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#1
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We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC
League in the US. So now it's time to work on how to get started in the competition. It may take a while for clubs to catch on, so the early adopters will have a big advantage. As long as one club member scores on one day of the weekend, your club will score a minimum of 1 point for the round. But if only 20 other clubs score, you will score a minimum of 30 points for the round. So it pays to get started early. To score you will need to get at least 50 handicapped points in 2.5 hours using only 4 legs. If you are flying in a SGS 1-26 or 2-33, or any other glider with a handicap less than 64, the required distance is less than 20 miles. Since you get 4 legs, each leg only has to be 5 miles long. So the simple strategy is to pick a turnpoint 5 miles upwind, climb up over the home airfield, then head out to the turnpoint, always staying above a safe glide back to home. Round the turnpoint, and fly home. Climb back up and do it again. Then, and this is important, climb back up to to your start altitude. If you did this in less than 2.5 hours, congratulations, your flight qualifies for the OLC League. So let's say you want to maintain a conservative 10:1 glide to home. Then, at 5 miles out, you only have to be 0.5 miles higer than pattern altitude, or around 3500' AGL. This should be doable on a decent soaring day in most places. Remember that you are working upwind, so the tailwind provides an extra safety factor. Of course if you are flying a higher performance glider, you will have to go a little further, but you can see that this is doable in any glider on a good day almost anywhere. All you need to do is carry an FAI approved logger to claim your flight. Naturally you should only attempt this if you have landable terrain upwind, just in case. If you can make your turnpoint an airport, that's even better. You also want to have the basic skills for X/C flight. The Bronze Badge program is an excellent introduction to X/C, and this basic OLC League task should be suitable for anyone who has properly earned this award. This task is also an excellent opportunity for dual instruction in X/C procedures. It creates a goal-oriented traning situation, which is an excellent learining opportunity. And if the goal is completed, it creates an instant trophy in the form of an OLC claim for all to see. Plus it can be done in any two place trainer, with minimal chance of an actual off field landing. So it's time to start thinking about how to get your club started in the OLC League competition. It doesn't require anything special, other than the logger. So start thinking about how to how to get your club involved. The competition starts this weeked! |
#2
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![]() Doug Haluza wrote: We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC League in the US. So now it's time to work on how to get started in the competition. It may take a while for clubs to catch on, so the early adopters will have a big advantage. As long as one club member scores on one day of the weekend, your club will score a minimum of 1 point for the round. But if only 20 other clubs score, you will score a minimum of 30 points for the round. So it pays to get started early. To score you will need to get at least 50 handicapped points in 2.5 hours using only 4 legs. If you are flying in a SGS 1-26 or 2-33, or any other glider with a handicap less than 64, the required distance is less than 20 miles. Since you get 4 legs, each leg only has to be 5 miles long. So the simple strategy is to pick a turnpoint 5 miles upwind, climb up over the home airfield, then head out to the turnpoint, always staying above a safe glide back to home. Round the turnpoint, and fly home. Climb back up and do it again. Then, and this is important, climb back up to to your start altitude. If you did this in less than 2.5 hours, congratulations, your flight qualifies for the OLC League. So let's say you want to maintain a conservative 10:1 glide to home. Then, at 5 miles out, you only have to be 0.5 miles higer than pattern altitude, or around 3500' AGL. This should be doable on a decent soaring day in most places. Remember that you are working upwind, so the tailwind provides an extra safety factor. Of course if you are flying a higher performance glider, you will have to go a little further, but you can see that this is doable in any glider on a good day almost anywhere. All you need to do is carry an FAI approved logger to claim your flight. Naturally you should only attempt this if you have landable terrain upwind, just in case. If you can make your turnpoint an airport, that's even better. You also want to have the basic skills for X/C flight. The Bronze Badge program is an excellent introduction to X/C, and this basic OLC League task should be suitable for anyone who has properly earned this award. This task is also an excellent opportunity for dual instruction in X/C procedures. It creates a goal-oriented traning situation, which is an excellent learining opportunity. And if the goal is completed, it creates an instant trophy in the form of an OLC claim for all to see. Plus it can be done in any two place trainer, with minimal chance of an actual off field landing. So it's time to start thinking about how to get your club started in the OLC League competition. It doesn't require anything special, other than the logger. So start thinking about how to how to get your club involved. The competition starts this weeked! Doug, you should write an article for the SSA E-newsletter and Soaring Magazine about OLC. I don't know of many members in my club who read RAS. regards, Chip F. |
#3
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![]() Doug Haluza wrote: We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC League in the US. So now it's time to work on how to get started in the competition. It may take a while for clubs to catch on, so the early adopters will have a big advantage. As long as one club member scores on one day of the weekend, your club will score a minimum of 1 point for the round. But if only 20 other clubs score, you will score a minimum of 30 points for the round. So it pays to get started early. To score you will need to get at least 50 handicapped points in 2.5 hours using only 4 legs. If you are flying in a SGS 1-26 or 2-33, or any other glider with a handicap less than 64, the required distance is less than 20 miles. Since you get 4 legs, each leg only has to be 5 miles long. So the simple strategy is to pick a turnpoint 5 miles upwind, climb up over the home airfield, then head out to the turnpoint, always staying above a safe glide back to home. Round the turnpoint, and fly home. Climb back up and do it again. Then, and this is important, climb back up to to your start altitude. If you did this in less than 2.5 hours, congratulations, your flight qualifies for the OLC League. So let's say you want to maintain a conservative 10:1 glide to home. Then, at 5 miles out, you only have to be 0.5 miles higer than pattern altitude, or around 3500' AGL. This should be doable on a decent soaring day in most places. Remember that you are working upwind, so the tailwind provides an extra safety factor. Of course if you are flying a higher performance glider, you will have to go a little further, but you can see that this is doable in any glider on a good day almost anywhere. All you need to do is carry an FAI approved logger to claim your flight. Naturally you should only attempt this if you have landable terrain upwind, just in case. If you can make your turnpoint an airport, that's even better. You also want to have the basic skills for X/C flight. The Bronze Badge program is an excellent introduction to X/C, and this basic OLC League task should be suitable for anyone who has properly earned this award. This task is also an excellent opportunity for dual instruction in X/C procedures. It creates a goal-oriented traning situation, which is an excellent learining opportunity. And if the goal is completed, it creates an instant trophy in the form of an OLC claim for all to see. Plus it can be done in any two place trainer, with minimal chance of an actual off field landing. So it's time to start thinking about how to get your club started in the OLC League competition. It doesn't require anything special, other than the logger. So start thinking about how to how to get your club involved. The competition starts this weeked! Doug, you should write an article for the SSA E-newsletter and Soaring Magazine about OLC. I don't know of many members in my club who read RAS. regards, Chip F. |
#4
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Though good ideas, I think even fewer read SSA eNews. Soaring would be
at least two months out. Probably better to forward Doug's posts to your club's member list. Frank Whiteley |
#5
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Doug, thankyou for an excellent write-up and the encouragement
for the lower-performance guys to compete. May I ask two questions on the scoring ? First, what happens if there are only two flights from a club on a weekend ? Is the average speed calculated on the sum of the speeds divided by two, or divided by three ? Makes a difference if one flight is very fast and the other very slow, as the slow flight might either hurt the club or benefit it. Second, from your example, the start altitude is the lowest point after release, setting the start time and start position. So it is the altitude at the base of your first climb, and your first time to climb is counted in the speed determination. But after you finish the last leg, and have re-achieved that low start altitude, the scored flight is not necessarily over. If you stay above that start altitude for another hour, not going anywhere in particular but just enjoying the day and maybe drifting a mile or two downwind, the small extra distance will be included as part of your last leg and all the time counted until your two and half hours are up. This could hurt your speed quite a lot; so you might want to consider landing pretty soon, or staying below your start altitude for the rest of your flight. Is this really how it works, or am I mis-interpreting the scoring description ? Fly safe, Ian At 01:42 27 April 2006, Doug Haluza wrote: We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC League in the US. So now it's time to work on how to get started in the competition. It may take a while for clubs to catch on, so the early adopters will have a big advantage. As long as one club member scores on one day of the weekend, your club will score a minimum of 1 point for the round. But if only 20 other clubs score, you will score a minimum of 30 points for the round. So it pays to get started early. To score you will need to get at least 50 handicapped points in 2.5 hours using only 4 legs. If you are flying in a SGS 1-26 or 2-33, or any other glider with a handicap less than 64, the required distance is less than 20 miles. Since you get 4 legs, each leg only has to be 5 miles long. So the simple strategy is to pick a turnpoint 5 miles upwind, climb up over the home airfield, then head out to the turnpoint, always staying above a safe glide back to home. Round the turnpoint, and fly home. Climb back up and do it again. Then, and this is important, climb back up to to your start altitude. If you did this in less than 2.5 hours, congratulations, your flight qualifies for the OLC League. So let's say you want to maintain a conservative 10:1 glide to home. Then, at 5 miles out, you only have to be 0.5 miles higer than pattern altitude, or around 3500' AGL. This should be doable on a decent soaring day in most places. Remember that you are working upwind, so the tailwind provides an extra safety factor. Of course if you are flying a higher performance glider, you will have to go a little further, but you can see that this is doable in any glider on a good day almost anywhere. All you need to do is carry an FAI approved logger to claim your flight. Naturally you should only attempt this if you have landable terrain upwind, just in case. If you can make your turnpoint an airport, that's even better. You also want to have the basic skills for X/C flight. The Bronze Badge program is an excellent introduction to X/C, and this basic OLC League task should be suitable for anyone who has properly earned this award. This task is also an excellent opportunity for dual instruction in X/C procedures. It creates a goal-oriented traning situation, which is an excellent learining opportunity. And if the goal is completed, it creates an instant trophy in the form of an OLC claim for all to see. Plus it can be done in any two place trainer, with minimal chance of an actual off field landing. So it's time to start thinking about how to get your club started in the OLC League competition. It doesn't require anything special, other than the logger. So start thinking about how to how to get your club involved. The competition starts this weeked! |
#6
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Are clubs like mine that have no home base out of luck? (We're flying
out of two or three locations this year. Maybe more ...) -Homeless in AZ |
#7
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Hmm, according to the web site the OLC goal is to encourage XC flying.
Staying within a conservative glide from home is not considered cross country and defeat the purpose of the OLC IMHO. Ramy Doug Haluza wrote: We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC League in the US. So now it's time to work on how to get started in the competition. It may take a while for clubs to catch on, so the early adopters will have a big advantage. As long as one club member scores on one day of the weekend, your club will score a minimum of 1 point for the round. But if only 20 other clubs score, you will score a minimum of 30 points for the round. So it pays to get started early. To score you will need to get at least 50 handicapped points in 2.5 hours using only 4 legs. If you are flying in a SGS 1-26 or 2-33, or any other glider with a handicap less than 64, the required distance is less than 20 miles. Since you get 4 legs, each leg only has to be 5 miles long. So the simple strategy is to pick a turnpoint 5 miles upwind, climb up over the home airfield, then head out to the turnpoint, always staying above a safe glide back to home. Round the turnpoint, and fly home. Climb back up and do it again. Then, and this is important, climb back up to to your start altitude. If you did this in less than 2.5 hours, congratulations, your flight qualifies for the OLC League. So let's say you want to maintain a conservative 10:1 glide to home. Then, at 5 miles out, you only have to be 0.5 miles higer than pattern altitude, or around 3500' AGL. This should be doable on a decent soaring day in most places. Remember that you are working upwind, so the tailwind provides an extra safety factor. Of course if you are flying a higher performance glider, you will have to go a little further, but you can see that this is doable in any glider on a good day almost anywhere. All you need to do is carry an FAI approved logger to claim your flight. Naturally you should only attempt this if you have landable terrain upwind, just in case. If you can make your turnpoint an airport, that's even better. You also want to have the basic skills for X/C flight. The Bronze Badge program is an excellent introduction to X/C, and this basic OLC League task should be suitable for anyone who has properly earned this award. This task is also an excellent opportunity for dual instruction in X/C procedures. It creates a goal-oriented traning situation, which is an excellent learining opportunity. And if the goal is completed, it creates an instant trophy in the form of an OLC claim for all to see. Plus it can be done in any two place trainer, with minimal chance of an actual off field landing. So it's time to start thinking about how to get your club started in the OLC League competition. It doesn't require anything special, other than the logger. So start thinking about how to how to get your club involved. The competition starts this weeked! |
#8
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Ramy, everyone needs to start somewhere. This post only encourages
people to start small. Obviously as clubs and their pilots get more experience, they will fly further and faster and score higher. So I disagree with your concluson that starting off within gliding distance of home is not encouraging XC flying. I think the purpose of the OLC is to allow everyone to compete at their level. It truly is the people's contest. |
#9
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Hi Ian,
You finish height can't be lower than your start but there is no reason it can't be higher than your start. There is no need to land right away. I think some people will get caught by doing standard tasks where the start altitude is higher than the finish. If they finish low and never get as high as their release or low point then the system will find a shorter task in the flight in which the start height equals the finish height. If the "sprint" section is less than 2.5 hours long then 2.5 hours is still used as the task time - which can lead to slow speeds. So, as Doug suggested, be sure to do a climb after you finish if necessary to make sure your finish height is greater than or equal to your start height. Remember that it is all optimized to find the fastest 2.5 segment. Paul Remde "Ian Cant" wrote in message ... Doug, thankyou for an excellent write-up and the encouragement for the lower-performance guys to compete. May I ask two questions on the scoring ? First, what happens if there are only two flights from a club on a weekend ? Is the average speed calculated on the sum of the speeds divided by two, or divided by three ? Makes a difference if one flight is very fast and the other very slow, as the slow flight might either hurt the club or benefit it. Second, from your example, the start altitude is the lowest point after release, setting the start time and start position. So it is the altitude at the base of your first climb, and your first time to climb is counted in the speed determination. But after you finish the last leg, and have re-achieved that low start altitude, the scored flight is not necessarily over. If you stay above that start altitude for another hour, not going anywhere in particular but just enjoying the day and maybe drifting a mile or two downwind, the small extra distance will be included as part of your last leg and all the time counted until your two and half hours are up. This could hurt your speed quite a lot; so you might want to consider landing pretty soon, or staying below your start altitude for the rest of your flight. Is this really how it works, or am I mis-interpreting the scoring description ? Fly safe, Ian At 01:42 27 April 2006, Doug Haluza wrote: We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC League in the US. So now it's time to work on how to get started in the competition. It may take a while for clubs to catch on, so the early adopters will have a big advantage. As long as one club member scores on one day of the weekend, your club will score a minimum of 1 point for the round. But if only 20 other clubs score, you will score a minimum of 30 points for the round. So it pays to get started early. To score you will need to get at least 50 handicapped points in 2.5 hours using only 4 legs. If you are flying in a SGS 1-26 or 2-33, or any other glider with a handicap less than 64, the required distance is less than 20 miles. Since you get 4 legs, each leg only has to be 5 miles long. So the simple strategy is to pick a turnpoint 5 miles upwind, climb up over the home airfield, then head out to the turnpoint, always staying above a safe glide back to home. Round the turnpoint, and fly home. Climb back up and do it again. Then, and this is important, climb back up to to your start altitude. If you did this in less than 2.5 hours, congratulations, your flight qualifies for the OLC League. So let's say you want to maintain a conservative 10:1 glide to home. Then, at 5 miles out, you only have to be 0.5 miles higer than pattern altitude, or around 3500' AGL. This should be doable on a decent soaring day in most places. Remember that you are working upwind, so the tailwind provides an extra safety factor. Of course if you are flying a higher performance glider, you will have to go a little further, but you can see that this is doable in any glider on a good day almost anywhere. All you need to do is carry an FAI approved logger to claim your flight. Naturally you should only attempt this if you have landable terrain upwind, just in case. If you can make your turnpoint an airport, that's even better. You also want to have the basic skills for X/C flight. The Bronze Badge program is an excellent introduction to X/C, and this basic OLC League task should be suitable for anyone who has properly earned this award. This task is also an excellent opportunity for dual instruction in X/C procedures. It creates a goal-oriented traning situation, which is an excellent learining opportunity. And if the goal is completed, it creates an instant trophy in the form of an OLC claim for all to see. Plus it can be done in any two place trainer, with minimal chance of an actual off field landing. So it's time to start thinking about how to get your club started in the OLC League competition. It doesn't require anything special, other than the logger. So start thinking about how to how to get your club involved. The competition starts this weeked! |
#10
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![]() Doug Haluza wrote: We now have well over 100 clubs set up and ready to compete in the OLC Where did you find this information? Under the League rules section, it states that OLC will publish a list of clubs/home airfields, but for the life of me I can't find it. |
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