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Wallace Berry wrote on 4/13/2021 11:49 AM:
On Tuesday, April 13, 2021 at 10:45:17 AM UTC-5, Dan Marotta wrote: Probably the motorgliders had a better day THAT day. But what if one had crashed in the mountains (possibly fatally) because his engine wouldn't start? The engine is a double edged sword. Use it well and it will be a great benefit to your soaring experience. Rely on it too heavily and it will rise up and bite thine ass. Dan 5J On 4/12/21 7:39 PM, Wallace Berry wrote: Just a sort of relevant anecdote: Was flying a contest at Uvalde where the task area has both flat land and mountains. One day a MAT task was called. It was almost totally blue over the flat ground but cu's were popping in the mountains. The motorgliders pretty much all went into the mountains to fly their extra turns. The non-motors stayed in the flats. Guess who had the better day. Yes, I fully understand the risks depending on the MOP. Has happened to a number of people I know with varying consequences from complete destruction of the glider with severe personal injury, to last-minute-last-ditch ground loop landings in brushy pea patches, to normal off-field landings. My point is: In that competition situation, it was less risky for the motorgliders to go up into the hills than it was for the pure gliders. So much so that the pure gliders just didn't go there. The motorgliders gained a distinct competitive advantage. I am not a particularly serious race guy, so doesn't bother me much. I do get a bit tired of the "motorgliders have no competitive advantage in racing" refrain. Would I penalize motorgliders or banish them back to a motorglider class? Heavens, no. We are having enough problems getting contests to fill up as it is. Besides, the technological race going on between IC, electric, and jet MOP is interesting. Before I understood some of the tech problems, I even made serious inquiries into having my glider modified with electric propulsion. " My point is: In that competition situation, it was less risky for the motorgliders to go up into the hills than it was for the pure gliders." That's an unusual situation to me, so I'd like to learn more about it. Can you tell me what contest and what day that was? And specifically, what made it "less risky" for the powered gliders: less safety risk, less scoring risk, less risk of a long retrieve, or something else? -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-Launching Sailplane Operation" https://sites.google.com/site/motorg...ad-the-guide-1 |
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