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#21
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I'm not sure what the point of changing the badge requirements would
be. Nobody really believes that a Silver/Gold/Diamond/1000km in an open class ship is as impressive as the same flights in a 1-26, do they ? Bragging rights is all that you get for these badges. You don't get money, power or fame. So if you did your badges in a 1-26, then you get to one-up the pilot who did them in a supership. And we have effectively increased the distances for badges. A diamond distance today does not match one done 40 years ago, you have to fly 1000km or more to get the same kind of respect from your gliding peers. Todd Smith 3S |
#22
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I guess I should have called this thread 'proposed
new badge DOCUMENTATION requirements'. This response, which looks very reasonable to me, came from Judy Ruprecht: 'The proposal to eliminate both documentation by ground-based Observer and photo documentation in favor of 'commercial off the shelf' GPS units ('COTS') has been wafting around since agreed-upon at the Spring 2004 IGC meeting - a month or so before my time. Since then, I've received a total of 7 photo-documented claims from US pilots... and quite a bit of lobbying from those who see no reason not to allow COTS. This hasn't been kept secret - the 2004, 2005 and 2006 editions of Sporting Code Section 3 are all prefaced with a note regarding the future demise of photographic evidence; the note at the front of the newest edition effective 1 October 2007 indicates photographic evidence will not be allowed after September 30, 2008. The current draft proposal will be reviewed by IGC at their spring 2008 meeting and is subject to change by IGC. The current draft would require National Aero Club approval of COTS units and software, and an approved COTS unit, supplemented by mechanical or electronic barograph, could be used only for documentation of Silver and Gold badge legs. Barographs - used alone - would, as I understand it, remain viable for any badge altitude or duration claim and IGC approved Flight Recorders would be required for Diamond Goal, Diamond Distance and all world records.' Ian |
#23
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On 2 Oct, 15:48, Chris Reed wrote:
Ian wrote: OK, let's introduce an inverse-speed condition. Silver distance to be done in no less than two hours, gold five, diamond seven. No dawdling allowed. It would mean that good days were no advantage. Hmm. I may have to work on this a bit. Ian Think you might need to. I flew my Gold distance in over 6 hours, but on a day when the club pundit decided it wasn't worth a launch. I reckon I earned it properly! Haven't yet managed Diamond, but in my Open Cirrus in the UK I don't expect to take less than seven hours if I ever do manage it. Then you'll have no problem with my minimum time limits! Of course you will be going rather further than the Ka8 drivers, but I am sure you'll agree that that's quite fair ... And what about Silver in a K8 into any kind of a headwind? Flying wood into headwinds is pointless and rather ostentatious. Downwind is for dashing! My experience of talking to pilots who are trying for their Silver distance is that the hard part is leaving gliding range of the home airfield. I guess the exception might be flying somewhere you can take one climb overhead, and the rest is final glide, but that doesn't happen in my part of the world. The main barrier for Silver is psychological, not ability or glider performance. I remember an enormous sense of liberation when I set off on my first cross country - which was also my Silver Distance, as it happened. Ian |
#24
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On 2 Oct, 20:06, toad wrote:
I'm not sure what the point of changing the badge requirements would be. Nobody really believes that a Silver/Gold/Diamond/1000km in an open class ship is as impressive as the same flights in a 1-26, do they ? Indeed. I never took seriously the Portmoak pilots who went solo, got bronze, bought 40:1 glass and cruised along a single wave bar (maybe two) round the Balmaha - Edzell milkrun for their 300km triangle. It's like doing your five hours on a hill - it may be within the letter of the law, but it's not quite gentlemanly. Ian |
#25
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On 2 Oct, 22:32, Ian Cant wrote:
an approved COTS unit, supplemented by mechanical or electronic barograph, could be used only for documentation of Silver and Gold badge legs. Does that mean it would be possible to use one of these for a 300km triangle and get gold distance but /not/ diamond goal as a result? That would seem to devalue the gold quite a bit: "You might have cheated, but we don't really care since it's only a gold." Ian |
#26
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Ian wrote:
Flying wood into headwinds is pointless and rather ostentatious. Downwind is for dashing! Ideally yes, but hardly anyone from the club where I learnt managed it because we're near the UK East coast. East and south winds are rarely soarable enough for a first 50k, and north blows you into controlled airspace. The prevailing wind is west, so into wind it had to be for most folk. Quite a lot of 30-49k attempts, even in 35:1+ glass! I remember an enormous sense of liberation when I set off on my first cross country - which was also my Silver Distance, as it happened. Me too, and I think this is part of the psychological importance of the Silver distance. Early soaring flights for me were a constant series of checks whether I was still within gliding range of base. Once I set off on my 50k and realised I was out of range, a real weight fell off my shoulders - I could go anywhere I wanted, so it made sense to go where I thought the best lift would be in the vague direction of my goal (this seems to have stuck, so my flight traces look like a drunkard's progress). Some people find this transition easy, but talking to those who have struggled they find the invisible elastic cord which links them to their home airfield is really difficult to escape from. |
#27
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