![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
From Sept 2010 "Soaring"...article on FLARM...
...."we were flying in big undiciplined gaggles"... ...."I received indications about one idiot who pulled in behind and then passed 10 feet over me."... ...."I received many beeps from gliders following 20 feet behind and just outside..." Holy close call Batman! ..Undiciplined??!! .. Idiot??!! .. 10 feet over??!!.. 20 feet??!! Are you thinking what I'm thinking??? Cookie |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 26, 6:53*am, "
wrote: From Sept 2010 "Soaring"...article on FLARM... ..."we were flying in big undiciplined gaggles"... ..."I received indications about one idiot who pulled in behind and then passed 10 feet over me."... ..."I received many beeps from gliders following 20 feet behind and just outside..." Holy close call Batman! *..Undiciplined??!! .. * Idiot??!! * .. 10 feet over??!!.. * 20 feet??!! *Are you thinking what I'm thinking??? Cookie Well, I'm thinking I'm glad to be alive. I'm thinking that I like the trend in US contest rules that take us away from mass gaggle flying, and wish the worlds would take a stab in that direction as well. I'm thinking flarm is a pretty darn good idea. What are you thinking? John Cochrane |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
We have placed FLARM information on our web site home page.
Go to: www.eglider.org At the top of the page, click on "News Articles" You will find a link to the my recent newsletter about FLARM. You will also find other articles of interest, many safety related. Tom Knauff |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
When in a large gaggle Flarm is next to useless, more of a distraction;
that's why it has a 5 minute mute function. In the big gaggle ignore Flarm and keep your eyes scanning outside. At 14:08 26 October 2010, John Cochrane wrote: On Oct 26, 6:53=A0am, " wrote: From Sept 2010 "Soaring"...article on FLARM... ..."we were flying in big undiciplined gaggles"... ..."I received indications about one idiot who pulled in behind and then passed 10 feet over me."... ..."I received many beeps from gliders following 20 feet behind and just outside..." Holy close call Batman! =A0..Undiciplined??!! .. =A0 Idiot??!! =A0 .. 10 feet over??!!.. =A0 20 feet??!! =A0Are you thinking what I'm thinking??? Cookie Well, I'm thinking I'm glad to be alive. I'm thinking that I like the trend in US contest rules that take us away from mass gaggle flying, and wish the worlds would take a stab in that direction as well. I'm thinking flarm is a pretty darn good idea. What are you thinking? John Cochrane |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mark Dickson wrote:
When in a large gaggle Flarm is next to useless, more of a distraction; that's why it has a 5 minute mute function. In the big gaggle ignore Flarm and keep your eyes scanning outside. Let me guess: You haven't ever flown with FLARM yet, have you? |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
At 15:21 26 October 2010, John Smith wrote:
Mark Dickson wrote: When in a large gaggle Flarm is next to useless, more of a distraction; that's why it has a 5 minute mute function. In the big gaggle ignore Flarm and keep your eyes scanning outside. Let me guess: You haven't ever flown with FLARM yet, have you? I fly with Flarm (admittedly just one competition so far, quite a bit of general cross-country) and find in large gaggles I'm too busy looking at the other gliders to notice it. If you get a ping you've hopefully already noted the hazard and have started to react to it. I don't use mute, I just mentally tune it out. It certainly doesn't contribute much to situational awareness in that situation. It's only really useful in my experience for warning you about the glider you haven't seen, probably because you don't expect him to be there. For instance, you're on cross-country on your own, miles from any gliding site and someone else turns up in your thermal. Unlike in a competition, this could be from any direction. Or (this has happened to me), you're on final glide near cloud base to an airfield to the south, and someone else is on a final glide to a different airfield to the north, both following the same energy line. Another one is in wave, working close to the leading edge of the cloud. You can tell people who haven't flown with Flarm- they're the ones who don't think they need it. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Gang
Surely flying in a thermal with a gaggle of other gliders is suicidal period. And what use is a Flarm in those conditions? I have a Phoenix on order and am anticipating putting a PowerFlarm in it. Why? Because the PowerFlarm has a PCAS function in addition to the Flarm function and the PowerFlarm costs only a little more than a Zaon PCAS. I do think the mandatory use of Flarm is a good idea for comps especially if one can inexpensively rent a Flarm. But outside of comps with the flying I do having a transponder is by far the most important piece of safety equipment I have on board. A PCAS is also worth having. Having a Flarm? It is a useless device until the use of Flarm by the gliding community reaches critical mass (usage). That is unlikely to happen here in the US for several years at best. And then what about GA? What good is Flarm for GA? They are never going to use it in the US. The FAA has another system in store for GA and commercial aircraft. Dave |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Of course I have, in comps on numerous occasions. I'm assuming you
haven't. At 15:21 26 October 2010, John Smith wrote: Mark Dickson wrote: When in a large gaggle Flarm is next to useless, more of a distraction; that's why it has a 5 minute mute function. In the big gaggle ignore Flarm and keep your eyes scanning outside. Let me guess: You haven't ever flown with FLARM yet, have you? |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Mark Dickson wrote:
Of course I have, in comps on numerous occasions. I'm assuming you haven't. At 15:21 26 October 2010, John Smith wrote: Mark Dickson wrote: When in a large gaggle Flarm is next to useless, more of a distraction; that's why it has a 5 minute mute function. In the big gaggle ignore Flarm and keep your eyes scanning outside. Let me guess: You haven't ever flown with FLARM yet, have you? I like those top-posts. They make followin a discussion so much more interesting. Anyway: Of course FLARM is useless in a gaggle. The very fact that you care to mention this made me believe that you haven't flown with one. And of course scanning outside ist the primary strategy for see and avoid, in a gaggle or not, even with FLARM installed. However, I don't understand why FLARM should be distracting in a gaggle. In a gaggle, mine is quiet unless a new glider joins. Or have you set yours to announce all traffic instead of only the conflicting? You know that you can change this mode by the push of a button? |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Oct 26, 10:07*am, Mark Dickson wrote:
When in a large gaggle Flarm is next to useless, more of a distraction; that's why it has a 5 minute mute function. *In the big gaggle ignore Flarm and keep your eyes scanning outside. * I have heard other say this, but that's not been my experience. My eyes don't see behind or below my glider, no matter how hard I look. I found flarm useful precisely in the huge mothers of all gaggles at Szeged. Sure, there's a little extra beeping but the really insistent BEEP BEEP BEEP with three lit up LEDs only happens when you really need to know about it, even in a big gaggle. And I also found very little head-in-cockpit distraction with flarm. I looked outside all the time, when huge beeps came about 1/10 second to glance at the LEDs for the direction of the threat, then back out. John Cochrane |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Flarm in the US | Steve Freeman | Soaring | 163 | August 15th 10 12:12 AM |
Reflections on good and evil | [email protected] | Piloting | 6 | April 18th 06 08:48 PM |
FLARM | Robert Hart | Soaring | 50 | March 16th 06 11:20 PM |
Good morning or good evening depending upon your location. I want to ask you the most important question of your life. Your joy or sorrow for all eternity depends upon your answer. The question is: Are you saved? It is not a question of how good | Excelsior | Home Built | 0 | April 22nd 05 01:11 AM |
B29 - "Necessary Evil" | Matt Tauber | Military Aviation | 30 | August 28th 03 10:35 AM |