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#1
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Good Day fellow sailplane racers,
Unfortunately this is not the email saying I have found a coed volleyball team that will be traveling around to different glider contests to help run wings. Nor is this an email to say I found a new sponsor for soaring contest. I am trying to gain support for my election in the Rules Committee, so if you have already voted for me then you can hit delete and get back to work, if you voted for someone else you still have time you can change your vote. By voting for me the only thing I can promise that I will do is....lower the average age. But enough with the things I promise to do, I hope that I can influence the committee and look at things slightly differently. I feel that with my experience in flying in 2 World Junior Championships, 1 Australian contest (I hope you enjoyed the article from last month), 7 US Nationals and 2 Regional contests. I have a very well rounded view on contests. I have won a few days and I have been the only pilot to not make it home on others. I feel the sports class should look at selecting pilots to fly club class world championships. I feel that the open class could not sacrifice loosing its Nimbus 3 pilots by allowing a weight change. If there are only 4 pilots that are willing to travel their large winged beasts then let them race and get sanctioned, that way there are no rushed struggles trying to get more pilots volunteering at the last minute. We will continue to struggle at the world level if we do not task our pilots on a similar field. I am concerned that the rules committee will continue to waste time with legislation intended to compensate for a pilot's lack of judgment. I know it's not a spectator sport, but there is a crew down there, waiting and watching, and the finish line is symbolic to their hard work and devotion to the sport. A pilot is not judged by the altitude of his finish or the lack there of, but rather by his ability to make safe judgments in all r=E9gimes of flight. Making rules that force us to stare in the cockpit and cross-check: altimeter, GPS, flight computer, altimeter... for some imaginary boarder in the sky, cannot be considered safer. If nothing else I will be a new face to point the blame at when you complain about the rules. http://206.168.3.4/survey/surveys.php Best Regards Garret Willat 927 |
#2
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OK, I'll bite. Maybe it's a good idea to have a better airing of
views involving the RC election. I don't think you can "legislate safety" either, in that nothing we do will eliminate all accidents. But I sure do think that rules can contribute to a safe or dangerous flying environment. I think that rules should be thoughtfully structured so that pilots don't have to choose between safety and points as much as is possible. The proposition "you can't legislate safety" is ludicrous. Does anyone honestly think that seat belt laws, speed limits, crash-safety standards and so forth have had NO effect on the car accident rate? Of course they have. Do you think we should get rid of the rule mandating a parachute, get rid of the 2 minutes before start (a "safety legislation to avoid 130 mph in the start gate), get rid of the 50 foot minimum for gate finishes, get rid of the ban on blind-flying instruments, the 25 point airport bonus, etc., etc., all rules that "compensate for pilots' lack of judgment"? Of course not. We quite wisely "legislated safety" in all these areas and it helped. Any rule has effects on fun, costs, practically, fairness, and safety. They all need to be considered together. We can't abdicate responsibility and just hide behind a slogan. And we cannot ignore that safety is an important issue. Masak, Carpetyan, Bowman... We lose one every other year or so. Is this inevitable? Do we just throw up our hands, blame their "judgment" and go on as usual? Is this really a "waste of time?" Or is carefully thinking through the safety implications of our rules about the most important thing we can do? The pros and cons of both sides of the finish line vs. gate have been argued at length, and I don't think this is the place to start it up again. We have a long winter ahead! Both have safety pros and cons, as well as other pros and cons. Where do I stand? As an individual pilot, I prefer the cylinder for reasons made pretty clear in my articles and posts over the years. (My current favorite is a cylinder followed by an optional "show finish" for fun and spectators.) As a potential RC member though, I don't think one should campaign with a dead-set opinion on issues like this - as well as the other issues facing us like the nature of sports class. I think the RC job is to represent pilot's opinions, analyze the issues in more depth than most pilots have the time for, and conduct a thoughtful discussion, listening carefully. If I think X is right but 90% of pilots think X is wrong, my job is to convince them, and listen carefully and perhaps be convinced myself, not try to get elected and then ram it down their throats. That's the attitude I will bring to the RC, and I hope it is the attitude that prevails no matter who is elected. John Cochrane BB |
#3
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OK I'll "bite back" BB.
I would prefer the statement to be "you cannot legislate good judgement". There is a huge difference between rules and laws that protect life by protecting the human body e.g. seat belts and parachutes and those that make an attempt to force people into making the "correct" choice. Casey Lenox Phoenix KC |
#4
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Kilo Charlie wrote:
OK I'll "bite back" BB. I would prefer the statement to be "you cannot legislate good judgement". There is a huge difference between rules and laws that protect life by protecting the human body e.g. seat belts and parachutes and those that make an attempt to force people into making the "correct" choice. OK, I'll bite: what is this huge difference, and how does it apply to contest rules? We also make traffic rules about stopping at traffic lights and driving on the right side of the rule, which seem to be safety related. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#5
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At 05:48 03 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote:
Kilo Charlie wrote: OK I'll 'bite back' BB. I would prefer the statement to be 'you cannot legislate good judgement'. There is a huge difference between rules and laws that protect life by protecting the human body e.g. seat belts and parachutes and those that make an attempt to force people into making the 'correct' choice. OK, I'll bite: what is this huge difference, and how does it apply to contest rules? We also make traffic rules about stopping at traffic lights and driving on the right side of the rule, which seem to be safety related. To push the auto analogy, I think KC is referring to rules like 'you have to stop your car to answer your cell phone', or 'motorists over 65 must take a road driving test twice per year', or 'the interstate speed limit should be set at 35 miles per hour'. I'm not sure about the last one, but the first two have been passed or proposed in many states in the interest of safety. And I bet some on this forum would agree that one or the more of them is actually worth the inconvenience it would cost. It's all a matter of where you draw the line - KC and many others draw the line at trying to use rulemaking compensate for judgement - a bit of a semantic line drawing in itself. 9B |
#6
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Andy Blackburn wrote:
At 05:48 03 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote: Kilo Charlie wrote: OK I'll 'bite back' BB. I would prefer the statement to be 'you cannot legislate good judgement'. There is a huge difference between rules and laws that protect life by protecting the human body e.g. seat belts and parachutes and those that make an attempt to force people into making the 'correct' choice. OK, I'll bite: what is this huge difference, and how does it apply to contest rules? We also make traffic rules about stopping at traffic lights and driving on the right side of the rule, which seem to be safety related. To push the auto analogy, I think KC is referring to rules like 'you have to stop your car to answer your cell phone', or 'motorists over 65 must take a road driving test twice per year', or 'the interstate speed limit should be set at 35 miles per hour'. I'm not sure about the last one, but the first two have been passed or proposed in many states in the interest of safety. And I bet some on this forum would agree that one or the more of them is actually worth the inconvenience it would cost. It's all a matter of where you draw the line - KC and many others draw the line at trying to use rulemaking compensate for judgement - a bit of a semantic line drawing in itself. I'm still curious about what the "huge difference" is. Why isn't wearing a parachute a "judgment"? KC seems to make the judgment that rules that try to legislate "judgment" are inherently bad and shouldn't even be discussed. I think either type rule should discussed so their value (will it work? what will it cost?) can be determined, especially since we'll differ on where to draw the line. -- Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#7
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I agree, KC and 9B. I hate it when traffic laws are made on the
assumption that I'm not capable of making my own judgements. The cell phone analogy is a good one. ~ted/2NO |
#8
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At 15:42 03 October 2005, Eric Greenwell wrote:
I'm still curious about what the 'huge difference' is. Why isn't wearing a parachute a 'judgment'? KC seems to make the judgment that rules that try to legislate 'judgment' are inherently bad and shouldn't even be discussed. I think either type rule should discussed so their value (will it work? what will it cost?) can be determined, especially since we'll differ on where to draw the line. I think as a matter of philosophy the gap is quite large, as a matter of pure utlitarianism there will always be room for debate. The philosophical point, I think, is that there are rules that protect us from systemic versus individual risk factors. Systemic risks stem from the nature of the system or environment and aren't significantly controllable by any one individual. Turning in the same direction in a thermal or passing to the inside and turning away from the ridge are examples of rules that address these types of risks. Individual risk factors such as how slow to fly in a thermal and how steep to bank are the domain of individual judgements. To the extent that we put rules against these individual risks the silliest, most paternalistic of them simply get ignored much of the time, or perhaps at the margin drive people from the sport. I know some perfer the mechanistic, utilitarian calculation: # lives saved x value of a life - total cost of the rule. If you set the parameters right you can make an argument for most any kind of restriction - without regard to whether you are trying to save people from risks beyond their control, or simply from themselves. Hope that helps, 9B |
#9
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This discussion is going in precisely the direction I was hoping to
stop. It's like the supreme court where we go on and on about Big Constitutional Issues of "privacy" and "federalism" rather than talk about what we really know is at stake. KC, Garret: you guys like the finish line. Good. As the RC considers the issue, let's have a good discussion over the pros and cons, including safety pros and cons, of finish lines and finish gates. The main point of my post is that the RC and RC candidates should be having and listening to such discussions, rather than go to a political system where people campaign on promises to vote one way or another on specific issues. But phrasing this as a discussion over the grand philosophical issue of "should rules encourage/legislate/consider safety" is just silly. The rules do it all the time, and they should, while taking into consideration cost, convenience, complexity, fun and all the other things that matter as well. Two of the finish line advocates' main complaints are that a circle requires some looking at the GPS, and they have trouble transitioning out of a 1 mile ciurcle into a well-sequenced landing pattern, a transition they find easier from a line. These are important arguments that need careful thought. But they are safety arguments, and people sound mighty silly making them while at the same time saying rules shouldn't "legislate safety" at all! John Cochrane BB |
#10
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I guess the flying season is coming to a close.
![]() I agree we can't legislate good judgment. But situations where a pilot must choose between points and safety are, in my experience, much less common than many would have us think. And good judgment prevails in most cases even where these do arise (e.g., when the task would require flying directly through a thunderstorm). Just like anxieties over technology taking over the cockpit, fears that safe pilots will lose out to dangerous ones who are willing to take unusual risks in order to win don't seem well founded. KS and DJ will beat most of us no matter what equipment is allowed, no matter what the rules are, and no matter how recklessly the other pilots fly. That said, rules that encourage safe flying are often welcomed even when they come at the price of a little liberty (e.g., left turns in the start cylinder). What concerns many is a possible trend towards "dumbing down" contest flying by eliminating certain skills that place a premium on experience and good judgment. One example is the finish gate vs. finish cylinder debate. The arguments I've heard so far aren't compelling on either side. But I will admit that I also enjoy the mastery, sense of achievement, and--yes--thrill of a high-speed pass at the conclusion of a good flight. It's the same satisfaction I had after a flight through unlandable terrain at the New Castle Regionals two weeks ago. CD Doug Jacobs called a task into an area most of us hadn't encountered--except to avoid--before. With a big circle around the turn, no one had to take chances so long as they got high, kept an "out", and exercised good judgment. Picking our way carefully through the forested valleys, we discovered the area around the TP itself was quite benign. Sometimes things just look dangerous from the outside. If one is attempting them without proper skills or good judgment, they often are. Yet mastering them is one of life's pleasures. I don't agree that it's wrong to campaign on the basis of "if elected, I will..." There are few one-issue elections and this isn't one of them. But if a candidate has an established position and wants to use it to garner votes, why not? If it's not important to most pilots, it won't matter. If it really is critical, why not vote for the guy who tells you exactly where he stands? I will observe that the current committee slot is only one of five. Based on my experience on various boards (including the SSA's), it's desirable to have a mix of opinions rather than a bunch of people who think alike. One dissenter can't sway the voting unless his arguments are so persuasive and compelling that the other four members see the wisdom of his position. And that would be a good thing. Chip Bearden |
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