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Todd Smith posted:
I was a new guy in soaring about 7 years ago and as I was working on my Silver badge, got a lesson in how to smoke a windup barograph and all that. I bought a used thermal electric model that required no screwing around, all I had to do was put it in the glider. I then tried to do my Silver distance with a camera, the rigmarole was ridiculous. I ordered a Colibri immediately after that and badge flights have been simple (except for the flying) ever since. ---------- Well, there's your mistake. No need for a camera to do the Silver Distance flight, even back in the olden days before GPS. I certainly didn't need one. I also helped set one state record for distance without using a camera. Jim Beckman |
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I also wanted to land back where I took off :-)
That's hard to do without the camera or logger. Todd |
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On Sep 27, 9:11 am, toad wrote:
I also wanted to land back where I took off :-) That's hard to do without the camera or logger. Todd Hard but not impossible. Back in the "olden days," you were allowed to use observers. On more than one occasion my father radioed the FBO at a local turnpoint and got him to come out and "observe" him (5,000 feet above!) as he crossed the airport. Then my dad would send the guy a letter with a pre-filled form to sign and a stamped, self-addressed envelope, and receive it a week later. OK, it was kludgy but it was possible. ![]() I agree that cameras and photo declarations and getting the film processed without cutting the negative were a hassle. On the other hand, so is trying to upload waypoints when ActiveSync won't release a COM port or any number of other modern glitches. Just Google this newsgroup for the plaintive cries for help. Worse yet, go to any user group page on one of the hardware or software makers' Web sites and read about the real-world experiences of pilots who are unknowingly (and unwillingly) recruited as beta testers by engineers who know they can't possibly afford to test their products for the soaring world the way they would for a larger market. Cameras are sold by the tens of thousands if not millions. By comparison, sales of loggers, flight computers, and related software and systems are infinitesimal. And anytime you think that the gliding community has somehow magically developed the skills necessary to acquire, configure, use, and troubleshoot various electronic gadgets that have to talk to each other, just show up in the scorer's office at any contest to see the parade of pilots waiting to have the scorer upload the contest database for them. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" USA |
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On Sep 27, 10:06 am, Chip Bearden wrote:
On Sep 27, 9:11 am, toad wrote: I also wanted to land back where I took off :-) That's hard to do without the camera or logger. Todd Hard but not impossible. Back in the "olden days," you were allowed to use observers. On more than one occasion my father radioed the FBO at a local turnpoint and got him to come out and "observe" him (5,000 feet above!) as he crossed the airport. Then my dad would send the guy a letter with a pre-filled form to sign and a stamped, self-addressed envelope, and receive it a week later. OK, it was kludgy but it was possible. ![]() I agree that cameras and photo declarations and getting the film processed without cutting the negative were a hassle. On the other hand, so is trying to upload waypoints when ActiveSync won't release a COM port or any number of other modern glitches. Just Google this newsgroup for the plaintive cries for help. Worse yet, go to any user group page on one of the hardware or software makers' Web sites and read about the real-world experiences of pilots who are unknowingly (and unwillingly) recruited as beta testers by engineers who know they can't possibly afford to test their products for the soaring world the way they would for a larger market. Cameras are sold by the tens of thousands if not millions. By comparison, sales of loggers, flight computers, and related software and systems are infinitesimal. And anytime you think that the gliding community has somehow magically developed the skills necessary to acquire, configure, use, and troubleshoot various electronic gadgets that have to talk to each other, just show up in the scorer's office at any contest to see the parade of pilots waiting to have the scorer upload the contest database for them. Chip Bearden ASW 24 "JB" USA Or the contest pilot that shows up with a logger, but no cables to upload or download that logger. Because I had the same logger (a Colibri), I got drafted to help him. So I understand that computers have there own problems. But for me, the electronic skills were so much easier to deal with, and most importantly, require very little from my potential observers and me on the day of the flight, that I could declare a badge task at about 1 minutes notice before takeoff. All of the computer mucking about was done on a tuesday night in my house, there was no work to be done at the airport before takeoff. Todd |
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Out of curiosity, has anyone 'recently' attempted a
badge flight using a camera or ground observers ? Did it get accepted by SSA without added hassle ? I guess a digital camera is completely out of the question ! Ian At 14:42 27 September 2007, Toad wrote: On Sep 27, 10:06 am, Chip Bearden wrote: On Sep 27, 9:11 am, toad wrote: I also wanted to land back where I took off :-) That's hard to do without the camera or logger. Todd Hard but not impossible. Back in the 'olden days,' you were allowed to use observers. On more than one occasion my father radioed the FBO at a local turnpoint and got him to come out and 'observe' him (5,000 feet above!) as he crossed the airport. Then my dad would send the guy a letter with a pre-filled form to sign and a stamped, self-addressed envelope, and receive it a week later. OK, it was kludgy but it was possible. ![]() |
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I guess a digital camera is completely out of the question
! Ian Think Photoshop! |
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On Sep 27, 8:00 am, Ian Cant
wrote: Out of curiosity, has anyone 'recently' attempted a badge flight using a camera or ground observers ? Did it get accepted by SSA without added hassle ? I guess a digital camera is completely out of the question ! Ian At 14:42 27 September 2007, Toad wrote: On Sep 27, 10:06 am, Chip Bearden wrote: On Sep 27, 9:11 am, toad wrote: I also wanted to land back where I took off :-) That's hard to do without the camera or logger. Todd Hard but not impossible. Back in the 'olden days,' you were allowed to use observers. On more than one occasion my father radioed the FBO at a local turnpoint and got him to come out and 'observe' him (5,000 feet above!) as he crossed the airport. Then my dad would send the guy a letter with a pre-filled form to sign and a stamped, self-addressed envelope, and receive it a week later. OK, it was kludgy but it was possible. ![]() - Show quoted text - According to the Badge Lady, my Gold Distance flight (July 06) was the ONLY baro and turnpoint camera badge she processed in all of 2006. I am currently OO preparing a Diamond Goal badge claim for another club member, and it's a LOT more work than a claim using a Certified Flight Recorder. Still, I'd like to smoke up another foil, mount up the camera, and do one more badge flight that way before I retire the Baro forever.... |
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On Sep 27, 8:46 pm, wrote:
On Sep 27, 8:00 am, Ian Cant wrote: Out of curiosity, has anyone 'recently' attempted a badge flight using a camera or ground observers ? Did it get accepted by SSA without added hassle ? I guess a digital camera is completely out of the question ! Ian At 14:42 27 September 2007, Toad wrote: On Sep 27, 10:06 am, Chip Bearden wrote: On Sep 27, 9:11 am, toad wrote: I also wanted to land back where I took off :-) That's hard to do without the camera or logger. Todd Hard but not impossible. Back in the 'olden days,' you were allowed to use observers. On more than one occasion my father radioed the FBO at a local turnpoint and got him to come out and 'observe' him (5,000 feet above!) as he crossed the airport. Then my dad would send the guy a letter with a pre-filled form to sign and a stamped, self-addressed envelope, and receive it a week later. OK, it was kludgy but it was possible. ![]() - Show quoted text - According to the Badge Lady, my Gold Distance flight (July 06) was the ONLY baro and turnpoint camera badge she processed in all of 2006. I am currently OO preparing a Diamond Goal badge claim for another club member, and it's a LOT more work than a claim using a Certified Flight Recorder. Still, I'd like to smoke up another foil, mount up the camera, and do one more badge flight that way before I retire the Baro forever....- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - someday my barograph will not fail, and she will have a Silver Badge to process on paper. unless of course someone decides to bankroll a flight recorder for me. |
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At 15:54 28 September 2007, Tim Newport-Peace wrote:
You will then, no doubt be entertained by the proposal to remove Camera and Ground Observers for the Sporting Code from 1st October 2008. Tim Newport-Peace That is interesting news. Perhaps it will/would only affect a small number of pilots, but would it not be nice to be informed about the proposal and have an opportunity to comment ? Where are our representatives on this ? Cameras and barographs may be awkward and unfashionable, but so are Ka-8s and 1-26s. Should we expect to see some future Sporting Code that allows only glass/carbon better than 40:1 for Silver badge attempts ? It might even be a 'safety enhancement'. And it would certainly reduce the number of impecunious upstarts who presume to try to take part in the sport. Open fire ! Ian |
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On 29 Sep, 15:33, Ian Cant
wrote: At 15:54 28 September 2007, Tim Newport-Peace wrote: You will then, no doubt be entertained by the proposal to remove Camera and Ground Observers for the Sporting Code from 1st October 2008. That is interesting news. Perhaps it will/would only affect a small number of pilots, but would it not be nice to be informed about the proposal and have an opportunity to comment ? Where are our representatives on this ? And what do our representatives fly? Cameras and barographs may be awkward and unfashionable, but so are Ka-8s and 1-26s. Should we expect to see some future Sporting Code that allows only glass/carbon better than 40:1 for Silver badge attempts ? I'd rather it was changed to Silver Distance being 2km * best L/D for the glider (and similarly for Gold and Diamond: 12km and 20km * best L/ D. Silver distance in modern glass is absurdly easy. I am very disappointed that we might see and end to cameras and mechanical barographs. Sometimes it seems that those of us at the budget end of the sport really aren't welcome any more. Ian |
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