5 Things I HATE About Paramotors!
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- Опубліковано 30 чер 2024
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Timestamps
0:00 Introduction
1:34 Regulations
4:59 Risk
6:41 Public Perception
7:42 Maintenance
9:34 Weather
13:02 Conclusion - Розваги
I worked at a small airport and can confirm there are people in this world that have nothing better to do than yell at the sky for being blue.
People move close to an airport and then complain about engine noise. When I was stationed at Norton way back when people would shoot at our aircraft. One night I was on the ramp talking with someone and heard Wheeet in my left ear, followed by the sound of a gunshot.
Amen!!!
Sometimes people just need to get a life. They live their life encapsulated , that makes them overly sensitive to minor changes . I know, I’ve been there. They see something different, new and it’s scary, it makes them overactive.
There is a guy in my town that flys a paramotor and one year my wife and I were elk hunting and about to shoot a big bull elk when the paramotor came down and drove all the elk into his field where his whole family were laying on top of the hay stack. They shot 11 elk all at the same time. We were pissed! Others seen what he did and called the cops on him. He was charged with herding elk with an aircraft and other charges. Besides that incident I hear people all the time that are mad at him for one reason or another. I think 99% of them are just being Karens!
@@mikemcdonald2755 in most states that is illegal.
Tucker: sitting on your couch watching TV is boring.
Everyone sitting on their couch watching Tucker's video: did he just call us all out?
Not if you are watching after 30 minutes after twilight!
Have you ever considered landing close to someone watching you and asking to talk to them about their cars extended warranty?
Lol! "We've been trying to contact you!"
I want to be a court server so I can serve everybody like that.
Funny but that would be dangerous and irresponsible
"Are you familiar with our saviour, lord Jesus Christ?"
@@mcbrite I hope everyone would become saved!
1) There is nothing stopping you from getting a paramotor registered as "Experimental", once you have a Paramotor Certified Experimental, you can Fly at Night, Fly with more than 5 gallons of gas, Fly over populated places. Just add the required modifications to your paramotor to meet the Experimental FARs, fill out the Paperwork and you should be good to go with the first Experimental Paramotor.
no way !! that's awesome ! never knew u could do that !
I was just about to look up the tiers of ultralight certificates. I know that fixed wing aircraft are in tiers (hobby, private, etc.), and I was curious if paramotor has tiers as well.
Is there an extra terrestrial classification???
@@MichaelRei99 Depends on the destination I guess. Most places don't have an atmosphere to fly in!
I dont think that is correct. not trying to start a long argumentative dialog here, so I'll let some others weigh in. registering a (paramotor) as experimental is probably not going to be possible, and then there are other (numerous) roadblocks in the way of reaching what he is speaking of... legally.
so... if we have terrific memories of flying in the calm under a full moon.... It was only a dream lol.
keep it going tucker, you are the man.
Two fingered phone dangle! A form of expression in comfort, confidence and understanding of limitations. Love it! Rest in Peace, Jeff. Sorry for your loss. We got to feel as though we kind of knew him through video. Tucker, Thanks for all you do! You inspire, and you are a great teacher.
All those FAR Part 103 issues you have can be waived under Part 103.5 if you contact an FAA Administrator. So you can file for a waiver to fly at night in a particular location, etc. You can file for a waiver to fly over a crowd as people have legally flown paramotors through cities. It takes some work, but it makes sense for the FAA to require waivers for these activities so low-experience pilots don't ruin things for everyone else.
I'd like to obtain licensure for travelling through Dallas. I imagine it will be tedious and will require a little bit of luck. But I'm going to see if it's possible if I jump through the hoops. I think the regs typically make sense, so if I just approach from a standpoint of being sensible, considerate, and prudent, I should be ok.
Really? A waiver? Nice.
My nightmare would be somehow not paying attention for a second and getting caught in some electrical cables. THAT terrifies me.
In Arizona we have florescent orange balls on the big electric lines. Without, those power lines look invisible until you are close.
also radio towers the guide cables run for miles can be invisible - reading maps and charts help , always having a spot to land, know where u going before get there
Trip planning goes a long way in preventing that. If you find an area to fly, look at the electrical grid maps to find out where electrical lines are. Make a route to avoid any lines that are potentially too close to your launch/landing zone.
@@FamilyWinn You don't look for the lines, you look for the poles and then follow the lines... ;-)
Don't do it then. It's not meant for you or everyone.
That 1 percent is the thing I hate most about paramotoring. I'm glad you brought it up. There are always couch potatoes that "know more than you" about flying.
Nice tree landing at the end ( only joking). It was one of the reasons I switched to flying my ultralight deltawing, it gave me a wider weather window and wing stability. I did smile at the comment of putting poles inside the wing, that's just a hang glider. I think what ever makes you smile and gets you in the air is the most important thing and every country you fly in will have their own limiting rules.. The UK have a Sub70kg limit so you can carry as much fuel as you want, as long as you can lift it. Keep the content coming.
I just bought a sub 70kg powered hang-glider in Australia we call them Nano-Lites. While watching Tucker I was wondering if I would be able to fly more of the day, I have in, just the hang-glider. I haven't done the power training yet so just now it's all guess work for me. Your comment made me feel good about my choice, thanks 😎👍
@@blue_beephang-glider5417 I'm only mentioning this as you said you are learning, my channel is dedicated to Sub70 and flexwing flying.. if you are interested, that's all.
@@blue_beephang-glider5417 does Australia have a similar Sub70 exemption that the CAA have granted us in the UK?
@@GolfFoxtrot22 Yes exactly the same. I've put a deposit on a Airborne V-Lite (Sub 70kg, we call them Nanolight) a friend is getting a Snake from the UK.
Deltawing is horribly dangerous and unpredictable
You really know how to set the vibe with the music selections and editing.... Pretty cool how creative your brain is man....Stay safe 👍🏿
> Thanks for the flight time Tucker. The beauty of a paramotor is it's simplicity. It provides a certain amount of performance because of it's simplicity. Be content with it's limitations and enjoy each flight, no cherish each flight that brings you home safely. Just about everyone wants to expand the requirements of a machine and that usually makes for a more complicated bird that is another beast of its own. More power, more capacity, all weather rating and then you own a Gulfstream.
I had a pretty bad accident and its taken me 5 months to learn to walk again and your vids inspired me to get into it, I think I had 5 paragliding flights before it happened and fun fact... I was wearing the "have fun or die trying" shirt..... still I can't wait to get back to training, it is what it is.
If you don't mind me asking, was it pilot error, or equipment malfunction?
💚
No no
I'm curious what the fatality breakdown is like between relatively safe flying, like in this video, and the other obviously riskier stuff people sometimes do.
Agreed. Sometimes shit happens but a lot of crash vids show people flying where they shouldnt or doing things that are beyond their skill level.
@@spinther I'd almost go so far to say I've never seen a video where there where ZERO complications present... i.e. there where always at least 1 thing wrong BEFORE the accident, more often multiple things.
From what I researched online, it's about as safe as flying a light airplane, but also about 12 times more dangerous than driving, but 30% safer than driving a motorcycle.
@@eric5001 I think you are close... The stats I learned are, that paragliding is pretty much 1 to 1 with motocycling. BUT, that is for paragliding WITHOUT motor. WITH motor is quite a bit more dangerous... So if you said "30% more dangerous than motocycle", you would be DAMN close! Also HUGELY depends on training... With no, minimal or bad training, in places you don't need to be certified, I'd be willing to bet it's 5x as dangerous a riding a motocycle. Vice versa, a great pilot will be A LOT safer in the air, than any motocycle on the ground, because he rarely get's ran into by other airborne stuff, unlike the poor biker... So there is less "chance" involved in flying, than taking part in traffic.
Take Tucker Gott for example: I'd be willing to bet, that on an average flight without crazy acro and so on, Tucker would be 10x safer than riding his motocycle.
There is always one..
I would have to agree with the points mentioned. Fixing to go look at a new LZ. Finally able to fly after 2 wks of not. Did get my first skydive last week though. Epic!
Great video as always. I appreciate you making the time to show paragliding in a positive and safety-conscious light. I hope that your efforts slowly whittle down the 1% to 0.9% or lower.
I love the videos keep them coming
I am looking at starting training the only stopping factor is my dad doesn’t want to ride with me to sit at training because I only have my drivers permit but your videos help me a ton
That was helpful to hear your take on the sport's growing pains & issues.
I live in an area with 300 sunny days per year and look forward to the meticulous engine engine rebuild. I worked for years as a mechanic for my father's auto repair business.
Hey Tucker! Long time fan. Really enjoyed your videos to help escape mentally during the v1rus panic. I also recently bought three shirts from your store. I wanted a fourth but you were out of stock. Anyway, you should consider adding to your website the camera equipment you use. Just thought I'd say that. Thanks for everything. I'm still trying to setup some training.
gopro
I always enjoy your casual flying vids like this one! Regulations in Canada are worse than in the US, especially on training, and who can train you.
Ya, me and my brother taught ourselves. Definitely dangerous, but it was nice to have the ability
8:29 electric paramotors are practical. There's plenty of portable power boxes for charging and many electric trucks have ability to charge them at fast rate.
Have you ever considered flying to McDonald's not to eat, but to deliver? I think it would be cool to see paramotor courier.
You Would Have To Have A Big Enough Landing Area To Drop Off
It would be amazing!
@@cjizzleinthewizzle7149 what about parachuting foods
Grub hub, Door Dash, and now paramotor express.
Exactly my idea. You do not need to land, you just drop the package to the yard
Up here in Alaska we get to fly in the twilight hours as defined in the air almanac! Pretty cool stuff🙂
I'm sorry to hear about Jeff. About a year or so ago I discovered your channel and watched a LOT of your videos and then just suddenly stopped watched for no particular reason. I think I remember seeing Jeff in some of your videos from back then. It's so weird coming back after all of this time and hearing this news. I really am sorry to hear about the loss of your friend though.
Hell yeah great video! I can't wait to see the spider review and all the others. Hopefully you review all the Ozone wings that would be fun. Plus your the dealer so why not, you gotta know what your selling 😆🤔
Also, finding a place that would be possible to fly over but is not full of people would be difficult in California unless you're in a desert. I hear you about acceptable risk. I've done some rock climbing and actually took a 25 foot lead fall once and got the shit scared out of me. But it was my fault that I got off route, didn't stop and anchor-in earlier, and also my fault I survived because of the cam I had just placed. So... ya gotta do what ya gotta do! Cheers!
As someone who ia trying to do his training at the moment (Winter here in Aust.), and only has weekends, I'm feeling the winter thing. The training facility is about a 2 hour drive from me so usually I go up the night before and camp out, this weekend though only today (Sunday) is flyable, and I didn't get the message that training was possible until it was to late to be worth heading up :( Hopefully one day I'll be able to buy some rural land, put an off grid house on it and be able to walk out of my front door to go flying.
Was a surprise to hear about your friend’s accident. I had to look it up. Very unfortunate. Fly safe.
Always love your videos Tucker. 👍 First thought I had, 4 of the 5 things you hate about paramotoring are similar in the drone pilot world as well. Obstacles, but definitely won't stop us from flying. 🙂 Thanks for your content.
My Boss got into paramotoring last year, and now I'm hooked and totally itching to get into it! He's also a pilot and I look forward to every opportunity to go up in his Cherokee 6. Now I'm doing as much research and knowledge I can find and absorbe. I totally appreciate ALL of your vids my man!
I just love the philosophical and random videos the "AH THEIR IS A BUG IN MY PANTS" best. What a beautiful flight too!
Hello, I admire your skills, as a private rated sailplane pilot and old school hang glider pilot circa 1977, I'm a little leery of nonrigid airfoils. I understand the airfoil limitations, but have you experienced being tossed out of a thermal or similar event where you may go negative G? My concern is unloading the wing whilst flying. Thoughts?
I think the biggest factor that gets people worked up is probably the noise, its like having an airborne lawn mower buzzing your property on an otherwise quiet evening. I'm sure the limited, best time to fly time-frames (weather-wise) don't help matters either; near sunrise or near sunset. Unfortunately, I'm sure that really gets people motivated to go to town meetings; especially, if you are out flying night after night.
True. My other guess is that they can see the pilot (yes, humans are weird like that). We tend to see machines as individual entities, at least subconsciously: when we see a car, truck or airplane, we first see the machine. And some people may not feel comfortable / may feel threatened/invaded by another person flying above their heads. All on instinct of course, but we know that many people don't follow logic.
Tucker didnt explain why you cant fly in the middle of the day? What is it about the weather at that time?
@@leob4403 I'm thinking because the Sun drives our weather here on earth, so our weather (winds) can be more volatile during the Suns most active hours. Late mornings / early afternoons VS early mornings and late afternoons. Just guessing, I'm no meteorologist. Ha!😃
@@JB-pk1vc interesting, I never heard of this phenomenon before. I was thinking the sun was too hot in the afternoon?
@@leob4403 Without the Sun, there is no weather on earth. Here is a basic explaination: ua-cam.com/video/0aNpEEjQaGM/v-deo.html
Hi Tucker another great video, stay safe, have fun. Peace.
Well, I've loved flying since I was 16 or so, but I'm not in the right shape nor have the motor skills to do this. So I sit in my chair and watch this. Very cool stuff. I love your trips, and I love your local stuff.
100% agree with the point about maintenance. I just bought an E-PPG to avoid maintenance
your not going to avoid maintenance but you are going to be landing off airport
Congratulations on your new toy! How much did you pay for it and what‘s the maximum flight duration if you don‘t mind?
@@shanewalsh5877 The max flight time is 1h and it was $7-8k for the motor + battery
I had you in front on my you tube videos favorites but you tube does something screwy with the algorithms. I love your videos. I’ve never para motor guided or para glided either but man I enjoy watching your channel.
Keep it up, stay safe. Thank you.
Totally agree on the maintenance, seriously thinking about going electric.
Is electric more quiet?
I'm so sorry you lost Jeff to a sport you love both loved so much! Life is a risk, but understanding the risks reduces them, but can never eliminate them altogether. I know you'll keep flying cuz it's in your DNA now. God's speed to you!
I would have added a sixth one: noise. In my opinion it greatly diminishes the beauty of the sport. The “spirituality” if you like. This greatly effects the pilot as well as the people on the ground, so it may be related to number three. It would be so much better if you could just fly around without the sound of a two-stroke engine on your back. I know electric engines are also noisy because of the prop noise. But if there was some way to really minimize the noise as much as possible that would be great. And yes I know you can glide but that doesn’t last long.
Yup, I think that would be number one as well. Especially, when the best times to fly are near sunset and sunrise. I'm sure it really motivates the neighbors to go to town hall meetings, when they keep hearing a para-motor overfly their property during those times.
If electric ever becomes practical to replace the 2-stroke then props will be designed for them to be quite. Low noise props can be made but they require expertise and time that no company wants to spend when power and performance are more important given the 2-stroke is very loud.
There are battery chemistries with up to 8x the energy density of lithium ions but all of them are non rechargeable and not commercially viable yet.
@@nocare The noise comes from the fact that the prop is operating in turbulent air. If it was in front of the pilot the same prop would be MUCH quieter.
About 5 days a week my neighborhood is invaded by lawn maintenance teams. Every freaking morning at 8 am the lawnmowers, trimmers and edgers arrive at 100+ decibels for over an hour. Parameters are FAR less annoying and the noise goes away as the pilot flies around, unlike the damn lawnmowers that circle your bedroom windows all morning.
@@JB-pk1vc Well... If you're flying at sunrise, especially on a weekend, you're the inconsiderate jerk. I don't blame the karens in that case.
Dude the risk thing is so so true, I'm a Skydiver and BASE jumper and it SUCKS ASS when you loose a friend man. Lost my buddy I called a brother recently and ultimately, while it sucks I'd rather die with my boots on vs in an home.
Why does it suck if you die doing what you love? You should be proud of those you lose, not sad like a woman.
I thought a drone was following your for the back shots but then I noticed a cable... Whats is that thing and how did you stick a camera to it ? It's really awesome !
just for reference you have to register a model RC airplane you don't have to register part 103 to put that into perspective, applys to drones too
Dude that rear cam is SICK!!!!!!! It took me a min to figure out what you were dragging and then I was like OH! I am debating paramotor training in the spring or at least a tandem flight to see if I like it and the electric ones definitely appeal cause of what you said the hassle free.. Even if the flight time is only 30 mins. Love your videos man!
Looks great fun bro 👌
Tucker if you do a Spyder 3 review, if possible could you explain tip steering and perhaps even how to tie it in. - Mike Bishop.
Also love these vids lately remind me of the Gott vids of yesteryear…love the content but these simple flying adventures never get old. Keep it up dude 🤙🏼
Ironically part of the problem with a uncollapsible glider is their safety rating. Several of the tests require the wing to collapse, if the test pilots can't get that to happen the wing would be unrated. The industry is moving in that direction though. Swing has their RAST technology which uses valves to trap air at the back of the wing, limiting the frequency and severity of collapses.
I think this is a case of "be careful what you wish for" at the moment you have freedom to fly with just enough regulation to keep everyone safe, if you start adding night flying or overflying of built up areas/groups of people, that will require stricter regs and training, more hoops to jump through could put people off the sport, just like RC there's a reason overlying of neighbourhoods and gatherings of people isn't allowed, it's to keep people on the ground safe in case of a malfunction, night flying is similar, it could be dangerous to other aircraft, esp as they will be flying by instruments when visibility drops.
Very true, today just go buy a wing and a motor and your good to go. No training required. Have fun.
I live in Ocean City Md , technically in west Ocean City ..I was looking out my sliding door and I looked over at the bay and low and behold there goes someone flying a paramotor.... I said dam... there goes Tucker..... of course it wasn't you . First time I have seen someone flying it was pretty cool... they were over the periphery of the bay . Great videos dude... keep on keeping on.
I myself got into it enjoyed the ozones and honestly even I had the crazy idea to use an e-bike with a propeller mounted on it
4:15 the over populated areas thing is clearly open to interpretation. If you're high enough, your glide ratio means that you could fly just about anywhere without endangering anyone on the round. Of course, if you're flying low, that's a different story, and most paramotorists fly low to be able to see stuff. Regarding fuel bladders, I'm pretty sure thaat's a "don't ask don't tell" thing for a lot of paramotorists. If it were something I were into (and if we lived in a place with a better climate and my wife would let me, I totally would be), I'd sure as hell have extra fuel! I just wouldn't go around blabbing about it.
How does the law work on fuel. Is it getting caught with actual fuel over 5 gallons or if you have a 10 gallon tank Thats empty you still get in trouble since theoretically you could add more than 5 gallons. Either way you won't get caught until there's an accident. Kinda like using dyed farm diesel fuel in a recreational truck. No one knows until a tank Burts in a wreck.
"If my wife would let me" was the castration painful or did you never have balls to begin with?
I want to see a onewheel launch!
As a ppc pilot but also an airplane owner and helicopter I agree that wind limits are annoying. Thinking about weight shift because they handle wind better
Regarding a couple of your points: have you ever been out to The Arizona Flying Circus? Everyone at the event would love to meet you of course, Mo especially (he owns MoTown and Airparamo too I believe). Also, there are a many folks who fly-in and camp next to their private aircraft. Skydive AZ and their crew are there often and they do a bunch of group jumps too. It’s like the burning man of Oshkosh! And the night events are unforgettable! 🌚🌝🌕🤫❤️🔥✨🙌🏼
Add the noise issue as #6. I recently flew a 4-stroke Baily Aviation motor and though it required me to run like hell on take-off and just had enough powerful to keep me in the air, the sound really made a big-big difference! (Low noise could also have a positive effect on that 1% of negative people. )
Are 4 stroke paramotors common?
@@noelchristie7669 Not very. AFAIK, there are maybe 1or 2 models, One being Baily and the other is Vittorazy (still in development). The paramotor companies don't like investing in 4-stroke, because of weight-to-power obsession. With the current popularity of this hobby manufacturers are happy with available 2-strokes. The next revelation they are praying for is electric.
I love the 2 stroke noise
@@michroz chinese 4strokers are amazingly unreliable
@@marguskiis7711 Me 2. I wish ALL people do, but they don't...
I always look forward to your videos.
Hey tucker could you or have you done a video talking about weather conditions and why day flying isn't good. ect and what conditions to look out for ect?
11:04 actually it exists. Maverick flying car has struts in the wings that can be folded away when not in use. Idea is good but the problem with regular paramotoring is that well you have setup the bars. And it's not really needed for most wings cause they are collapse resistant like that mojo that you tested.
Good honest information, thanks!
Looks like Ethyl Hoppock school. I know it well. Had a lot of Spanish food around the corner, good place to drink and eat! Here is your chance to take the FAA up on its prior offer! You should contact the FAA and explain your “beefs”!
Tucker, please show your chase cam rig sometime. I find it interesting and would like to know how you deploy it.
Thank you for your insight. Love the fly and talk vids!
I thought as one of the points you were gonna mention the noise. I was thinking how awesome it could be to fly around like that but without that fan/motor noise. Do electric ones make a lot less noise? It love to see a video of you trying out one of those.
Ill just answer for now as i fly too. The headphones we wear are noise cancelling. Mine is also connected to my phone via bluetooth so i sometimes listen to music while flying. even when not listening to music the engine isn't that loud with the headphones on and you quickly forget about the engine sound and just enjoy flying. Also , The engine is loud but, the prop also makes a loud noise due to spinning so fast which is only slightly drowned out by the engine.. so I reckon electric wont be much quieter.
@@ramvander88 That’s very interesting. Thank you for explaining that to me 👍
The wind noise is probably just as loud
@@wormhole331 I only hear wind when I turn the motor off.. But still with headphones its pretty soft..
@@ramvander88 ill bet you could get a low noise fan...or at least one could be built. I could see 25% quieter being possible if noise was prioritized over power efficiency
This video makes me homesick. Launching from out middle school. The see you on the other side thing 😭😂
Hey Tucker, I challenge you to try Hang gliding bro!! have uou ever considered it?? :)
I've been following your channel for years now and i love your content!! ive even been thinking of getting a PPG actually, but I've been flying hang gliders for a couple years now and when the paragliders are packing up because the conditions are too strong is EXACTLY when we set up our gliders so we can catch the Strong themals in the middle of the day to stay up longer! i know most people these days choose paragliding or PPG because of the convenience and easier portability?! but the trade off of only having such SMALL flying windows is a pretty CRAZY trade off!!
i was thinking to get a ppg ( mostly because of your videos) but now after this one in particular im thinking maybe i should just stick to HG and just get a powered hang glider harness for my glider instead.
i absolutely LOVE the aspect of EXPLORING with your PPG and my hang gliding right now is too focused on thermalling. ... but i want the freedom to explore is what ive now learned.
anyways im not sure if youll even see this comment.... but powered hang gliding would literally mean you could fly almost ANYTIME, ANYWHERE, and in much stronger wind conditions since it is a rigid wing. (which is also why its much safer even though you can fly much faster! :)) And its really NOT that hard to transport.
anyways sorry for the essay here... i would really appreciate if you could comment on this (or even make a video) just so we can hear your thoughts on it!
also another side note is that it would be awesome to see how you could/would transition... and also would be awesome yo have a professional content creator and pilot suvh as yourself bring some awareness and life back into hang gliding! it too is ana amazing flying machine and theres no rule book sayung we have to stick to only one type of flying machine!!! Take care bro! be safe and God bless!
that's truly amazing. I always watch your videos. that's all i can do about paramotoring.
So wish I could get into a paramotor for a hobby, to be up in the clouds is amazing. Cost keeps me grounded but I do fly FPV drones which helps me cheat being able to fly, however our part107 rules limit us to a 400 feet altitude. These posts always keep me inspired to work hard and hope...just one day man, if I could have that giant motor, prop and cloth in the air. I'm inspired even in this hate video. You inspire me man.
Thanks for keepin it real ✌
Im at aviator rn after 4 years of saving. You will get there one day i promise. One day you'll wake up and be a fucking paramotor pilot dude!! Keep working for it
I hope it never happens for you.
Hey Tucker, sense your in NJ, how about doing a fly over Mt. Holly where I grew up in the 50's. I'm sure it's changed, but would love to see how much. Especially the Mount which is right behind the old town main st. Thanks, a real fan.
Very nice video! Any link about electric paramotor...?
I'm subscribed. I hit the "like". This is the only UA-cam that I'm addicted to. Always looking ahead to the next one. Great job, Tucker !
Thanks for sharing!! 👍
I can tell you from first hand experience that if you drop that phone from altitude it will look fantastic as it tumbles end over end through the air in a nice ballistic arc to the ground.
I dont need a paramotor, I just watch your videos in my big screen and point a fan at my face
Thank you for all the videos bro.. I ts alot of work and I appreciate them all.. Hey man do you have used gear that you want to sell to a beginner? (me) I am a private pilot tho.. Would get formal training somewhere.. Peace Rolf
Please record video about how to get a benefit of paramotor as a business. Thank you for interesting videos.
Tell me more about the rear camera please that trails behind you
Can you hook up a big powerstation battery to an electric motor battery to extend flight time???
U took one with u when camping..
The 40 to 60 minutes with an electric motor are just not enough..
Powered hang gliders are great in thermals (although you have to be on your toes when coming in to land).
What was the reason for the main flying spot being shut down? Noise or safety concerns?
Great video. Keep them coming.
Learned the weather problem with learning to speedfly. If you don't like waking up early or sneaking out of work early. Youre probably only gonna fly once a month.
Before viewing, I'm thinking "noise".
A way to give people maybe a bit of an idea about the risk is to compare it to motorcycling, based on the same duration riding.
When people complain, what do they specify as the issues? Noise? Risks to bystanders? Privacy? Trespass?
Hope you're doing well Tucker. 👍👍
All the same things I hate as well! I'd wager most pilots would agree with your assessment. That looks about like the length I have in my yard at the moment (Eventually I'll extend it back 80' or so), except once you get over the stone wall at the end with a 75' gap between trees, there's another 300' before you need to clear trees and wires. I know you could easily launch from here. I need a bit more experience. Zero engine-out options too, just to spice things up, lol. Would be tree landing more than likely! Just like where I thought that balloon was headed! 😁
That tow behind cam is sick
Great vid as always
8:45 Approx what would be the electric battery+motor weight vs 5 gallons and 2 stroke engine? 1 hour of gas vs 1 hour of battery? Batteries could really change the sport and make it much quiter. So interesting.
Ohh tucker, the regulations in Belgium are sooo strict😅, you can only fly between sunrise and sunset. You cannot fly below 500 foot AGL ,.... And many more.. waayy more strict than USA😌
Would it not be possible to do a set up with a hand glider wing? I have seen hand gliders with trikes but never a foot launched one...
Keep doin' what your doin'. Always inspired by your videos and flying. Just curious... any plans to bring back some of your older merch. I've got a drawer full of your shirts but some are aging and need replacing (particularly my red 'Eat, Sleep, Fly' T-shirt which I love). I also made the mistake of buying the wrong size on my first order and would like to replace them with the larger size. Cheers and check out Matty H for a Canadian perspective.
Also, there's a small pucker factor when you take out your phone. I just can't bring myself to do it.
In Canada, Paramotors are classed as Basic Ultralights and are subject to all the regular Canadian Aviation Regulations. That means a pilot license, medical, insurance, and aircraft registration. Not only are we not allowed to fly over people but also not allowed to overfly built up areas or municipalities at less than 1000' above the highest point in said area and 2000' horizontally away from it, people or no people. An empty highschool is pretty much built up so... Upside is I'm allowed to fly at any airport and essentially cannot be refused permission.
My electric paramotor requires no maintenance. I probably will have to replace my batteries at 200hours though. The new OpenPPG SP140 battery would probably last 500 hours. I just bought a new motor with an Atom 80 so I can go on longer adventures.
I gotta admit. I don't remember one thing you said you hate about paramotoring. I had so much fun watching the landscape.
Easy-Peasy for a seasoned pilot like yourself--a Full moon night with no lights around your ring would be easy to do where i live in the Arkansas Delta, flying in the country with few houses around would be the greatest....
Hey Tucker I have a question! I made the same helmet as you last time I made it for the GoPro seven does the 10 plug right in the same as a seven!
Great video!
You need to get a lanyard for your phone. Or, One of those wrist gauntlets like football quarterbacks and baseball catchers use.
What did you edit out at the 200 hour rebuild mark. It sounded like the cost.
I think I have seen you near my house, I live on the Delaware in Milford
A career out of your hobby. Way to go. Was that your plan at the beginning? I wonder about the video editing part of being a UA-camr... I mean, how did you learn and was it very difficult?
I would want to have at least a sling for my feet. I would feel unsteady with my legs just hanging out there on space. Also, it seems you wouldn't be able to paramotor in an area with hills and mountains, like where I live in California.
10:55 Just because nobody has done this yet, doesn't mean that it can't be done. If it is better, then people will look back and wonder why people flew on old style "collapsible" wings. An inflatable wing would keep the wing structural even in the event of a collapse. The Paramotor is a "tension" device, it's structure comes from tension only. The lines going to the wing, and the wing itself, the fabric must be in tension. There is no "Compression" post in the wing. Although it could be argued that it is pressurized with stagnation pressure, it's not a good compression post. A wing collapse is simply when the wing loses it's tension at "negative" angles of attack, or the stagnation point moves from the holes on the leading edge to the upper surface of the wing. The Stagnation Pressure pushes the cloth in towards the lower pressure internal to the wing. So having a pressurized wing, this can never happen, but at "negative" angles of attack, tension in the lines will be lost, the wing can fly towards the pilot. No, you can't fly inverted. Inflated wings, different kind of collapse that I have yet to see anyone test. Would be interesting. No more Big Ears allowed.
Maverick flying car has that.
That's an interesting idea, if I'm reading you right (fully inflated wing on the ground, without needing ram-air, right?) My first impulsive concerns about a mechanically inflated wing vs a ram-air wing would be 1) weight, and 2) in-flight safety. For weight, although I could be completely off the mark, I'd imagine any fully impermeable fabric to create such an inflatable wing would be heavier than the current fabrics used for ram-air canopies. Heavier wing means higher speeds to reach sufficient lift for normal flight, which might be more than foot-launchers could realistically achieve. Of course, other airfoil shapes could be explored to maximize lift and minimize wing mass, so this may not be a major issue.
My bigger concern would be the possibility of deflation while flying. Even a small puncture would rapidly lead to lower than nominal inflation pressure, resulting in airfoil deformation and decreasing performance. The cascade from perfectly inflated to sub-inflated to collapsed rag could be quite rapid. There are certainly ways to engineer the wing to not completely deform due to a puncture and loss of internal pressure, even ways to consistently trickle in air to maintain optimal pressure, but that all adds weight to the system.
Still, an interesting idea that I can see being pursued. If it could be done without sacrificing portability and foot launch, I could see something like this taking off (pun intended.)
Ok a few questions. For the rebuilds. About how much are the kits? On a scale of 1-10 how would you rate the difficulty of the rebuilds? And how many hours do they take? Great video as always.