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#1
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No scores or news about the crash, what's up? If Charly is not at the
contest, we may never hear. |
#2
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...Huh? I suppose this is in the US? Please bear in mind that this is an
international newsgroup, they may even listen in from other planets as well ;-) Lars Peder DG-600, Denmark -- -- Lars P. Hansen "Bob Fidler" wrote in message ... No scores or news about the crash, what's up? If Charly is not at the contest, we may never hear. |
#3
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It's up on the ssa website as of 11am cdt. Look for Charlie's coments
in the "news" section not the "results" section. John Cochrane |
#4
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The report, on the SSA website, www.ssa.org, is under
the 'Members Only' section, then under 'Contest Reports,' then under 'Contest News.' Maybe it can be found somewhere outside of the 'Members Only' section? If so, I haven't been successful. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA At 17:00 07 March 2005, Bb wrote: It's up on the ssa website as of 11am cdt. Look for Charlie's coments in the 'news' section not the 'results' section. John Cochrane |
#5
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Yes, it appears that the contest reports are under the news section for
which you must log in with SSA member number and password. I have written Dennis Wright a note suggesting that both the reports and scores should be posted under the Contest Button so that anyone can access the scores and reports. I know that I enjoy reading contest reports and scores from other contries and feel that we should make this information universally available. If you feel as I do, please write Dennis a note. David Martin ASW27 BV |
#6
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It doesn't say anything anyway, just that there was a crash on practice
day. |
#7
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#8
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I know it's a dead horse, but I can't help but point out that this is
exactly the sort of accident that would be a lot less frequent with a 500 foot one mile circle finish. 70-80 kts right over the center of the airport at 51 feet is about the worst place you can be -- too much to land straight, too little to do a pattern. 70 knots, 501 feet, one mile out gives you a lot of time to think about what you're going to do next. 70 knots, 300 feet, one mile out means you're not going to make the flying finish at 500 feet, so you must roll. That decision is over, now use the whole mile to figure out how to land. Yes, pilots should think ahead to the pattern while also managing the stress of a tight glide. Yes, they should decide to do a rolling finish rather than focus entirely on the finishline and then wake up to the fact they have to land the darn thing. But everyone knows this advice, it's repeated over and over at the safety meetings, and we still get a crash like this once every few years -- usually with much worse results. A lower workload reduces the chances any of us will screw up. John Cochrane BB |
#9
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BB wrote:
I know it's a dead horse, but I can't help but point out that this is exactly the sort of accident that would be a lot less frequent with a 500 foot one mile circle finish. 70-80 kts right over the center of the airport at 51 feet is about the worst place you can be -- too much to land straight, too little to do a pattern. 70 knots, 501 feet, one mile out gives you a lot of time to think about what you're going to do next. 70 knots, 300 feet, one mile out means you're not going to make the flying finish at 500 feet, so you must roll. That decision is over, now use the whole mile to figure out how to land. We've used a 1000 foot two mile circle finish at the last two Minden regionals, which makes finishing a breeze. No problems, no complaints, no near misses, no one trying 180s at 100 feet, plenty of time to get everything put away, check that the water has finished dumping, make a nice leisurely traffic scan, then sequence for landing. On the other hand, at another recent regional contest I participated in, a vocal subgroup insisted upon using a finish gate with a 50 foot floor. There's nothing more exciting that dodging gliders coming from random directions at 100+ knots, while trying to make something approximating a normal pattern from my personal finish floor of 500 feet. That kind of excitement I can live without... Marc |
#10
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You must be aware that a pilot stalled and spun with water at 600'
attempting to get over the circle edge last season. So how is that safer??? Casey Lenox Phoenix KC |
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