Thread: Safety Altitude
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Old October 4th 16, 12:47 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Safety Altitude

On Monday, October 3, 2016 at 5:24:22 PM UTC-4, John Cochrane wrote:
I wrote a Soaring article about this a while back. Some key points: The theory says you want an altitude minimum that is a quadratic function of distance to go. Basically, thermals are random. The chance of getting 3 tails in a row, 3 miles out, is higher than the chance of getting 30 tails in a row, 30 miles out. A McReady setting plus safety altitude is a good approximation.

Now, do you put that safety in the flight computer, so it says "0" when you really have 1000 feet margin? I used to, but turned them all off. I couldn't remember which margin applied to task end point, glides to turnpoints, glides to selected airports, and the glide amoeba. It's much easier to set them all to zero and then mentally say "I wont go unless I have 1000 over Mc 4" than it is to remember just what padding you put in the computer.

Also use a substantially higher McCready for safety than you do for speed.. Work out your glide angle for Mc 2. You'll never do a Mc 2 glide over unlandable terrain after that!

The risk of not making it is actually more under strong conditions than under weak conditions. No lift = no sink! The safety margin is really about how much unexpected sink could you find.

John Cochrane


I use the same methodology as John. McCready setting is raised to "final glide number" during the last climb. I may fly at 2 all day, but the final glide won't be at 2.
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