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#1
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The latest SSA Newsletter says:
"OLC entrants in the USA will hopefully at least double in size again this year - with more and more pilots going out away from the home airport. OLC has grown significantly over the past three years, with participation coming from many different groups. We are looking at posting scores and rankings by Region, or by State. And, as this year at Arlington, awards will be presented at Memphis Convention next year." More participation is good, but for that to happen OLC will have to be attractive to pilots. I looked at all US flights starting on Saturday, March 11. During that time, 262 flights were made with a score over the 50 point minimum, and 70 of those flights had the "red mark." I think it probably is safe to say that not one of those 70 red marks was due to a pilot who was cheating. When over a quarter of pilots get no score for their flights, a lot of pilots will decide not to continue to participate (and the above statistics probably are skewed due to pilots who already have dropped out). |
#2
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![]() "Greg Arnold" wrote in message news:HreWf.911$I%6.121@fed1read12... The latest SSA Newsletter says: "OLC entrants in the USA will hopefully at least double in size again this year - with more and more pilots going out away from the home airport. OLC has grown significantly over the past three years, with participation coming from many different groups. We are looking at posting scores and rankings by Region, or by State. And, as this year at Arlington, awards will be presented at Memphis Convention next year." More participation is good, but for that to happen OLC will have to be attractive to pilots. I looked at all US flights starting on Saturday, March 11. During that time, 262 flights were made with a score over the 50 point minimum, and 70 of those flights had the "red mark." I think it probably is safe to say that not one of those 70 red marks was due to a pilot who was cheating. When over a quarter of pilots get no score for their flights, a lot of pilots will decide not to continue to participate (and the above statistics probably are skewed due to pilots who already have dropped out). I noticed last season 'first timers' were sometimes 'red-marked' but pilots quickly learned how to upload flights. I suspect this year will be the same. Listening to conversations around the airfield, it seems that most of the problem were with files from older Cambridge loggers that didn't produce a file with all the needed parameters. Perhaps someone can post the proceedure to get a good file. My Volksloggers always produced good OLC files. Bill Daniels |
#3
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Link to thread with one pilots directions for submitting
with the older Cambridge loggers....if you poke around the OLC site, they have their version of these directions as well. http://www.abqsoaring.org/viewThread.php?threadID=68 |
#4
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The older Cambridges are covered in the other threads and pilots need
to familiarize themselves with the procedures. The OLC remains a shifting paradigm, but it's pretty cool. At the SSA Governors and Record Keepers breakfast at the convention, we discussed the pros and cons and wants. The regional filters were set up without discussion or purpose. To me, as an SSA state governor, regional filters are pretty useless. There also are no plans for regional awards, so I see little point in regional filters. State filters I would find useful and would enough granularity in searches to query for flights originating in this state, terminating in this state, and both originating and terminating in this state. However, there are 'borderline' soaring sites that actually fly their flights in adjacent states and regions, just to complicate things. It may be for some of us that raw data file access would be the best alternative in the near term. Frank Whiteley |
#5
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Frank Whiteley wrote:
The older Cambridges are covered in the other threads and pilots need to familiarize themselves with the procedures. The OLC remains a shifting paradigm, but it's pretty cool. At the SSA Governors and Record Keepers breakfast at the convention, we discussed the pros and cons and wants. The regional filters were set up without discussion or purpose. To me, as an SSA state governor, regional filters are pretty useless. There also are no plans for regional awards, so I see little point in regional filters. State filters I would find useful and would enough granularity in searches to query for flights originating in this state, terminating in this state, and both originating and terminating in this state. However, there are 'borderline' soaring sites that actually fly their flights in adjacent states and regions, just to complicate things. It may be for some of us that raw data file access would be the best alternative in the near term. Frank Whiteley A regional filter is useful for Region 12 (Southern California), as California essentially is two separate soaring areas. |
#6
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Stewart Kissel wrote:
Link to thread with one pilots directions for submitting with the older Cambridge loggers....if you poke around the OLC site, they have their version of these directions as well. http://www.abqsoaring.org/viewThread.php?threadID=68 Good directions, but I think he is wrong that you have to change the file name if you need to do the process a second time. It is true that OLC wants to use the old uploaded file the second time, but you can force it to use the new file by clicking on the button that allows you to upload a new file. I don't presently have a flight on OLC that I can open, so I can't say just how you do this, but I have done it several times without any problem. |
#7
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Last Saturday it was 14 of 33 flights (42 percent) which were red
marked, and I know many of those are experienced OLCers who have been succesfully submitting flights for years. Yes, most had Cambridge loggers. Things have definitely gone downhill for this substantial subset of pilots. Even if you have a valid CAI file and follow the whole CAI2IGC song and dance to the letter, there is a substantial probability you will not get scored because the OLC software doesn't know how to handle certain glitches that sometimes appear in the Cambridge logs, even though SeeYou handles them just fine. But hey, in this post 9-11 world we just can't take the risk of a fake IGC file appearing on the web. |
#8
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![]() Greg Arnold wrote: Stewart Kissel wrote: Link to thread with one pilots directions for submitting with the older Cambridge loggers....if you poke around the OLC site, they have their version of these directions as well. http://www.abqsoaring.org/viewThread.php?threadID=68 Good directions, but I think he is wrong that you have to change the file name if you need to do the process a second time. It is true that OLC wants to use the old uploaded file the second time, but you can force it to use the new file by clicking on the button that allows you to upload a new file. I don't presently have a flight on OLC that I can open, so I can't say just how you do this, but I have done it several times without any problem. To Greg's point, the failure rate is still unacceptably high, even when following the directions. I know - I've tried to help out several people in my club with Cambridge loggers, and the success rate is only about 50%. The folks in my club (currently in first place in the US right now, I might add) , have actually begun to revolt. They've basically decided that the OLC is "unstable" and are not willing to invest more computer time trying to get scored. Though that might not be a fair statement, it is an understandable perception. Given that, we can expect participation to drop off. Whether or not we want to blame Cambridge, the OLC, SeeYou, or anyone else, the problem with the validation of G Records for Cambridge loggers is a real issue that isn't going away right now. I think we ought to reconsider whether this Validation is worth the price (ie. turning off prospective participants). My suggestion is that we ask OLC to disable Validation until someone comes up with a script that successfully handles all of the steps required to create an acceptable output from a Cambridge Logger using a user-friendly interface. Asking the average glider pilot to manipulate files using a DOS command prompt is a recipe for failure (or at least good for a laugh or two). Erik Mann (P3) p.s. If anyone want an example of the situation, take a look at the file from Ron Schwartz on 3/27 in the US. The source .CAI file passes Vali-Cam just fine. Ran CAI2IGC just fine. Output .IGC file shows the binary .CAI file appended to the IGC file. File still shows up on OLC as invalid, not to mention that the scoring distance is also wrong. Would appreciate anyone who can download the file and see if anything jumps out at you. |
#9
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Have any of the Cambridge 10/20/25 users contacted
the OLC Group and asked for help? I don't have one of these Cambridge FR's, but I have e-mailed OLC a couple of times and they always helped me with 'user headspace' problems. I see a lot of notes here on RAS about the problem and one of our club members has the same issue with his older Cambridge. Just seems like the comments should go to OLC directly. Ray Lovinggood Carrboro, North Carolina, USA At 16:30 29 March 2006, Papa3 wrote: Greg Arnold wrote: Stewart Kissel wrote: Link to thread with one pilots directions for submitting with the older Cambridge loggers....if you poke around the OLC site, they have their version of these directions as well. http://www.abqsoaring.org/viewThread.php?threadID=68 Good directions, but I think he is wrong that you have to change the file name if you need to do the process a second time. It is true that OLC wants to use the old uploaded file the second time, but you can force it to use the new file by clicking on the button that allows you to upload a new file. I don't presently have a flight on OLC that I can open, so I can't say just how you do this, but I have done it several times without any problem. To Greg's point, the failure rate is still unacceptably high, even when following the directions. I know - I've tried to help out several people in my club with Cambridge loggers, and the success rate is only about 50%. The folks in my club (currently in first place in the US right now, I might add) , have actually begun to revolt. They've basically decided that the OLC is 'unstable' and are not willing to invest more computer time trying to get scored. Though that might not be a fair statement, it is an understandable perception. Given that, we can expect participation to drop off. Whether or not we want to blame Cambridge, the OLC, SeeYou, or anyone else, the problem with the validation of G Records for Cambridge loggers is a real issue that isn't going away right now. I think we ought to reconsider whether this Validation is worth the price (ie. turning off prospective participants). My suggestion is that we ask OLC to disable Validation until someone comes up with a script that successfully handles all of the steps required to create an acceptable output from a Cambridge Logger using a user-friendly interface. Asking the average glider pilot to manipulate files using a DOS command prompt is a recipe for failure (or at least good for a laugh or two). Erik Mann (P3) p.s. If anyone want an example of the situation, take a look at the file from Ron Schwartz on 3/27 in the US. The source .CAI file passes Vali-Cam just fine. Ran CAI2IGC just fine. Output .IGC file shows the binary .CAI file appended to the IGC file. File still shows up on OLC as invalid, not to mention that the scoring distance is also wrong. Would appreciate anyone who can download the file and see if anything jumps out at you. |
#10
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![]() Erik Mann (P3) p.s. If anyone want an example of the situation, take a look at the file from Ron Schwartz on 3/27 in the US. The source .CAI file passes Vali-Cam just fine. Ran CAI2IGC just fine. Output .IGC file shows the binary .CAI file appended to the IGC file. File still shows up on OLC as invalid, not to mention that the scoring distance is also wrong. Would appreciate anyone who can download the file and see if anything jumps out at you. I think two things are going on with this file. First, the optimization software thought he landed near the beginning of the flight, so most of the distance was not counted. He needs to manually enter the time he landed, and that should solve this problem. Why did the optimization software think he landed at the top of a thermal? Who knows. Open the flight in SeeYou, and the flight is optimized just fine, so it appears the flight was not uploaded with SeeYou. I think the OLC is using Strepla as its optimization software for flights that are not already optimized when uploaded. But SeeYou gets it wrong at times, too. The other problem is the message " Sorry, Validation Service is current not running. OLC Team is working on that issue." Apparently some or all of the earlier Cambridge files are getting the red mark because OLC can't run its validation software. This has been going on for 3 weeks now, and certainly would cause unhappiness for a pilot who just made a tremendous flight. Especially since after going through the CAI 20/25 song-and-dance, you don't know if you did it right until you see the approved flight on the website. My personal feeling is that the OLC is a great idea that has been implemented very poorly: 1. The web interface is very poor, both for those uploading flights, and those wanting to look at recent flights. 2. It has all the noted problems with older Cambridge loggers, including rejection of flights that have a single bogus line in the IGC file. 3. It requires a level of security that is way beyond what is needed for this type of contest. 4. It requires you to submit a Monday flight by the evening of the next day (so the flight in question is already beyond the submission date, and now there probably is no possibility of correcting the distance). 5. The maps on the OLC site are very poor. 6. You must enter a code to view any IGC files (is there really a problem with automated software downloading hundreds of flights, and if so isn't there a better way to handle this?). The founders of the OLC did a fine job implementing a great idea. What is needed now is to transfer the entire OLC project to new people who can take it to a higher level. |
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