I am a newbie to this site as I enjoy the refurbish ideas and pictures. You can't fly these things for 1000s of hours and not be interested in their journey.
I am particularly fascinated about the interest in BAS harnesses, or something equivalent. Same for the helmet issue.
Without going into great detail, between a huge downdraft on final and my looking for feeding steelhead I crashed a fine example of a Cessna 180 at Wilson Bar in Idaho. I had no helmet, but did have the first generation BAS harnesses in use.
I did have injury, lots of gashes and stitches on my face, and purple/yellow contusions on my chest and neck. A MRI was performed at McCall as preventative analysis.
The back of my head was really swollen from gear flying forward THROUGH the cargo net. The ice cooler had nicked my head and shoulder after it broke through the cargo net supplied to me by an Alaska outfit (kind of flimsy with carabiner attachments to hard points on the door post). That cooler went on to actually somewhat dent the thick V brace on the windscreen OUTWARDS. Those V braces of the H model 180s are thicker than the F model 185s upon inspection.
Also, your body folds at the spine when forward motion is abruptly stopped. The shoulders go back as they are restrained, the chest goes out as well as the neck snaps forward. You could see that with my contusions on my chest for several weeks.
So, the helmet idea is a good one, for not only forward/top/side impacts, but for gear attacks from the rear. Just do not assume it will protect your face, as your face is going forward should you abruptly stop. The motorcycle helmet makers know this, as do the businesses like the Forest Service. The BAS harnesses are essential to all Cessnas, for sure. I do think the Hookers are more preventative of the body bifolding on impact, but I have never seen Hookers in a Skywagon or for that fact any Cessnas. I do hear, however, that there are some around. Access to that Johnson bar flap handle could be problematic with the Hookers, what with my 50 hrs of aerobatic training in a Citabrias taught me.
This is just my experience I thought it best to share. I won't post (like I could figure out the picture post thing here anyway) pictures of upside down airplanes or blood, but this is real experience sharing with you. A good set of newer generation BAS harnesses and helmet with faceguard would be good addition to travel to remote places where you are just one step from an intake valve seizing or you smell something hot and you are in a canyon. And don't ignore the availability of good cargo nets. Just bring $
As the guy said, sorry for the interruption.


