Should also have mentioned..
Small baskets are square so no turning vents.
Some Americans, bless them use triangular baskets for smaller baskets and no turning vents so there in a fast landing its invariably a corner that hits and the things rotate around so the passengers really have no idea which way to face.
The basket can roll over, its called doghousing.
Used to happen a lot before we put plastic rods in covers holding the burner frames up.
The burners in flight will stay there using the tension of the cables that attach them to the envelope.
But when you land they tend to follow the downward movement of the balloon and hit you on the head. Hence all the pictures of balloon pilots with crash helmets on in the 70's. The reason poles to help hold the burner up took a while to be perfected is the amount of load they can undergo during an inflation. Snapping them.
Thats also why they have a cover, keep bits out of passengers if they do go.
Anyhow if your landing at speed downhill there always was a change of tipping over, the poles now form a sort of roll bar with the burner frame and resist that so it happens infrequently. In fact its changed from an every other flight thing to a reportable accident.
When it does happen these days the pilot is normally trying very hard and somebody is injured
Oh yes hi Henry
G
The only time you have too much fuel is when your on fire.