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#1
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Two gliderscoming in to the finish directly over the
runway. One at about 100 ft and the other at 150 ft. The one at 150 ft is going about 30 knots faster than the lower and flies over it just as the lower glider is pulling up. Lower glider misses the one above by approx. 5-10 ft. This happened directly in front of me and probably 10 other people. It was mentioned by Charlie Spratt at the pilots meeting. GORDY |
#2
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![]() "Gordon Schubert" wrote in message ... Two gliderscoming in to the finish directly over the runway. One at about 100 ft and the other at 150 ft. The one at 150 ft is going about 30 knots faster than the lower and flies over it just as the lower glider is pulling up. Lower glider misses the one above by approx. 5-10 ft. This happened directly in front of me and probably 10 other people. It was mentioned by Charlie Spratt at the pilots meeting. GORDY This brings up a point that I had not thought of......in a gate finish it is possible to call others on the radio to report seeing them or to say that you are "to the left side of the gate" or to say that you are overtaking them and above, since it is in a focused area. With a cylinder finish there is no way to really do this unless you see them directly. With numerous finishes at the same time how would one report your position...."KC is on the 240 radial to the finish center 4 miles out at 810 feet"??? I can hear all of those type fixes being reported at a nationals with 30 finishes in 5 minutes. Oh ya. Re the specific incident you report.....once again it was poor judgement and pilotage on the overtaking pilots part. If the pilot that was being overtaken called in at 4 miles prior to the other then it is the following gliders responsiblity to locate him and if he does not see him then it is his responsibility to report that. This is no different than what occurs at nearly every controlled airport in the nation hourly. A gate at least allows meaningful position fixes vs. the cylinder finish. Casey Lenox KC Phoenix |
#3
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This is a classic example of two gliders flying in
the other pilots 'blind spot'. Lower pilot can't see above and behind, higher pilot can't see below and in front, because the nose of his ship blocks his view in this area. Both ships heades for the same point in space. Some have reffered to this as a 'scheduled mid-air', same point (GPS coordinates of gate), same altitude (50 feet), the only remaining variable is the timing of the event. Looks like the it was almost perfect on this one. Come on guys, there is a better way. JJ Sinclair At 04:30 16 March 2005, Gordon Schubert wrote: Two gliderscoming in to the finish directly over the runway. One at about 100 ft and the other at 150 ft. The one at 150 ft is going about 30 knots faster than the lower and flies over it just as the lower glider is pulling up. Lower glider misses the one above by approx. 5-10 ft. This happened directly in front of me and probably 10 other people. It was mentioned by Charlie Spratt at the pilots meeting. GORDY |
#5
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Were these two guys using the radio at all? Why weren't they aware of each
other? I can't imagine anyone doing a finish without announcing, how did this happen? "Bert Willing" wrote in message ... Finish gates without radio procedures are indeed a quite dumb thing to do. I'd call that Darwin... -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "John Sinclair" a écrit dans le message de news: ... This is a classic example of two gliders flying in the other pilots 'blind spot'. Lower pilot can't see above and behind, higher pilot can't see below and in front, because the nose of his ship blocks his view in this area. Both ships heades for the same point in space. Some have reffered to this as a 'scheduled mid-air', same point (GPS coordinates of gate), same altitude (50 feet), the only remaining variable is the timing of the event. Looks like the it was almost perfect on this one. Come on guys, there is a better way. JJ Sinclair At 04:30 16 March 2005, Gordon Schubert wrote: Two gliderscoming in to the finish directly over the runway. One at about 100 ft and the other at 150 ft. The one at 150 ft is going about 30 knots faster than the lower and flies over it just as the lower glider is pulling up. Lower glider misses the one above by approx. 5-10 ft. This happened directly in front of me and probably 10 other people. It was mentioned by Charlie Spratt at the pilots meeting. GORDY |
#6
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And did no one on the ground have a radio and see this developing?
Gary "Gary Boggs" wrote in message ... Were these two guys using the radio at all? Why weren't they aware of each other? I can't imagine anyone doing a finish without announcing, how did this happen? "Bert Willing" wrote in message ... Finish gates without radio procedures are indeed a quite dumb thing to do. I'd call that Darwin... -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "John Sinclair" a écrit dans le message de news: ... This is a classic example of two gliders flying in the other pilots 'blind spot'. Lower pilot can't see above and behind, higher pilot can't see below and in front, because the nose of his ship blocks his view in this area. Both ships heades for the same point in space. Some have reffered to this as a 'scheduled mid-air', same point (GPS coordinates of gate), same altitude (50 feet), the only remaining variable is the timing of the event. Looks like the it was almost perfect on this one. Come on guys, there is a better way. JJ Sinclair At 04:30 16 March 2005, Gordon Schubert wrote: Two gliderscoming in to the finish directly over the runway. One at about 100 ft and the other at 150 ft. The one at 150 ft is going about 30 knots faster than the lower and flies over it just as the lower glider is pulling up. Lower glider misses the one above by approx. 5-10 ft. This happened directly in front of me and probably 10 other people. It was mentioned by Charlie Spratt at the pilots meeting. GORDY |
#7
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Yes, how did this happen? I have flown in several Seniors, and radio
discipline is usually quite good! Just guessing (I know, bad!), one of them had to fail to switch from "crew" 123.5 to "gate" 123.3--So each announces and does not hear the other because they are on different frequencies. The overtake speed differential is small enough to keep them in the blind spot a long time. -- Hartley Falbaum ASW27B "KF" USA "Gary Boggs" wrote in message ... Were these two guys using the radio at all? Why weren't they aware of each other? I can't imagine anyone doing a finish without announcing, how did this happen? "Bert Willing" wrote in message ... Finish gates without radio procedures are indeed a quite dumb thing to do. I'd call that Darwin... -- Bert Willing ASW20 "TW" "John Sinclair" a écrit dans le message de news: ... This is a classic example of two gliders flying in the other pilots 'blind spot'. Lower pilot can't see above and behind, higher pilot can't see below and in front, because the nose of his ship blocks his view in this area. Both ships heades for the same point in space. Some have reffered to this as a 'scheduled mid-air', same point (GPS coordinates of gate), same altitude (50 feet), the only remaining variable is the timing of the event. Looks like the it was almost perfect on this one. Come on guys, there is a better way. JJ Sinclair At 04:30 16 March 2005, Gordon Schubert wrote: Two gliderscoming in to the finish directly over the runway. One at about 100 ft and the other at 150 ft. The one at 150 ft is going about 30 knots faster than the lower and flies over it just as the lower glider is pulling up. Lower glider misses the one above by approx. 5-10 ft. This happened directly in front of me and probably 10 other people. It was mentioned by Charlie Spratt at the pilots meeting. GORDY |
#8
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Casey, Casey, Casey,
Does the word 'denial' mean anything to you? I make it 5 accidents in the Neanderthal gate, but they were all caused by 'poor judgement' and or 'poor pilotage', right? Tell me something, how does this near mid-air at the Seniors, differ from the ASK-21 that pulled up into the Cub at Turf, resulting in the tragic loss of 4 people? They were both flying in each others blind spot. One pulled up (starting a loop) and hit the Piper Cub on down-wind. Doesn't count, right? Didn't happen in a contest. I'll say it again, there is a better way. Why don't we drop, once and for all, this Neanderthal Gate and go with the proven finish cylinder to score all our races? JJ Sinclair (Wuss) Re the specific incident you report.....once again it was poor judgement and pilotage on the overtaking pilots part. If the pilot that was being overtaken called in at 4 miles prior to the other then it is the following gliders responsiblity to locate him and if he does not see him then it is his responsibility to report that. This is no different than what occurs at nearly every controlled airport in the nation hourly. A gate at least allows meaningful position fixes vs. the cylinder finish. Casey Lenox KC Phoenix |
#9
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Take a look at the responses here....most are wanting to know why the radio
wasn't used to avoid this conflict. I'll repeat the idea that the radio is only useful when you have some way of identifying your position relative to other pilots. That is easy with the finish gate. Explain to me how you could tell another pilot where you are if you just heard them call 4 miles and you are at the same distance but do not see them with a cylinder finish. Landmarks don't help...you're too high. Distance from the edge or center doesn't help...you could be on a collision course anywhere along the way since you are most likely on differing tangents but both headed toward the runway. Your facts are incorrect re the Turf midair. For the record the glider was in an established acro box on the downside of a loop and the Cub was on a downwind through the middle of the box which he knew was hot during a lot of the day. Your using this to support your point is lost on me since I would argue the opposite or that it at very least that it has nothing to do with this thread. An analogous situation with the contest gate finish would be that they would both have been entering downwind, called it on the radio and if getting a no joy would have kept talking until they did. Let's try this.....the parcel of cubic atmosphere that a glider might be in when calling a finish with the cylinder is many fold greater than that with the gate. That allows many more possibilities for unseen conflicts and fewer possibilities for being able to identify where you are in relationship to the other folks. OK you math guys.....help me out with some numbers....you out there 9B?! You should have been a politician with your Neanderthal comments and use of hyperbole JJ. When your argument has no basis in fact that is all that's left I suppose. Re the denial....what is it that you don't get about some of those stall spins being unrelated to contests or are you now going to attribute all stall spin accidents to gate finishes? This is a good and useful discussion but please let's keep it to the facts and not get so emotional about it. Casey Lenox KC Phoenix |
#10
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At 02:30 17 March 2005, Kilo Charlie wrote:
OK you math guys.....help me out with some numbers....you out there 9B?! Go get 'em Casey - grrrr... ...I'm covering the Neanderthal thread. Check it out, I just folded the 15-minute rule into the discussion - it'll be hypergolic! (BTW, I'm inclined to agree with you - for years I knew where to look when someone called 'four miles' or got a 'mark' on finishing - now I still look but odd's are I won't see anyone - particularly on MATs, so on I go in the blind. I remember Marine ground attack pilots telling me about dropping bombs on targets at the same time as incoming artillery. They called it 'big sky, little bullet' - this seems like the same doctrine. If the cylinder is big enough the odds are reduced than any two random gliders will run into each other, but the price you pay is making it harder to see and avoid each other if you do end up on converging courses. Hard to prove the math of it - too many possible combinations.) 9B |
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