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#11
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Nice flight.
It appears you rounded all the turnpoints, and in fact SeeYou says that you did, but also says the task wasn't finished. One of the SeeYou guys may have to explain this. Does your triangle meet the 28% FAI requirement? It looks like the third leg is a bit short. But that doesn't explain why SeeYou says you didn't complete the task. Uncle Fuzzy wrote: On Nov 10, 4:45 pm, Bernie wrote: Me again! Actually I looked at your initial post and see that what you declared IS the task See You knows about (571.0 Km triangle). I thought you had more TP's for a while there. But you clearly didn't go through the FAI sectors, you certainly went beyond them substantially....... but thats not the same as through them! And if you zoom in, you'll see that you didn't get any closer to the apex of the Ely AP sector than the photo landing point in your orbit to the North East. So See You is working as designed I'd say.......... and you either have to try harder to get the sectors or just use the Edit/Optmize/ Copy process to get your distance. Regards, Bernie. Okay. I'm obviously mistaken about the nature of the FAI Sector. I had believed the legs were infinitely long, and haven't found a reference in the FAI Sporting code that specifies any size for the sector. Doesn't mean it's not there, just means I haven't found it yet. If you have a reference, please post it. I didn't claim the flight for anything but OLC, but would hate to be attempting a badge fligth and find out only after the flight that I'd blown it! Thanks Jim |
#12
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On Nov 10, 6:41*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote:
Okay. *I'm obviously mistaken about the nature of the FAI Sector. *I had believed the legs were infinitely long, and haven't found a reference in the FAI Sporting code that specifies any size for the sector. *Doesn't mean it's not there, just means I haven't found it yet. *If you have a reference, please post it. *I didn't claim the flight for anything but OLC, but would hate to be attempting a badge fligth and find out only after the flight that I'd blown it! Go to Options-Observation Zone then modify waypoint radius to 10 miles and your flight will become valid. The FAI sector is defined in photographic terms, so although it's "infinite", in practical terms it needs to have some limit, and in the old days it was the resolution of the camera and visibility of the turnpoint. If the sector were really infinite, then it would wrap around the globe such that any declaration could be completed by making a pattern flight, since one would be in ALL the OZs immediately after release. Not quite what was intended. It appears the authors of SeeYou decided to implement the OZ as a quarter circle with limited, user adjustable radius. I don't see any problem with extending this radius to a fairly large size in order to capture a flight such as yours. Consider a 50+ km diameter thunderstorm sitting on top of the turnpoint. If using a camera to document the flight, you might just be SOL due to not being abole to see any landmarks at or near the turnpoint. B ut with GPS, you just circumnavigate the storm, and although you may fly several hundred km farther than the declared distance, at lest you are able to claim the declaration. -Tom |
#13
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On Nov 10, 6:13*pm, 5Z wrote:
On Nov 10, 6:41*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote: Okay. *I'm obviously mistaken about the nature of the FAI Sector. *I had believed the legs were infinitely long, and haven't found a reference in the FAI Sporting code that specifies any size for the sector. *Doesn't mean it's not there, just means I haven't found it yet. *If you have a reference, please post it. *I didn't claim the flight for anything but OLC, but would hate to be attempting a badge fligth and find out only after the flight that I'd blown it! Go to Options-Observation Zone then modify waypoint radius to 10 miles and your flight will become valid. The FAI sector is defined in photographic terms, so although it's "infinite", in practical terms it needs to have some limit, and in the old days it was the resolution of the camera and visibility of the turnpoint. If the sector were really infinite, then it would wrap around the globe such that any declaration could be completed by making a pattern flight, since one would be in ALL the OZs immediately after release. Not quite what was intended. It appears the authors of SeeYou decided to implement the OZ as a quarter circle with limited, user adjustable radius. *I don't see any problem with extending this radius to a fairly large size in order to capture a flight such as yours. Consider a 50+ km diameter thunderstorm sitting on top of the turnpoint. *If using a camera to document the flight, you might just be SOL due to not being abole to see any landmarks at or near the turnpoint. *B ut with GPS, you just circumnavigate the storm, and although you may fly several hundred km farther than the declared distance, at lest you are able to claim the declaration. -Tom Thanks Tom! That was indeed the problem. There's still a ton I don't understand (like why there is a maximum altitude in the observation zone) but that's one thing cleared up! Gotta' love the internet for being able to contact so many people. There's almost always someone who has an answer! Thanks again! |
#14
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On Nov 10, 6:09*pm, Greg Arnold wrote:
Nice flight. It appears you rounded all the turnpoints, and in fact SeeYou says that you did, but also says the task wasn't finished. *One of the SeeYou guys may have to explain this. Does your triangle meet the 28% FAI requirement? It looks like the third leg is a bit short. *But that doesn't explain why SeeYou says you didn't complete the task. Thanks Greg, it was a pretty awesome day! The flight did meet the 28% rule, I spent a couple hours the night before laying out the task. The OLC FAI triangle came in at 625 kilometers. The hard part about laying out an FAI triangle around here is staying out of Restricted Airspace. It would be REALLY hard to stay completely out of all MOA's on a triangle. |
#15
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On Nov 10, 6:24*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote:
On Nov 10, 6:13*pm, 5Z wrote: On Nov 10, 6:41*pm, Uncle Fuzzy wrote: Okay. *I'm obviously mistaken about the nature of the FAI Sector. *I had believed the legs were infinitely long, and haven't found a reference in the FAI Sporting code that specifies any size for the sector. *Doesn't mean it's not there, just means I haven't found it yet. *If you have a reference, please post it. *I didn't claim the flight for anything but OLC, but would hate to be attempting a badge fligth and find out only after the flight that I'd blown it! Go to Options-Observation Zone then modify waypoint radius to 10 miles and your flight will become valid. The FAI sector is defined in photographic terms, so although it's "infinite", in practical terms it needs to have some limit, and in the old days it was the resolution of the camera and visibility of the turnpoint. If the sector were really infinite, then it would wrap around the globe such that any declaration could be completed by making a pattern flight, since one would be in ALL the OZs immediately after release. Not quite what was intended. It appears the authors of SeeYou decided to implement the OZ as a quarter circle with limited, user adjustable radius. *I don't see any problem with extending this radius to a fairly large size in order to capture a flight such as yours. Consider a 50+ km diameter thunderstorm sitting on top of the turnpoint. *If using a camera to document the flight, you might just be SOL due to not being abole to see any landmarks at or near the turnpoint. *B ut with GPS, you just circumnavigate the storm, and although you may fly several hundred km farther than the declared distance, at lest you are able to claim the declaration. -Tom Thanks Tom! That was indeed the problem. *There's still a ton I don't understand (like why there is a maximum altitude in the observation zone) but that's one thing cleared up! Gotta' love the internet for being able to contact so many people. There's almost always someone who has an answer! Thanks again! Tom beat me to the punch on the OZ radius. The only reason I can think of for the height limit is for competition flights where start cylinders have a ceiling. My guess is it was just easier to include it for all waypoints as I don't know of any rules that require it. Nine Bravo |
#16
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#17
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I don't think the problem is with Seeyou, I think the problem is with your
302. I often get a similar result from Seeyou using a 302. The problem is with the engine noise detector; despite having a pure sailplane the 302 is too sensitive and picks up noise that is assumed to be engine noise by Seeyou. Next time you open one of your flights in seeyou, right click, select flight properties and check pure glider. There is a modification that Dickie Feakes (UK) does to the 302 to solve this problem; maybe you have someone in the US that can do the same. At 22:44 10 November 2008, Uncle Fuzzy wrote: When I look at my flights in See You, it always tells me I haven't completed the task. I don't know if it's because See You wants me to fly cylinders, or of the ZERO entries in my Takeoff and Landing Coordinates are the issue. Here's what shows in the declaration: C0000000N00000000WTAKEOFF C3803480N11705370W*TONOPAH C3918500N11450510WEly AP C3924400N11656600WAustin6 C3803480N11705370W*TONOPAH C0000000N00000000WLANDING In case anyone is bored and feeling like digging into it, this is the flight: http://www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0...Id=-1674917029 If the issue is the TAKEOFF and LANDING coordinates, I don't know how to get them in the 302A declaration. Need help dispelling my ignorance. TIA |
#18
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Hi,
Cambridge Aero Instruments can do the 302 Engine Noise Level upgrade here in the USA. All new 302 ENL units built starting around Jan. 2008 have the hardware change that fixes the previous problem with the ENL recording. If you own an ENL version built before that I highly recommend sending it to Cambridge for upgrade. www.cambridge-aero.com. Good Soaring, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com "Mark Dickson" wrote in message ... I don't think the problem is with Seeyou, I think the problem is with your 302. I often get a similar result from Seeyou using a 302. The problem is with the engine noise detector; despite having a pure sailplane the 302 is too sensitive and picks up noise that is assumed to be engine noise by Seeyou. Next time you open one of your flights in seeyou, right click, select flight properties and check pure glider. There is a modification that Dickie Feakes (UK) does to the 302 to solve this problem; maybe you have someone in the US that can do the same. At 22:44 10 November 2008, Uncle Fuzzy wrote: When I look at my flights in See You, it always tells me I haven't completed the task. I don't know if it's because See You wants me to fly cylinders, or of the ZERO entries in my Takeoff and Landing Coordinates are the issue. Here's what shows in the declaration: C0000000N00000000WTAKEOFF C3803480N11705370W*TONOPAH C3918500N11450510WEly AP C3924400N11656600WAustin6 C3803480N11705370W*TONOPAH C0000000N00000000WLANDING In case anyone is bored and feeling like digging into it, this is the flight: http://www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0...Id=-1674917029 If the issue is the TAKEOFF and LANDING coordinates, I don't know how to get them in the 302A declaration. Need help dispelling my ignorance. TIA |
#19
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No Mark, if you look at the noise trace it is reasonable, and at the
'photo landing' time noise is relatively low. The problem is clearly the setting of the TP zone radius, and the 'photo landing' is at the closest approach to the waypoint, since the flight path never enters the zone within the radius set. In SeeYou, go into Edit/Flight Properties/Observation Zone. Change the two waypoint radii from 3km to 30km. The flight is now analysed as completed at a speed of 82.58 kph. Interestingly, the analysis also shows that every thermal was turning right. I have seen traces where SeeYou interprets a noise peak (due to opening the DV panel for extra ventilation) as an engine run, but this isn't one of them. At 11:00 11 November 2008, Mark Dickson wrote: I don't think the problem is with Seeyou, I think the problem is with your 302. I often get a similar result from Seeyou using a 302. The problem is with the engine noise detector; despite having a pure sailplane the 302 is too sensitive and picks up noise that is assumed to be engine noise by Seeyou. Next time you open one of your flights in seeyou, right click, select flight properties and check pure glider. There is a modification that Dickie Feakes (UK) does to the 302 to solve this problem; maybe you have someone in the US that can do the same. |
#20
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I'm wondering if SeeYou is confused by the fact that the flight wraps
around midnight (UTC) and apparently starts after it has ended. When I run animation against the relevant IGC file its starts at the launch time but when it reached midnight UTC (part way along the second leg) it thinks the flight has ended and jumps back to the launch. Looks like this could be a SeeYou bug - even if it's not the root cause of the original landout problem. |
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