Thanks for the explanation Pat. What is your opinion on what you see in that video regarding the harness upon arrest?
Actually, 2 things come to mind: 1) The reel doesn't lock as fast as it should when the G from the trap hits, in which case it needs to be looked at by Seat Shop. The "never to be annoyed" Shop
Or 2) He doesn't really go as far forward as it LOOKS like, due to the camera location, lens shape, and zoom factor. The lens is a little fish-eyed, if you look at it.
A third possibility just occurred to me as well: When he leans way forward to look over his shoulder is just when he locks the harness reel, just because his brain is at that point in his checklist, so that there's more slack than is obvious to the camera when he traps, allowing more forward motion of his upper body than should occur.
Alternatively, he took a little bump, or the deceleration of the plane + his lean caused the real to lock, and it never unlocked before he trapped. Like I say, that can happen, and all it takes to free it, generally, is a forward tug and a quick relax after. If he didn't realize it had locked on him, with his shoulder straps loose, it would do what we see. It's like if you pull your seatbelt strap to loosen it just as you go over a bump. The reel can sense the apparent G it's receiving, and lock, and if it's a little dirty, it can take a little tug/release to free it. Same with the shoulder strap reel.
Did you see him reach up to his shoulder? I suspect the reel had locked for whatever reason, with the shoulder straps a bit loose and he was trying to slide the shoulder strap back into the reel to free it. It may not have worked though, and all he did was push the slack behind him, then forgets about it. That's a pretty busy, intense time of a flight, after all. Then, if that happened, the reel would lock when the trap G hits, but the straps are already loose, and when the the gear hits it frees, then the hook grabs and it pays out a little more before it can lock, allowing him to lean way forward.
Personally, I think it's a trick of the camera lens shape/zoom factor, and he's not going as far as it appears. But that's just my opinion, for whatever it's worth. It's obvious his lap belt isn't as tight as it should be, as he has to hoist himself back and up using the glare shield after everything comes to a halt.
I learned early on, when I was first learning to fly, back when I was 14/15, that if the straps leave bruises, they're almost tight enough. My instructor would bounce me around, even go inverted for a bit and bounce me there, to see if my straps were tight enough. If my head hit the canopy, not tight enough. And if it did, he'd bang it off the canopy a few times as an object lesson. All this in a glider of all things, but he was a great instructor. Carried a yardstick to rap my skull from the back seat. Once I solo'd I used to go chase a pair of hawks on the cliffs. They enjoyed it as much as I did. But I was sure glad I had
tight straps when I was doing some of the more radical maneuvers! After all, hawks are great pilots.
I think some pilots get slack about how tight their straps are. Sure, the seat takes care of the shoulder straps, usually, but the lap belt is entirely up to the pilot. If they start to leave it comfortable, not
tight then things like you see in the video happen...
Have fun all!
Pat☺