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Old June 16th 04, 07:33 PM
Bill Daniels
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Partly true. If you have a 35 knot 90 degree crosswind, the wind component
along the final glide path is zero. However the penalty for crabbing into
that crosswind to maintain your course to the finish line is significant.

My concern is mountain flying. Mountain winds tend to change a lot in a
short distance. The sooner you know of a wind shift the easier it is to
take advantage of it. I still want highly accurate real-time wind data.

Bill Daniels

"David Starer" wrote in message
...
For calculating a final glide, you only need to know the wind component
along the final track; it isn't actually necessary to know the absolute

wind
strength and direction. The difference between true airspeed (corrected

IAS)
and ground speed (from the GPS) is equal to the component you need, so the
glider's heading isn't required.

David Starer

"Bill Daniels" wrote in message
news:gw%zc.59643$HG.25574@attbi_s53...
I've been analyzing the IGC files from my flights and comparing them to
others.

Generally, in good conditions, I'm circling less than 25% of the time.
Other, far better pilots than I, are circling less than 15% of the time.
This means that wind data that depends on the glider flying circles gets

way
out of date during the long glides. OK, "S" turns can give the computer

a
chance to compute wind if you remember to fly them but there are still a

lot
of long, straight glides.

To compute real-time wind data we need Groundspeed, Ground Track (any

GPS
gives these)True Airspeed (Some computers do this if they have OAT,

Pressure
Altitude and IAS) and accurate heading data. Heading data it the tough

nut
to crack.

So, how do we get Heading? One way might be to put a GPS antenna in

each
wing and look at the carrier phase difference. If the computer saw a
constant track, it could assume the wings are level and determine a

heading
value. This heading value might update an aerospace quality MEMS

heading
gyro that would maintain a flow of heading data to the glide computer

during
times when the wings were banked.

With good heading data we could get uninterrupted high quality wind data
regardless of the gliders' maneuvering or lack of it.

OK, RAS gageteers, how about it?

Bill Daniels