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#11
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Hello Mark,
FAI is right when it tries to avoid that pilots fly back and forth between two nearby waypoints to achieve a large distance claim, e.g. for the 1000 km badge. Everybody will have sympathy for this position. And three turnpoints looks o.k. to me also. So there is a rule for that in the Code. And one can say "a rule is a rule". However when the hidden effect of this rule is disastrous for an excellent and very sportif distance achievement then to my humble opinion there is something wrong with the definition of the rule. The rule now says "10 km apart and not a second time" with the aim of avoiding "jojo-ing" between nearby turnpoints. Looks o.k. at first glance. At second glance however there is a severe hidden malfunction in this rule. One can hardly say that having flown hundreds of km's and returning many hours later back to the first waypoint has anything to do with "jojo-ing". Is a claimed 'out and return' of 800 km with start and finishpoint a "jojo". Of course not. Is an 'out and return' of 800 km as part of a larger claimed distance flight a "jojo". Of course not also. So the malfunction in the FAI rule should be corrected for is the way to go I think. In fact a better rule looks very easy to me indeed. Considering the "Distance using up to three turnpoints" (1.4.5.b in the Code), what do you think of a rule like "At each visit of a turnpoint the number increases by one". Very simple and effective I think to avoid "jojo-ing" and not having the disastrous hidden effect on an excellent cross country flight of over 1000 km. Karel "Mark James Boyd" schreef in bericht news:40c107b5$1@darkstar... I must say I'm soundly against using any more than 3 turnpoints for badge performances. |
#12
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Ian
10 km and Cots has just one thing in common. We glider pilots are so keen to discuss technical topics, that really is not significant for the survival of our beloved sport. As you, I am an engineer, but I have realized that we engineers, and there are plenty of us in gliding, just love to solve every poblem with a technical solution, even if the optimal solution is not technical. I mean, logger security, the distance between TP:s, GPS altitude or pressure saltitude etc etc, which we spend so much time on, will we get more new members if we use GPS altitude, skip the 10 km rule or allow COTS? NO...... but it is is damn fun to discuss! May be it is a bit annoying, but I support your proposals for free flight for badges. As always Ian, it is stimulating to debate with you. Robert Ian Strachan wrote: In article , Robert Danewid writes Ian I was present at the 1991 IGC meeting in Queeenstown, just a couple of months after Rays flight, which he presented at the meeting. Perhaps I was fouled again at an IGC meeting, but my impression was clearly that to fly so long tasks we needed more TP:s. OK, I was not at the meeting at Queenstown in New Zealand so I bow to your memory. We have seen all this stuff several times, I amquite sure that eventually we will have COTS loggers apporved. I fail to see what these issues of distance flying rules have to do with the use or otherwise of COTS GPS units. Could it be a fixation of yours, more appropriate for another thread on newsgroup r.a.s.? Anyway as I am sure that you know, I and others are working on rules that might be approved by IGC for the use of such COTS GPS units for badge flights up to Diamonds. The "up to Diamonds" IGC-approval level is currently used for the EW series of GPS flight recorders which are recorder units that need a NMEA feed from specified Garmin GPS receiver units. Do you remember when we went from marking the TP:s with ground markers to cameras? Too right, in the mid-1960s I wrote the rules for and than ran a trial of photographic evidence on behalf of the BGA at a competition at Bicester in the UK. It was successful and I drafted the first BGA rules for photographic evidence as a result. These included the use of Kodak Instamatic cameras which were at the time simple and almost glider-pilot-proof. I remember that at the Bicester trial, one guy with a 35mm camera managed to fail to load the film properly and thought that he had taken 24 or 36 pictures when in fact none were exposed because the film was not winding on. And now we have 24 satellites whizzing around giving position to 10 metres or so. Amazing! BTW, it is more fun to debate with you Ian than to agree with you! Ah, that explains it. PS: what about my other points on no need for declarations for free flights, and why not allow free flights for badge distance requirements on the basis that proven distance is just that, a distance achievement? |
#13
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In article , Robert Danewid
writes snip I support your proposals for free flight for badges. OK, you national delegates that can make proposals to IGC, go for it! As always Ian, it is stimulating to debate with you. I am quite humbled by what you say. But debate is not as good as action and decisions that enrich our sport. -- Ian Strachan Bentworth Hall West Tel: +44 1420 564 195 Bentworth, Alton Fax: +44 1420 563 140 Hampshire GU34 5LA, ENGLAND |
#14
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On 4 Jun 2004 00:09:20 -0700, (Caracole) wrote:
I object to you laying the blame of ruin at the feet of the OO Well Cindy, Karel is only blaming himself ;-) I have to agree with him that it's a silly rule and it does not serve any pupose in a 1000 Km flight. I think that all rules must have a clear purpose. Can anyone explain the purpose of the 10 Km-rule in a 1000 Km flight? A complicating factor is also the very complex airspace structure in our part of the world. BTW this flight is an excellent achievement. Have a look at: http://www.onlinecontest.de/olcphp/2...hp?ref3=119825 It inspired several other contenders to go after the first official 1000 km FAI diploma flown from the Netherlands. |
#15
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Todd Pattist wrote:
...I think there's a good chance we might keep more by getting them to make the transition to XC flying, lured on by the first Silver distance leg that we make easy to prove with a COTS. This is true. It does no good for retention to present a list of rules many of which are awkward, expensive, and irrelevant. Badges have no intrinsic value; we have competitions to weed out pretenders; the competitions themselves are too often built upon rules the like of which would make no sense in any other sport with which most are familiar -- and yet we can't understand why the sport is not sought after by 10,000 new participants each year. Ridiculous. Jack |
#16
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Ruud wrote in message . ..
BTW this flight is an excellent achievement. Have a look at: http://www.onlinecontest.de/olcphp/2...hp?ref3=119825 It inspired several other contenders to go after the first official 1000 km FAI diploma flown from the Netherlands. Would it be possible to satisfy the 10km separation between TPs 1 and 3 by judicious use of a "virtual" TP (1 or 3) on this flight? In other words, declare a point 10 km away from TP 1 but on the track for TP 3? Might be fun to play with it in SeeYou. The flying is getting easier; it's the rest that is getting hard! But it's still all a lot of fun. Great flight, BTW. Kirk |
#17
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I mean, logger security, the distance between TP:s, GPS altitude or
pressure saltitude etc etc, which we spend so much time on, will we get more new members if we use GPS altitude, skip the 10 km rule or allow COTS? NO...... but it is is damn fun to discuss! Oh, I disagree. Allowing GPS altitude and COTS would have given several pilots I know a lot more to talk about to their friends after several flights, and some buttons and pins to show off, and got them interacting with SSA for their badges. Things that make soaring, and the recognition of soaring achievements easier, help the sport. Maybe not in the quick way of making droves of new members apply, but anything that makes a part of aviation even marginally easier (nosewheel vs. tailwheel is another example) does have some effect, though it be hard to determine. -- ------------+ Mark Boyd Avenal, California, USA |
#18
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Mark James Boyd wrote:
...anything that makes a part of aviation even marginally easier (nosewheel vs. tailwheel is another example) does have some effect.... Now you've done it! Nosewheels have definitely lowered the quality of the powered aviation experience -- roughly to the same degree that rational competition and logging rules _would_ do for the sport of soaring. Jack |
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