1-26 1000km attempt
Long since forgotten from my days of having to actually know ASCII vs. EBCDIC vs. Hex vs. .... but different character sets handle certain special characters differently. So, something you see as a space or Carriage Return with Line Feed (CRLF) in one set may look different in another. I'm guessing (too lazy to look right now) that =20 is a CRLF.
P3
On Thursday, April 24, 2014 3:42:48 PM UTC-4, Vernon Brown wrote:
On these discussion groups and R.A.S in particular I keep seeing "=20"
Can some please explain the meaning?
At 17:02 24 April 2014, Papa3 wrote:
On Wednesday, April 23, 2014 3:47:58 PM UTC-4, Soartech wrote:
At Pocono Mountains airport, about 5-10 miles upwind of the ridge, the
wi=
nd is NW at 18 gusting to 30! Plenty of ridge lift I would guess.=20
=20
Temp is 44 and it is overcast.
The limiting factor in most long distance flights from Blairstown is the
Ha=
wk Mountain transition. One has to go from Hawk Mountain upwind to
Sharp/=
Second mountains. Neither of these is an especially good ridge, and the
la=
nding option are either a) the unused part of a cemetery (fitting) or b)
a
=
couple of reclaimed open-pit coalmines (you might survive, the ship
probabl=
y wouldn't). While it's certainly doable with low bases and 30kt
headwinds=
in a 40:1 uber-segler, it's no picnic. In a 1-26, it's an even taller
or=
der. =20
Yesterday was just another example of how many factors have to come
togethe=
r for truly long ridge flights. The northeast quadrant of the
Appalachians=
was plagued by overcast conditions until late in the day, even though
the
=
winds were pretty close to ideal. =20
P3
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