. The likely cause was determined to be an invisible dust devil (it was a very hot day with big dust devils in the area). So my point is be very careful during strong thermic conditions while flying close to the ground. I've found it's best to be on the ground wishing you were flying rather than being in the air wishing you were on the ground.
I'm getting more comfortable with turbulence but when it lasts as long as it did that's what I don't like . Thanks for your knowledge and experience.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 No problem. Be safe and have fun.
I’ve watched invisible vortices nearly push large SUVs off the road. The August heat here in Wyoming seems to be when they are most prevalent. When the do hit a dust patch or alkali flat, they rocket the dust into the sky!
@@tomcoryell not sure what I hit but I know I didn't like it . lol
As I was reading your post before getting half way through I was thinking ‘Dan Buchanan’ and then you added you weee there. That accident really took the wind out of my sails …total pro, high airtime pilot, boom..he’s gone. I only saw him fly once at an airshow in Grand Junction. I happened to be one of the ‘early bird’ hang glider pilots back in The 80’s hot towing behind a vehicle in Hobbs, NM using the harness tow method.
40 years ago I went up in a Terratorn Tierra with my 9 year old daughter. The only reason we are alive is I had the prudence to buy a BRS ballistic chute. I am a believer. I will never fly without one.
Totally agree.
I have a throwable chute.
I would rather have a ballistic though.
Thanks for commenting and watching.
If I had a ballistic parachute I might have kept my ELSA. But they cost 5000 and FAA requirments are to be inspected every 2 years i think at around 1500. @@FLYNRYAN1978
First question that jumped into my mind was exactly about this.
A@@FLYNRYAN1978
@@FLYNRYAN1978It takes real ⚾️🏐🏈🎾’s to fly one of those things. 👍. Maybe save up for the BRS ballistic chute you prefer. 🧠
I am thinking about a ultralight for retirement and you gave me a new perspective of what else there is than just flying and having fun. Thank God you came through this ok but, again, thanks for showing me there are other things to think about other than taking off and landing.
You’re welcome. Admittedly I may have overreacted in my situation but until that flight I’d never experienced turbulence for that long of time. I recommend this type of aircraft to anyone.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
You should have flown in and around Dublin GA, The turbulence you experienced was a normal day for me. I finally sold the ELSA rotax 670 high performace engine. Unbelievable power. I could never get used to wind gusts trying to flip my ELSA over. The worst trubulence was flying in the pattern and trying to burn base to final fighting really bad turbulence like drops of 20 feet or fighting the wing being blown on one side. I remember being blown so hard I ended up landing in the grass next to the runway. I had Tundra tires. The ELSA was designed for grass landings. @@FLYNRYAN1978
Try flying on the Internet , works for me …
@@airspro5666 LOL! Great advice for staying alive!
@@FLYNRYAN1978 I trust you cleaned the seat and did a laundry when you got home.
That sharp buffeting when you encounter significant turbulence can sure make you want to "suck up a seat cushion". Extra high pucker factor there.
Absolutely!
Nothing to be scared off here,, normal smooth flight with some bumbs.🤘
It's almost like you were there lol.
Thanks for commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 From ground view or overhead view it looks less scary.
But i flew trikes over 12 years and had my own scary moments, while ground viewers say ,, your wing was perfect and straight level, and i was shaking in the trike unit.🤗
I have flew with a few bums on UNITED
If he said it was so scary omg you'd agree though right like he didn't need to be there? @@FLYNRYAN1978
Amazing. What state is this, when you first took off, the countryside that came into view, just beautiful the green is overwhelming
Thank you yes it’s extremely beautiful here.
Gainsboro TN is the location.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
I know this is completely irrelevant, but this video reminded me about my great uncle. He used to have an ultralight very similar to yours and he got to land it on the USS Yorktown CV-10. It was done as a Vietnam War memorial. He was drafted into the army. I wish I could have seen that in person, but it happened about 20 years before I was born.
That would have been awesome to see!
Thanks for watching.
Excellent story, I’ve been to the Yorktown several times and plan to go again later this year. Hopefully you can go to honor him and the flight he made. Cheers
May I ask what brand/model trike is that? I’m from Gallatin Tennessee. I’m about to solo this weekend.
It’s a Skycycle
They were made by a guy named Trike Mike out of Chattanooga. He passed away a couple years back.
They are very similar to the Northwing mavericks .
Where are you Soloing?
I fly at Jackson Co airport in Gainsboro.
You should check it out sometime.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Mine is a SkYcycle too. I've had it about two years. We'll have to get together. ruclips.net/video/W2UAXmfD9-E/видео.html
Yep, I owned a ELSA with a Rotex 670 engine. That engine had so much power that one could not step on brakes and apply full power on the concret, the engine would push the trike across the apran. I flew for two years. Trained in Jackson County Ga, close to SC border. The air for the most part was okay up there. I had some turbulence. When I flew the ELSA down to middle GA 130 miles, the turbulence was bad. I mean it was really bad in Dublin Ga. I could count on 1 hand the smooth flights. My turbulence looked like what this guy went through ALL THE TIME. And, I was in the air at sunup with calm winds reported. 800 feet off runway, I would get thrown all over the place. I often wondered if I could make it through the pattern without going down. It was always a struggle landing. Right where Dublin Ga is we have the warm fronts from Fl meeting the colder air from North Ga. The 40 mile stretch of land was always volitile. I never could get use to flying in the turbulence and sold the aircraft. Mine was a 2 seater. So I had to have a LSA license by the FAA. I had to take 20 hours training, complete a cross country to three airports using a sectional map, fly with an FAA examiner and take a written exam at an FAA office in Atlanta. I also had to pass an oral exam from the examiner. This guy did not have to train at all as he was in a single seater. I dd notice he was flying over a mountain range. Had he been trained, he would have avoided that as the rotor turbulence on the leeward side of the mountains will take you down fast.
I have some training as I am an H2 rated pilot back in 2019 and trained for around 6 hours in a two seater in North Carolina. So I didn’t train all by myself as I’m crazy but not on that level of crazy lol. I was around 27to 2800 MSL at the time and usually once you get around 2500 or better things start to smooth out significantly however I believe I ran into a cold front starting to move in as the weather said it would be smooth the rest of that late evening however as we all know the weather isn’t always accurate as I found out lol. Also I couldn’t fly anywhere if I had to avoid mountains where I fly as you can tell in the video my airport is right beside one lol. Thank you for watching and commenting.
Does anyone else feel a sense of falling while watching these? I do. lol
Thank you for watching.
Great video. Thanks for sharing
I flew a Wizard ultralight for 5 years. Now looking for a two place paraplane.
Thank you , I want to complete my sport pilot license and get a two seater . I want to share this beautiful gift with others .
Very minor turbulence. In about a thousand hours of flying trikes I have suffered much worse on many occasions.
Didn't feel minor to me but then again, I only have a little over a hundred hours. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Code brown for sure there. I don't know anything about those aircraft--do you practice stalls in those? Power on/off?
Yeah, I never practice for turbulence though lol.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 I don't recall that coming up in my private or instrument rating, either!
I've had days where the air was smooth as glass until I hit that first bit of moderate turbulence and then it seems to follow me all the way back to the airport. Then when I look at the windsock it's just hanging limp and I have to think to myself, "Seriously, what the heck?"
Exactly my thoughts lol. Thanks for the comments .
The devil is messing with you.
It's the meaness coming out of you. It causes turbulence. And flatulence 💨💨💨
That is why you check the windspeed and direction at the different altitudes.
Now thats real flying, and getting a real feel of some wind/turbulence. Well handled. When i encounter heavy turbulence i just add power. Pull the bar slightly and try to punch through. Circling the bar and just keeping calm. It always feel worse than it is. I also convince myself its only the cart swerving. The wing has got this👌🙏😄
Yeah
You really have no choice but to stay calm . If you can’t you have no business flying. Panic makes you make bad decisions lol .
Thanks for the support and thanks for watching.
I just do a quick dump in my pants… Bail the craft, dragging frantically at my Parachute before doing another quick dump in my pants… And then crash land somewhere over some power lines minus my Phone, shoes, craft, pants and my dignity… 🪂
@@neptunemeditation😂😂😂😂😂😂😂😂
Scary stuff, great video! Would you be okay with me featuring some of it in my series Weekly Dose of Aviation? Of course you will be credited both in the video and in the description.
Absolutely. That’s why I share content. I love showing others the beauty and sometimes scary side of flight . Thank you for commenting. Appreciate your support.
Can you also let me know when the video is up ? Thanks .
ruclips.net/video/4FNjlvcBeQU/видео.html
Where is your airstrip ?
@@SparrowCYEL Gainsboro TN
Yes, updrafts and downdrafts from the hilly terrain with maybe some added wind to make it even more interesting. Ultralights will be affected more than heavier aircraft. You should be okay if you don't exceed your maneuvering speed. You did well when you reduced your throttle. Just ride it out and be prepared to quickly add lots of throttle if you get into a downdraft.
I agree.
Thank you for watching and commenting.
To avoid thermals, do not pass over darker colored ground cover. It's tough around airports but rising heat from dark colored ground cover will toss you around like a hackysack
Thanks for commenting and watching.
@@FLYNRYAN1978helluva nice video though
I'm sure it's really scary in an open cockpit configuration such as an ultralite. I've had summertime turbulence in a Cessna 152 that lifted me off the seat and bounced me around. Yes, I did not have my lap belt on but the cross belt was on. Just know thermo turbulence does not happen over water. That river would be a great place to fly down her or up her and not have the affects of thermo turbulence. Wind turbulence is different, but on relative calm or cool days, you won't have that.
I have also found it to be calmer flying over water. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Did you check your upper wind forecast before flying?
I sure did. That's why it was so surprising to me . Best I can tell it was a pop up gust front that I ran into . I seen it in the distance but didn't know which way it was heading, now I know lol. Thanks for commenting and watching.
Turbulence... It looks like similar situation I experienced in the past during my paramotor flight. Sometimes the weather is unpredictable... Great job Ryan!
It’s definitely unpredictable. Sometimes they say it’ll be gusty and it turns out to be the smoothest air ever and other times the exact opposite. Thank you for commenting.
Sometimes the weather is unpredictable ? And sometimes pilots have a lack of knowledge and ignore their basics... Back to your books !
Of course sky.....
It's normal to get some mild turbulence when transitioning from flying over water to over land, especially on hot days and bare land.
This was a little more than mild lol. Thanks for watching.
@@FLYNRYAN1978I didn't mean to minimize your experience, I've never flown an ultra light and I'm assuming turbulence affects them more than heavier aircraft.
I used to fly out of an area that would routinely have smooth air in the morning but the thermals coming from uneven surface heating would always make the afternoon air rough.
Strictly speaking the FAA defines light to moderate turbulence as bumpiness with temporary changes in altitude and/or attitude. Severe turbulence causes violent changes of attitude and altitude with periods of loss of control.
I once had a situation where I could hold my altitude within 1000 feet of my desired altitude, yet the turbulence was reported as moderate.
I'm curious, what was the wind speed, temperature and time of day?
@@keithcanfield3251 It was late afternoon and really smooth until I ran into that gust front to my left .
It was really surprising.
I’ve hit some bumps before but nothing that continued for that long all the way back to the airport.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 The atmosphere can be an unpredictable beast. Good video. Fly safe.
@@keithcanfield3251 thank you.
Appreciate it!
We would fly The Columbia River Gorge, when flying from southwestern Wa State to North Idaho. In a bad storm we had 250ft+ elevation drops and gains in a Cessna 6 seat going thru the Gorge. We flew that way to Idaho all the time,, and went thru some doozie storms in the Gorge. Hood River in the Gorge is or was a very popular sailboarding spot,,and a high turbulence area. Sometimes that turbulence extended quite a ways up in elevation. You did the best you could when riding a kite, chop the power and turn around, be ready with the power after the turn. Be ready for the back flip if you get a monster updraft or headwind., God Forbid.
Yeah, that's exactly what I did but my little trike couldn't outrun it back to the airport. lol Thanks for watching and commenting.
Which place is it? Scenic beauty is awesome 👌.
Gainsboro TN
Thank you for watching and your kind comments.
Hi Ryan, It was interesting to watch your response to the turbulence and the more it kicked you, the more you pulled on the bar. The extra speed from tensing and pulling the bar in will make the turbulence feel much more pronounced. If it does get a bit rough just slow the wing down as well as just damping it out. I did make a video on fly in turbulence but this is all about your channel. Being confident in your machine comes with time, experience and knowledge of how to make it easier and less stressful for you. Keep flying and a good pilot never stops learning. Fly safe :)
Thank you for your support.
It’s instinct to pull the bar in lol. I have to get away from that I know. You are definitely one of my favorite channels to watch and learn from .
Thanks for watching and commenting. Happy flying!
@@FLYNRYAN1978 little oks like 1978 was a good year as well. I hope my small amount of words has helped, even just a little bit.
Oh yes
I appreciate all the input I can get.
Beautiful! Thank you! Cheers!
@@mlopez2aol you are welcome. Thank you for watching and your kind comments.
Ryan was it rotors coming off the hills/Mechanical Rotors? Or Thermal? or Both. And the flight over was smooth until it wasn't, but you seem to turn back right away, I would have thought that It would have gotten better going back from where you came??? Was there a front coming in?
It was very calm for the first 15 minutes or so . Yes I think it was a front because I fought it all the way back down to the landing. The weather didn’t predict this for sure lol . There were some darkish clouds forming to my left but I didn’t know which way it was heading and thought I was far enough away to fly a little further. Next time I’ll listen to my instincts.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Amen
Actually some good exsperience for you. The hills i see and the calm water tell me it wasnt mech rotors. You came into a shear and turbulant edies. Prob generated by the weather you had on a distance. But you maintained control and flew the wing. Good job
@@whisperingeagle Thank you
Like a flip of a switch - buttery smooth to crap just like that - what time of day? Just curious as I fly a paramotor trike and confined to morning and evenings. This sport intrigues me and want to pursue.
It was late afternoon but apparently not late enough lol.
I’m pursuing paramotoring .
I want to be biwingral.
Ive had worse than that in a fixed wing single seater Glider being caught in the tail end ot a Rotar. Not nice.High winds from 360 degrees. Alttitude about a 1000 ft. Thank God I managed to do a 90 deg. turn and get the hell out of there
Thanks for watching.
Turbulence or not, i'm still dreaming to get myself one of these someday.
And as many already mentioned before, a beatiful scenery you got there.
I highly encourage it .
No pun intended lol.
I flew with a friend on his trike, and another buddy took off with us out of Double Eagle near Albuquerque New Mexico in 2008, I was invited to drive there for a trike fly-in group I was part of when I took up flying them using my LSA fixed wing experience as hours so I could learn to fly trikes with mechanical, comms and especially meteorology experience (my College minor was Earth Science and Major was Social Science) .
On our trike flight near KABQ, everything was nominal--nice smooth air, our engines were well warmed up, and we looked forward to an hour long flight, and we headed west, away from the city, knowing the high mountain range to the east, the southern tail of the Rockies, could churn up dangerous turbulence.
What we did not see, or see on the radar, was the hidden gust front moving in from the east from behind the mountain range. It came upon us suddenly, making us feel like the wind wanted to separate our wing from us.
We declared an emergency, and tried to warn our friend on the radio, who had flown faster out ahead of us, but we could not reach him and there was no operational tower at Double Eagle at that time.
So with me and my friend both working the trapeze trying to stay cool thru the chop--just flying through it and not trying to overpower the trapeze, we made it to the longest runway at the field, about a mile long, coming in crabbed but touching down shaken, but not stirred.
During the flight my friend shouted to me "r u alright?" and I gave a thumbs up, since his helmet probably would have not let him hear the answer, even on radio with noise cancellation, because of the heavy wind.
Funny thing, I was fine, more worried about landing so I could visit that place we need after a flight on an aircraft with no "facilities" since I had had several cups of hot chocolate that morning. My fixed wing teacher taught me how to be unflappable in a crisis--his attitude is "one way or another, you'll kiss the planet earth again" so he prepared me and coached me well for emergencies before offering me a solo, only four lessons in my fixed wing training though I only flew trikes with a partner, because it was like camping, since trikes can land by streams and rivers and we could catch fish for our lovely ladies waiting for us at home.
Only advisory about this video--find a helmet, the only landing u can walk away from is one where your head does not have to be velcroed back on to your body.
Thanks you
I enjoyed reading your comments.
I have several helmets and I don’t disagree that it’s probably better to wear one than not to but if I land that hard that I need a helmet it’s probably only going to be good for identification purposes only lol .
@@atticushexcel9567 So correct. On any ulltralight, a must. I was run over crossing at a crosswalk in '19, the car that impacted me was going 35 mph, and I rolled under the SUV and flew 10 feet, landing upright.
Soo lucky, the police said I was the only person they'd seen who'd survived such an accident, and I was out of the hospital 24 hrs later with just a concussion and bruises.
Of course I did not have a helmet, pedestrians usually do not, but I was wearing my heavy jacket I always use for trike flying, since it was cold that night. My padded arms cushioned the blows the tires and suv axles made to my face, and I had jeans on.
So I recommend motorcycle style wear in addition to a helmet when flying an Ultralight--since my impact speed in my pedestrian accident was quite similar to what one might expect in an ultralight landing upset by a freak wind gust.
As one who has hit the ground at speed many times, the helmet becomes one of the few things you actually prefer to lead with. While an aircraft impact could be too severe to matter, it could also be sort of an out of control landing type crash that resembles motorcycle style/type smacks/tumbles. Anyway, having been knocked out with a helmet on, I’ve never been a fan of testing the ground with my bear naked skull.
Great pilot,what is the crusing speed of your trike?
Thank you
Around 45ish
@@FLYNRYAN1978 thank you😊
Being in the rockies, I've experienced a bunch of similar conditions and they can get your attention fast! Nice video.
Thank you and thanks for watching.
It never ceases to amaze me the way we create new ways to die.
The way I see it is new ways to truly live lol. It’s all a matter of perspective I guess.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
You thinking living to be 90 years old when you barely can walk or pisses and pooping your parents all the time is worth it? Live ain't that serious..dying isn't that big of a deal really..we are just scared of hte unknown is what fear comes from
🤣 life's not hard enough, let me put a few hundred feet between me and the ground
Nice vid, good flying. I plan to get to work on my light trike, just as soon as i finish up learning my ppg! Love the low n slow stuff too!!!👍👍👍
Sweet
Yeah I’ve been training on the PPG since last year.
I want to go even slower lol.
Thanks for watching.
My pleasure...keep posting, love the adventures!
@@FLYNRYAN1978yeah I been kiting for cpl years myself, got all the goodies now to start hang testing n motor practice! I'm ready for spring for sure!!!
Im not religious but that much chop would make me pray 😁
Great landing 👍
Cheers
I was praying to JESUS all the way back and thanking HIM for a while when I landed safely. I’m not religious either sir and am totally against religion as a whole. As a Christian though it’s about a relationship with our Creator and Savior. Thank you for commenting Patrick .
@@FLYNRYAN1978
Like @Wayne said -- the wing is built for it. It was just the landing I was worried about and you nailed it.
Come in as fast as possible is how I was trained for in choppy wind. Most of my training landings were high short approaches and pulling the bar in for a steep approach. This leaves no chance of needing your engine should it fail. The only engine-on approach the instructor chanced was at his personal field where he likes to come in low and long as his field is short. But the the approach is over low growth crops so not much to worry about.
Get back up there my friend - humans where meant to fly -- evolution gave us the mind power to create aircraft to do it. Its just the fear we have to get over. Like from the movie Dune - "Fear is the mind killer" 🤣.
Cheers
@@patrickmckowen2999 absolutely going back up .
Where is that if you don't mind me asking? Beautiful valley there.
Gainsboro TN
Jackson Co Airport
Thanks for watching.
LOL, I trained at jackson country airport in Georgia just north of Athens@@FLYNRYAN1978
I’m an instrument-rated private pilot and licensed skydiver, yet I’d never fly around in one of these rinky-dink ultralights. No thanks!
It's definitely not for everyone. Thanks for watching.
Atleast not without a chute
Even the Wright Bros would be afraid to go up in that contraption.
lol
I think they would actually be amazed.
Thanks for watching.
I’ve really wanted to fly an ultralight. I’ve got my part 107 and that made me go through PPL ground school andI’ve even been practicing in a flight sim quite a bit. One thing that really makes me wonder though… I made all the usual mistakes in the sim. Crashed many times, but one time even after I got the hang of it and was flying it in the sim regularly, I was flying in Arizona in the simulator and like you, came over a mountain ridge, and for some reason, was slammed into the ground. Almost like I lost all the air beneath me. My ultralight was flying perfect and the next thing you know I was diving into the ground. I’m not sure if it was a glitch in the sim or something I should consider before I start actually trying to fly one of these. I’m in Florida so it’s not like I have to worry about turbulent air around mountains, but still makes me wonder if that’s a reality that deserves consideration. I know turbulence is something that has to be dealt with, but how an ultralight handles it comparatively to maybe a Cessna 172 is another thing. I don’t have the experience to know the difference.
@@lycosa2000 ultralights like my Trike wing are tested to way beyond what you should ever be flying in , with that said anything can happen , but anything can happen anywhere you are and anything you travel in. It’s a calculated risk but the risk for me is worth the reward. You should always strive to make it as safe as possible for instance checking weather several days and the day of before deciding to fly. You should always do a good preflight. Always keep your head on a swivel and don’t get fixated on any certain object or direction. A Sim can only do so much . The more you fly and the more experience you attain the better you’ll become as a pilot. With that being said a lot of the time it’s the ones who have been flying for a while and get complacent are the ones who have accident’s. If it’s not calm out and I don’t know direction of the wind I tend to fly a little higher above the mountain ridges.
Open air flying is limited to weather but it is by FAR the best type of flying.
Thank you for watching and commenting and GODspeed on learning to fly whatever craft you choose .
Thank you for taking the time to respond. I do realize how important it is to actually start flying and gain experience outside in the real world. I’m getting close to making that decision. I’m close to having saved the money and go out and buy one. I have to admit it’s been bothering me about the experience in the sim. Everything went out of control really fast and I could not recover. Thankfully, I was safe in my desk chair so it’s not like it was traumatizing, but it just had me scratching my head. Could this happen out there while I’m flying? Could I just be thrown into the ground with little time to react? I also consider how each of us get into a car every day and every day, probably hundreds or thousands of times people don’t have time to react and find themselves in accidents and in varying degrees. Since we’re all used to it, we don’t think much about jumping behind the wheel and driving. I have to assume it’s a little like that. The more you fly, the more you gain confidence about your ability to fly and trust in the aircraft. Like you’ve said, complacency is dangerous and I certainly agree with that. At this point I can’t even imagine getting to the point of complacency. I’m more worried that I’m a little too apprehensive about it. I can’t wait to try it, but honestly, I keep second guessing it as well. I suppose that’s probably normal.
@@lycosa2000 I’ve never seen anyone thrown to the ground like you’re describing. You can hit what’s sometimes referred to as sink or maybe rotor close to the ground but you are usually ready and expecting anything as you speed up and focus on landing. As I’m sure you may have heard already if not you will that altitude is your friend. You have more of a chance to react if something should occur. When you begin training with someone most or all of what you’re asking will be covered.
Turbulence is sometimes scarier than others because air as you know is invisible lol. If there is a little wind and you know which way it’s blowing you can avoid it for the most part like staying away from the leeward side of hills and mountains and or being well above them. If you get into Trikes you will love them or hate them as there’s usually no middle ground lol.
The great things about Trikes are the glide ratio and ability to land slow and in most places other aircraft can’t land .
Flying around on something made out of tinker toys with a Gayla kite strapped on top. No thanks.
lol
Come on.
Where’s your spirit of adventure?
Thanks for watching.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 it left about 35 years ago, lol
@@marka.2715 lol
You handled this like the Total Boss that you are! Outstanding! I have a question about a glider vs a chute. Assuming vfr as in you were familiar with ground and terrain features.. having flown neither... would the chute be easier or harder to maneuver?
Thank you for your kind comments. I am currently learning powered paragliding and from what little experience I have with PPG I think it’s a little easier for a hang glider . The plus with PPG though is how small it packs down and the portability of it. But the powered hang glider as long as you have a hangar is easier as you don’t have to inflate the wing . Thanks for watching and commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Thank You Sir! Fly safe and keep The great vids coming!
the LSA is funner to fly. Both are suspectible to turbulence. Never flew paramotor but i understand situation from shifiting wings can cause wing collapse. A lot more people are killed flying paramotors than LSAs
@@kevindecker9444 I'm currently learning to fly paramotor trike.. I love low n slow.
A waste of time. I didn't see anything to get all scared up about.
Well thanks for watching anyway .
@@FLYNRYAN1978that's the number one thing that puts me off from flying. My ass would have been twitching in that turbulence 🤣🤣🤣 does the sensation get easy to deal with the more you fly?
@@tourbike yes it definitely gets easier the more you fly but at the time I had been flying 4 years and this one went from butter smooth to rowdy in an instant with the forecast not showing anything but smooth air.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
U saved ma time bro thanks
@@FMEDİM welcome
Thanks for watching
Did you intend to fly with turbulence in order to learn how to deal with it or keep your skills fresh, and what are the safety margins when its safe to fly and when it is not?
No the weather forecast for that afternoon was SUPPOSED to be calm .
A little gust front popped up and I didn’t turn around when I should have and I got hit by it . I didn’t listen to my instincts lol. The wing so I’m told is rated to take much more than I experienced or that I could have physically controlled. I’m also still new to flying even though it was my 4th year at the time of this video. I’m sure there is a lot worse turbulence to experience and hopefully I can avoid it for the most part lol but it help to build skills and to realize first hand what the wing is capable of . Thank you for watching and commenting.
Andy was an experienced Paramotor pilot who never wore a helmet. His friends always gave him shit for not wearing one. Andy gave in and started to wear one. One day Andy went up and he ended up crashing while wearing his helmet. He was rushed to the Hospital but was in pretty bad condition. His best friend Amos went to see him in the Hospital. Amos walked into the emergency room where Andy was being kept alive by some machines. Amos was shocked to see what all was left of his best friend Andy. Andy had no body left at all! All that was left was his head being kept alive all hooked up with machines and hoses. Andy didn't have a scratch or cuts anywhere on his face or his head. Amos was in shock when he heard Andy greet him when he walked into the room. No body, only his head on a platter all hooked up to wires and hoses. Amos looked at him and said "Now, aren't you glad that you had your helmet on"?
LOL Good one, Dude!
lol some people always have to find a reason to argue but everyone is entitled to their opinion.
Nice story, funny.
@@jeffj_39 lol me too .
And I thought skydiving humor was bad.
Reminded me of when I got to fly around Phx. Just going over the freeway caused lift. Pretty scary machines if there's any wind. Good video.
I agree , flying these are very weather dependent.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
Don't be discouraged because I am your God don't be afraid for you are mine I will protect you and I will give you strength I know that's not the exact words but that's the outline
Amen John ! Thanks for your encouragement sir .
Beautiful scenery where's this ?
Gainsboro Airport middle TN
Ryan you flew from a smooth air layer into a shear and turbulance. Notice how as soon as you crossed into that valley you dropped and then turbulant eddies. Good job fly the wing. Relax. Fly faster and change direction. Sometimes you can find smoother air at different altituides.
I thought about trying to climb out of it but i was ready to get back down after that .
@@FLYNRYAN1978 nothing wrong with that. I fly big mountains in my soaring trike so i have to be even more carefull. I flew one of the highest peaks in my home of montana. Pretty smooth but then turning back to the airport got pretty rocky.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 reminds me of when my friend ultratrikepilot
And i were flying over mt baldy in plains montana heading to hot springs . We both got in some serious sink at 9 thous and we both were floating in are seat belts. We both headed for home.
Should you apply power at least 50% in turbelence to make it smoother?
I tried a little bit of everything.
Nothing seemed to help lol.
So I returned to the Airport ASAP.
Thanks for watching.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 you handled well though it seems was scary.
@@dataknado it lasted a long time that was the scary part. I've hit turbulence before but it never lasted that long.
That didn’t look too bad!
It never looks bad with stabilization turned on lol but if you notice the wing cam got turned flat facing down from the turbulence.
It's looking very nice! How fast this goes?
@@Finnair92 it cruises around 35 and bar pulled in about 50mph.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
If turbulence can make the wings of an airliner bend up and down, imagine what it can do to an ultralight.
Right lol
Do you have an icao for departure airport? I would like to “fly” this in my simulator.
It’s Jackson Co airport in Gainsboro TN.
Thanks for watching.
Click magnet... nothing scary here
I put a time stamp on it . It wasn’t intended for click bait.
Thanks for watching.
Great video. In 1997 i was part of a British Army/RAF team that flew two Microlight Aircraft across Canada from Torfino on Vancouver Island to Halifax Nova Scotia.
@@BikerBloke600 Hey thank you.
That sounds really awesome.
Eventually I’d like to fly cross country from small airport to small airport and see the country side .
Thanks for watching and commenting.
You did well pulling the power back and keeping your composure.
I ran into the same thing when flying my Cessna over southern Oklahoma last year.
Thank you and thanks for watching and commenting. Happy flying.
Do you have to pay insurance every year , or property tax ? thanks
No , I do pay hanger rent and gas , that's about it .
@@FLYNRYAN1978 thanks a lot for your fast answer, i live in italy and i really like a loooot flying but here is alittle more complicated because you need a licence etc.. just for my own curiosity, last questions i promise : are you from usa ? do you need a licence to fly it ? your contents are nice and inspiring btw
@ you’re welcome.
Yes i live in the US
No license required because my craft falls under part 103 of our regulations as it is light enough and not a two seater.
Thanks you for your comments and for watching.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 waoo so nice that you can enjoy this sport with more freedom than us here.. good to know! thanks again
@ yes indeed , your welcome
As a paraglider and Paramotor pilot, these will be my next changele. It’s seems less stressful than the Paramotor(by foot) or trike launch.
Yes, I became a paramotor Pilot this year and after my first solo I decided to stick with Trikes . I liked the idea of how portable they were, but I like a structured wing a lot more lol.
Hi nice video. Where was it taken please?
Thank you
Gainsboro TN is where it was recorded.
Do you need wingtip strobe lights on that machine?
No
It falls under part 103 .
I do have and use them though among all the other lights I use .
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Awesome view. Yea that turbulence can be real scary. Sad part is ya can't see it till ur in it. Seems it messed up the camera view. Thanks for sharing the trip.
Yeah
That’s the first time turbulence moved the cameras.
Thank you for watching and your comments.
nice flight, that turbulence would have been interesting to feel. i learn that if you crab (duirng skydiving) it is minimized at attitude. speaking of crabbing, looks like you had to do it shortly before landing. does this model have an altimeter.
Yes, there was a lot of crabbing going on in this flight lol. I use an app for my altimeter. Thank you for watching and commenting.
Mine had an altimeter and a speed gauge along wiht a com setup for driver and passenger and a radio for contact with other aircraft in the pattern. The weird thing about crabbing is I can remember flying up wind parallel to the runway with my wing pointed at least 40 degrees sideways but kept going parallet with runway. Wing always wants to point towards the wind. It is a strange sensation as you feel like the aircraft is going to turn around backwards. I can also remember crabbing on final and the last 100 feet, the wing always straightened out. Then you only had to deal with oscillation control and not dropping out of the sky. My instructor insisted I pull the bar back for max speed. "speed was your friend" this meant very small corrections were required. If you came in to low, apply more throttle but keep bar pulled in. Some would push the bar out and stall thus falling out of the sky.
@@kevindecker9444 yes speed is life .
That’s what we call a “ soft landing “ 🤣🤣🤣
You land in your own sh!t 🤣🤣
Almost needs a new pair lol.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
Great to watch I fly a FLPHG and would kill power and turn in the lift for that situation making the most of the unstable air .I have thermaled to inversion layer only to bounce under it that felt like every bolt would shake undone it terrified me .latter after landing I asked other pilot how he broke through inversion he said stay with it until a stronger thermal can punch you through inversion to were the lift is like silk .mabe you were at an inversion layer ?
I think it was a gust front that popped up out of nowhere.
Thank you for watching and commenting.
Fly safe !
Was fun to watch… but in which country is it ? France ?
TN America . Thanks
Why is the camera so still. ?
???
How is called this sport? Paramotor gliding?
Thanks for sharing this wonderful video and moment.
Very welcome !
Thanks for watching and commenting.
Well done... I've never flown an ultralite or anything like that, but I can see how the situation would have got you nice and tensed-up!
Thank you and thanks for watching.
Aqui é do Brasil. Lindo voo meus parabéns Sr.
Thank you so much.
I appreciate you watching and your kind words.
THAT THING FLYS AWFULLY SLOW. IS IT POSSIBLE TO SLAP A TURBO ON THOSE THINGS TO GO FASTER?
Lol that's the whole point is to fly slow .
Thanks for watching.
Did ya get a racing stripe on the back of them trousers? I think I would have!!!!
Almost lol
I've got to give it to you, Ryan, you've got to have some pretty big balls to fly such a craft. Great video! Turbulence at 15:45 and onward was terrifying for me to watch; I can only imagine how you must have felt. I am learning to fly a Cessna 172S with Garmin 1000 avionics in a flight simulator (X-Plane 12). That is scary enough for me, thank you very much!
Thank you for your kind words and thanks for watching . Maybe we can fly together one day.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 I'm not so sure about our flying together since I am terrified of heights and will stick with the simulator. Fly safely and enjoy!👍
@@SWExplore nothing like the real thing.
Where are you from is it Canada or America??
This is America . Middle TN
Thanks for watching!
were was the airport sharp looking
Gainsboro TN Thank you
Check winds from surface to above maximum terrine, current and forecast.
Yeah I did . It was a surprise cold front starting to move in . Thanks for watching and commenting.
how can i build my air craft ?
@@ጠቅላላ_እውቀት_Knowledge I would recommend buying a used one and reverse engineering it . The wing however I would buy from Northwing or some other reputable manufacturer.
Thanks for commenting
Where is this? 🤔
Jackson Co. Airport Gainsboro TN
Do you not feel the cold wearing just a t-shirt while flying at height?
In the summer as long as you stay below 2500 MSL it's nice, any further up it starts getting cold . Thanks for watching and commenting.
Is it a good idea to fly in the flight path of someone else landing or taking off from the landing strip of an airport?
Not really . That's why we use transponders and keep our heads on swivels incase someone's not using one. Thanks for watching.
can you still fly enough and land safely if that engine dies?
Yes, that's the one of the great things about flying a Hang Glider. Thanks for watching and commenting.
Great flight! Greetings from Argentina!
Hey thank you ! It’s one I’m sure not to forget. Lol
What speed do these fly at 😊
Mine cruises around 35 mph with a range of around 30 to 50 mph. Thanks for watching and comments.
How durable are these things? I’d be worried about some type of structural failure. I’d love to own one.
They are tested to several G’s .
I am not specifically sure at the moment but they are tried and true and have been out for a long time or I wouldn’t be flying one lol.
They are very robust believe it or not.
How long did it take to travel 100 miles?
i'm not sure
i think it would take around 1 and a half hours
thanks for watching
"Let it wobble", as told to me by my instructor on numerous occasions in my early flexwing flying days. Only attempt to correct it if you're blown off course, or descending or ascending significantly. You just have to get used to it but its no fun feeling like youre in a washing machine😬
Btw, when backtracking you should be on the right-hand side of the runway. Fly safe and enjoy it 😁
Good to know thank you.
Does this flight take place along the Maryland, West Virginia border?
No
More of the Tn and Kentucky border.
Thanks for watching.
Don't fly in much thermic conditions? The terrain can rip thermals and cause mechanical turbulence. I could see you just wanted to get down :) and I went through your channel, HG pilots have a good bump tolerance. You didn't pursue hang gliding after H2 or something?
I’ll start by saying that yes I’ve hit some significant turbulence before however I think I ran into a cold front moving in and it was fairly rough for an extended period pretty much all the way back to the airport as shown in the video. I know that some pilots say that it was mild to nothing but it wasn’t or didn’t feel like nothing to me lol. First time my cameras were moved around while flying. Yes I stopped flying hang gliding as an H2 but not due to turbulence I was just impatient and didn’t care to hangwait as it was called . I was also fairly high for it to be mechanical turbulence off the hills . I also passed several hills before that and it was butter smooth until I got closer to those darker clouds starting to form .
Thanks for watching and commenting.
It was some sort of sheer, terrain can break thermals. Na, it looked quite turbulent especially the couple of negatives. About a month ago, I got sucked into a wave flying my hang glider and shot right through the CB at 5.5K and couple of minutes later was a couple of grand above clouds. The ride up was insane, being fully pulled in and climbing at over 2.5K ft/m. It was the ride down which I thought would break my glider mid air. Just a tumble weed. I made it but it loosened just about every bolt on the glider and small bits came off. I did see the turbulence followed you all the way down to the river. That's just how it is sometimes. Good stuff man, keep on flying and be safe.
@BariFPV yeah I care nothing for flying in those types of conditions. I know turbulence is part of the game and I’ve actually become more tolerant over the last couple years but I still hate the stuff lol. Happy flying!
@@FLYNRYAN1978 just have to build that bump tolerance hehe :) but nothing like flying in glassy conditions though if the air isn't spicy I get bored rather quickly lol
I would never... almost had a mid-air with one coming out of an outlying field touch and go in a T-34C back in '83
Always have to be alert .
Thanks for watching.
Why you have a radio. And scan for aircraft in 10 degree increments. You will never see it panninng the sky.
Why do you fly with no helmet on? Rocks with wings hertz a lot
I do most of the time.
Thanks for commenting and watching
Oh, man... Been there...!! Attempted an approach to Woodland WA just as the north wind kicked in on final. SLAM BAM WHAM WHOA!!! IMMEDIATE ABORT!! Safe skies me brothah...
Yeah, It's not where I want to be lol. Thank you .
Does this thing have a poor clime rate? Took forever to gain altitude.
He might have been taking off downwind.
In no wind it climbs around 300 fpm.
Thanks for watching.
There wasn’t any wind until about the 15:30 minute mark lol .
What kind of an aircraft is this called?
This is normally referred to as a Trike or Delta Wing or Powered Hang glider . Thanks for watching and commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Thanks..have a good day, from NAF El Centro, California...winter home of the Blue Angels!
@@goodtalker you too, Thanks
Where is this at?
Gainsboro TN
@@FLYNRYAN1978 beautiful area
What kind of aircraft is tis
It’s a weight shift hang gliding trike .
Thanks for watching and commenting.
What, no helmet / protective clothing ??
I have a hard head .
Protective clothing from what?
Why did you edit video?
Uh
Because I have too.
Or it wouldn’t magically appear on your device. Lol
I have to ask. Is turbulence more dangerous in a trike than a fixed wing plane? I've hit way worse in my Vector, and aside from being uncomfortable, I wouldn't consider it scary. The only scary time was hitting a rotor from the side and having the plane bank to about 60 degrees in a second. Twice, lol.
I don’t think it’s more dangerous but it’s definitely more exaggerated as you cannot right the Trike with a stick and rudder. You control the direction with not only your weight but the weight of the Trike and gas you have on board. The cameras have pretty good stabilization so you’re not seeing the full effect of what was happening. My wing definitely banked and dropped several times on my way back to the airport.
Thanks for watching and commenting.
@@FLYNRYAN1978 Your wing area & slow speed amplify the effect of turbulence. Minor bumps in high speed airplane might be severe to this craft. A little extra speed and keeping the faith helps a lot. Probably a front coming in. It started up at cloud base but kept bumping all the way down. As a hang glider and ultralight pilot of 50 years experience, smooth flights are boring but a nice time to wring out the wing. Most thermal bumps are fun to work. A front approaching or a horizontal wind shear is not so fun.
@@larrycroome7759 yeah I’m happy with (boring)flights lol.
It was probably a front moving in.
Thanks for watching.
I have flown through exactly what you went through numerous times. It is scary and I believe the LSA is more dangerous and pronounced that a cessna or something. My aircraft weights 400LBS, wing was 150 plus gas and passenger weight. So I was around 800 - 900 LBS. My tank held 15 gallons@@FLYNRYAN1978