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#1
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I susspect that anything as obvious as the following has been thought of and
rejected for equally obvious reasons that I'm also not aware of. Anyway, here goes.... Why not adjust turn area tasks so that turn area diameters are porportional to a competitors handicap - i.e. small diameter turn areas for high performance gliders and huge ones for low performance gliders? This would force the high performance gliders to fly much farther than the low performance ones to get credit for turnpoints. The idea is a sort of an elastic "one size fits all" approach to task calling. Of course, this might require complete rejiggering of an already complex scoring system. Bill Daniels |
#2
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Why not adjust turn area tasks so that turn area diameters
are porportional to a competitors handicap - i.e. small diameter turn areas for high performance gliders and huge ones for low performance gliders? This would force the high performance gliders to fly much farther than the low performance ones to get credit for turnpoints. The idea is a sort of an elastic 'one size fits all' approach to task calling. Of course, this might require complete rejiggering of an already complex scoring system. Bill Daniels Hi Bill, In theory this is done by selecting the average point to point distance around the handicap of 1.00 and choosing a radius that allows the low and high handicap gliders to finish the task. There is one problem I have noticed the powers to be do not always take this under consideration. Rarely is a club class pilot an advisor. Also on rare occasion when the Weather dictates a change in mid air and one is purvey to the chatter between the two advisors and the contest director I have noted that the effort is centred around the 15metere class max distance and time. Personally it does not effect me with my glider. I am still one of those that holds the bottom 2/3 of the score sheet up. |
#3
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A modest proposal from a former PW5 driver--
Assign a penalty to the use of any thermal closer than 80% of the maximum distance the ship could travel from the last thermal. "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message ... I susspect that anything as obvious as the following has been thought of and rejected for equally obvious reasons that I'm also not aware of. Anyway, here goes.... Why not adjust turn area tasks so that turn area diameters are porportional to a competitors handicap - i.e. small diameter turn areas for high performance gliders and huge ones for low performance gliders? This would force the high performance gliders to fly much farther than the low performance ones to get credit for turnpoints. The idea is a sort of an elastic "one size fits all" approach to task calling. Of course, this might require complete rejiggering of an already complex scoring system. Bill Daniels |
#4
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![]() Bill Daniels wrote: I susspect that anything as obvious as the following has been thought of and rejected for equally obvious reasons that I'm also not aware of. Anyway, here goes.... Why not adjust turn area tasks so that turn area diameters are porportional to a competitors handicap - i.e. small diameter turn areas for high performance gliders and huge ones for low performance gliders? This would force the high performance gliders to fly much farther than the low performance ones to get credit for turnpoints. The idea is a sort of an elastic "one size fits all" approach to task calling. Of course, this might require complete rejiggering of an already complex scoring system. Bill Daniels Bill- The flaw in your logic is the assumption that we only fly to the turn area and not beyond. With cylinders now up to 30 mile radius there is plenty of flexibility to cover the likely range of handicaps. The guide to the rules puts the nominal task length at one doable for gliders in the mid range(ie "club class"). With this guidance a task is set which should be doable by the lower performance gliders but yet forces the higher performance gliders to go farther to the outside of the cylinder. They have less choice of where they can go than the lower performance gliders and are therefore at a bit of a disadvantage. The strategy for the lower performance guys is to cherry pick the best parts and laugh at the saps in the high performance ships as they are forced to fly out into the weaker weather. Dave Stevenson has been doing this for years. Cheers UH |
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