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I am currently flying with a Cambridge GPS NAV and a L-Nav. I would like to up
grade or add equipment to help me fly the Turn Area Task. What works well and what are the important features that can aid in making correct decisions while flying the Turn Area Task? Bill Snead 6W |
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#3
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#4
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Bill,
WinPilot fully supports this task in addition to 2 cylinder start gates. It also has a tasking feature that can move the point in the turn area as you fly, and update your task distance and ETA. Please see my website for information or call. Richard www.craggyaero.com 530-905-0062 "Snead1" wrote in message ... I am currently flying with a Cambridge GPS NAV and a L-Nav. I would like to up grade or add equipment to help me fly the Turn Area Task. What works well and what are the important features that can aid in making correct decisions while flying the Turn Area Task? Bill Snead 6W |
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We are working on a new display graphic idea which will help.
You ought to work on some informative marketing material for your website. The only product info on the B2000 there is the manual which is not the best way to get an overview of the product. |
#6
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First, I have to say the "dumb-ass" is my own description of the 15-minute
rule, but I think it fairly accurately represents the opinion of the majority who I fly with in the ASA series. Some are neutral, some are opposed and some are just plain furious. Most think it's a bit dumb and adds complexity while subtracting from comprehensibility. I don't believe it can be a good rule if it takes so much explaining! Rules should be simple. We don't want something that resembles the US tax code! My main complaint about the "start height penalty" , if I can call it that, is that it treats all pilots the same, even though actual start height is different. I have actually started a task lower than a colleague, flown faster cross-country than him, then been beaten by him as he converts his extra height into distance! We both received the same height (time) penalty, even though I started lower. You might ask, why didn't I take the extra height and start at the top like others? First, it's crowded at the top of a start cylinder. Second, we often get cyclical thermals that go higher than others and sometimes one group of starters gets higher than the others. The lower group just can't get up there! If you want to level the playing field on start height (and I'm not going to argue that it's unreasonable), then why not use each individual pilot's actual start height? It's on the logger, and it means you don't have to add an arbitrary fixed time (or height) to everyone. The big problem, in my view, is that the decision making has been made more complicated than under previous rules. Before, when you got final glide, if you were getting home over minimum time, you just flew to the finish as fast as possible. (It is a race, after all!) Under the new rule, when you get final glide, you have to decide the optimum speed and how much of that height to allocate to speed and how much to distance. Your flight computer won't tell you! At a critical part of the race, you're having to do mental arithmetic instead of concentrating on flying. Anyway, I'd be happy to share opinions with the rule-making committee from me and my colleagues who have quite a bit of experience flying with them in local contests. There are some other rule changes we're not delighted about either. The discussion on www.asa-soaring.org is under "Scoring" in the Forums section. Mike ASW 20 WA |
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There is a vote in progress for the vacant seat on the Rules
committee..Now is the time to voice your opinion of the "dumb-ass" 15 minute rule....Vote for the member that will listen to your complaints and represent you and not force a rule we do not want. Sam Fly Michael Stringfellow wrote: First, I have to say the "dumb-ass" is my own description of the 15-minute rule, but I think it fairly accurately represents the opinion of the majority who I fly with in the ASA series. Some are neutral, some are opposed and some are just plain furious. Most think it's a bit dumb and adds complexity while subtracting from comprehensibility. I don't believe it can be a good rule if it takes so much explaining! Rules should be simple. We don't want something that resembles the US tax code! My main complaint about the "start height penalty" , if I can call it that, is that it treats all pilots the same, even though actual start height is different. I have actually started a task lower than a colleague, flown faster cross-country than him, then been beaten by him as he converts his extra height into distance! We both received the same height (time) penalty, even though I started lower. You might ask, why didn't I take the extra height and start at the top like others? First, it's crowded at the top of a start cylinder. Second, we often get cyclical thermals that go higher than others and sometimes one group of starters gets higher than the others. The lower group just can't get up there! If you want to level the playing field on start height (and I'm not going to argue that it's unreasonable), then why not use each individual pilot's actual start height? It's on the logger, and it means you don't have to add an arbitrary fixed time (or height) to everyone. The big problem, in my view, is that the decision making has been made more complicated than under previous rules. Before, when you got final glide, if you were getting home over minimum time, you just flew to the finish as fast as possible. (It is a race, after all!) Under the new rule, when you get final glide, you have to decide the optimum speed and how much of that height to allocate to speed and how much to distance. Your flight computer won't tell you! At a critical part of the race, you're having to do mental arithmetic instead of concentrating on flying. Anyway, I'd be happy to share opinions with the rule-making committee from me and my colleagues who have quite a bit of experience flying with them in local contests. There are some other rule changes we're not delighted about either. The discussion on www.asa-soaring.org is under "Scoring" in the Forums section. Mike ASW 20 WA |
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#9
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In article , stant2
@mindspring.com says... Well, I'm going to try to stay dispassionate about this whole argument. The 15 minute rule IS A DUMB ****ING RULE! It "solves" a problem that doesn't exist. First of all, if everyone can start at the same height, then how does it advantage anyone? IT DOESN'T. Now, about the problem of having to figure out your final glide to the minute or lose points, and how unfair it is... Well, gee, we are racing, aren't we? That's what I want to do also, and I could never see how trying to arrive at particular time was "racing". It reminded me rallying in a sports car, which involved following directions very carefully, and maintaining precise speeds; I.e., nothing like the sports car racing I used to do. I didn't think is was "unfair", I just thought it wasn't racing and wasn't fun. It's just like a final glide - if you pooch that and end up too low, you lose a lot of points! So now you would just have had to not finish too soon. Pretty basic navigation task. Maybe I was doing it wrong, but it didn't seem anything like a "basic navigation task", which I think is getting to were you want to go. Getting there at the time you wanted to, in a sailplane, with variable weather, just seemed like a crap shoot to me. I won some and I lost some, but I never felt like it was my navigation that resulted in either, but mostly luck. -- !Replace DECIMAL.POINT in my e-mail address with just a . to reply directly Eric Greenwell Richland, WA (USA) |
#10
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Sam Fly wrote in message ...
There is a vote in progress for the vacant seat on the Rules committee..Now is the time to voice your opinion of the "dumb-ass" 15 minute rule....Vote for the member that will listen to your complaints and represent you and not force a rule we do not want. Sam Fly So reading the biography for 2 out of 3 (one of the three I know wants the "dumb-ass" rules) I cannot deduce which one of the other two will represent the racers and not force a rule we do not want. Can the other two please present their view on the "dumb-ass" rules please? I want to race, go fast, and know who won based on clear, simple rules, such as Distance/Time = Speed. No 15 minute add No 500' minimum finish Get what you fly! Thanks, Tony Smolder - ASA contest manager TS1 racing every weekend and loving it! |
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Hardware and software for motion platform | [email protected] | Home Built | 0 | November 4th 04 10:57 PM |