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On Sun, 31 Jul 2011 11:30:20 -0600, BobW wrote:
On 7/31/2011 9:43 AM, John Sinclair wrote: At 17:19 29 July 2011, bish wrote: Hi This question has probably been ask many time! My new to me LX 7000 offer the choice of Netto or Relative netto for the vario needle During cruise with pure Netto selected the needle will be down most of the time. When you go through a 3 knot thermal your display will go from 600 down to 300 down, hard to realize you are in a 3 knotter. If you select relative Netto, the display will show the climb rate you will get if you slow down to thermal speed, or 300 up! Much easier to read and understand. I never use anything but relative netto. JJ Because JJ's description of "netto" apparently conflicts with what I posted earlier, this may be a good place to define "netto" (as I've learned/used it...not all soaring descriptions are universal). To me, "netto" means a vario display indicating the actual vertical air motion, relative to the earth's surface...i.e. 'net air motion' once the glider's own speed-dependent sink-rate contribution has been subtracted/eliminated from the picture. In other words, 'my netto display' always indicates actual air motion, independent of glider speed (the 'glider speed' bit being the 'compensation' part). No interpretation needed - that's the beauty of it, so far as my brain is concerned. And that's also why the speed ring doesn't require the pilot to iterate in on the speed to fly...because the glider's increasing sink rate with increasing speed has already been subtracted out of the display. Hence the vario needle *always* points to 'absolute air motion,' and in consequence to the whatever speed to fly your ring setting calls for. Yes, I agree, but 'super netto' or 'relative netto' are alternative terms for something different from either TE vario of 'netto'. A 'super netto' vario shows what a glider would be doing if it was flying in the current air mass at its thermalling speed, so as well as the TE input, it also needs the current IAS and the glider's polar. I fly with an SDI C4 vario, which is a pure TE vario in climb mode and a super netto vario in cruise mode. It has several ways of switching between the two: manual, off the GPS (which is meant to detect circling) or off airspeed (two separate speeds: cruise-climb and climb-cruise). I prefer the latter though I needed to tune the C4's switch points to suit the glider and my flying style. Its noises reflect the mode - climb rate in climb mode and two other sounds for cruise, when it operates as a speed director and takes the Macready setting into account. I really like the way it works and, if forced to replace it, would want a vario with exactly the same functions. IOW, 'super netto' works well for me in cruise. HTH -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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On 7/31/2011 2:02 PM, Martin Gregorie wrote:
On Sun, 31 Jul 2011 11:30:20 -0600, BobW wrote: At 17:19 29 July 2011, bish wrote: Hi This question has probably been ask many time! My new to me LX 7000 offer the choice of Netto or Relative netto for the vario needle Snip... ...this may be a good place to define "netto" (as I've learned/used it...not all soaring descriptions are universal). To me, "netto" means a vario display indicating the actual vertical air motion, relative to the earth's surface...i.e. 'net air motion' once the glider's own speed-dependent sink-rate contribution has been subtracted/eliminated from the picture. In other words, 'my netto display' always indicates actual air motion, independent of glider speed (the 'glider speed' bit being the 'compensation' part). No interpretation needed - that's the beauty of it, so far as my brain is concerned. And that's also why the speed ring doesn't require the pilot to iterate in on the speed to fly...because the glider's increasing sink rate with increasing speed has already been subtracted out of the display. Hence the vario needle *always* points to 'absolute air motion,' and in consequence to the whatever speed to fly your ring setting calls for. Yes, I agree, but 'super netto' or 'relative netto' are alternative terms for something different from either TE vario of 'netto'. A 'super netto' vario shows what a glider would be doing if it was flying in the current air mass at its thermalling speed, so as well as the TE input, it also needs the current IAS and the glider's polar. I fly with an SDI C4 vario, which is a pure TE vario in climb mode and a super netto vario in cruise mode. It has several ways of switching between the two: manual, off the GPS (which is meant to detect circling) or off airspeed (two separate speeds: cruise-climb and climb-cruise). I prefer the latter though I needed to tune the C4's switch points to suit the glider and my flying style. Its noises reflect the mode - climb rate in climb mode and two other sounds for cruise, when it operates as a speed director and takes the Macready setting into account. I really like the way it works and, if forced to replace it, would want a vario with exactly the same functions. IOW, 'super netto' works well for me in cruise. HTH "Ah so! I think I'm getting a glimmer of 'adjectivized "netto"'." Cogitating on the statement, "'...super netto' vario shows what a glider would be doing if it was flying in the current air mass at its thermalling speed, so as well as the TE input, it also needs the current IAS and the glider's polar," this - to me - seems to simply be subtracting (roughly) 200 fpm from a 'unadjectivized "Netto"' display, which itself already (as best as is known and the designer of the instrument can) subtracts out the glider's speed-dependent, straight-line, polar. It may just be the way my brain works, but - to me - this definition of 'super netto' merely adds a(n unnecessary) layer of complexity to a simple concept of crucial interest to every glider pilot, i.e.: What is the air through which I'm flying, doing?" The answer to that question - along with the glider pilot's goals of the moment - determines everything else the glider pilot *might* want to do. Based on various conversations through the years with fellow glider pilots who (often, apparently) did not fully grasp the power-inherent-to (concept of?) 'unadjectivized "netto",' and who (also often) 'poo-pooed the concept' by (correctly) noting the vario would not display actual climb rate when thermaling (it reads high by the incremental circling sink rate of the glider, or, the 200 fpm I keep referencing...200 fpm presuming that Joe Glider Pilot knows how to most effectively thermal his sailplane), I'd guess this is wherefrom springs the flight-mode-based, mode-switching-vario-based display apparently known as 'pure TE vario in climb mode' and 'super netto vario in cruise mode.' Anything that floats your boat is good, I reckon, but my simplistic brain can't help but wonder, "Why is any of this necessary, and how is it *better* than 'unadjectivized "Netto"'? When I first installed my 'unadjectivixed "Netto"' system (the display replaced an old, sticking, TE-compensated PZL unit), I left in place - but now vented to cockpit (i.e. non-compensated) - an electric Ball vario, simply for its audio, which I'd set to squeal above some daily climb-rate-dependent threshold; else it was silent. A few years later, when the Ball died, I didn't bother to replace it, going only with the (silent) 'unadjectivized "Netto"'. Worked just fine for me...though I occasionally encountered pilots who implied I was 'being dangerous' by soaring w/o an audio. A few 'weird Libelle pilots' (and myself) aside, most glider cockpits I've seen have (at least!) two varios, so I suppose a person might argue that - when I still had the Ball in place - I was using two varios to do what the C4 (with which I'm 100% ignorant) implements in a single unit...save for the fact it 'continually subtracts' that aforementioned 200 fpm/2 knots when in cruise mode. Anyhow, returning to the O.P.'s O.Q. (original question), my vote would be to use 'unadjectivized "Netto"' for at least a couple of 'longish soaring flights' or until such time as what I've tried to describe makes conceptual/in-flight sense. Once it does, try whatever other display options the LX-7000 has (all of which likely 'add conceptual complexity to' the basic 'unadjectivized "netto"' concept). Going that route will ensure making 'the most informed' decision as to 'which is best.' Have fun! Bob W. P.S. Keeping things as simple as possible at the outset will maximize the likelihood of avoiding 'a mental rathole' quite possibly detectable in differences between display methodology. What Joe Glider Pilot is (or should be, dry chuckle) interested in is maximizing effective use of the energy contained within the air through which he's flying. Anything else is 'somewhat beside the point' if remaining aloft (or XC) is a given flight's fundamental goal. Satisfy yourself your instrumentation is - or is not - providing you 'intelligible data' before worrying about 'instrumentation differences.' I suspect that failure to adhere to this concept is one reason so many pilots have multiple - competing - varios. |
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On Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:18:02 -0600, BobW wrote:
A few 'weird Libelle pilots' (and myself) aside, most glider cockpits I've seen have (at least!) two varios, so I suppose a person might argue that - when I still had the Ball in place - I was using two varios to do what the C4 (with which I'm 100% ignorant) implements in a single unit...save for the fact it 'continually subtracts' that aforementioned 200 fpm/2 knots when in cruise mode. I'm also a Libelle driver, though of the two vario variety: I carry a Borgelt B.40 as backup to the C4 and fins its extremely rapid response is a useful addition to the C4, especially for finding the hot spots under large clouds. I've wondered why the C4 uses super netto rather than plain netto in cruise mode. My current best guess is that maybe the switch from netto to TE modes causes the vario to step its reading. The C4 never produces a sudden reading change that I've noticed when it switches between modes. Anyhow, returning to the O.P.'s O.Q. (original question), my vote would be to use 'unadjectivized "Netto"' for at least a couple of 'longish soaring flights' or until such time as what I've tried to describe makes conceptual/in-flight sense. Agreed. I suggest the OP does a few flights with each netto setting, in each case staying with the same netto type long enough to get used to what its telling him in cruise mode. Then he should simply use the one he likes best. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
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On 1 août, 18:24, Martin Gregorie
wrote: On Mon, 01 Aug 2011 13:18:02 -0600, BobW wrote: A few 'weird Libelle pilots' (and myself) aside, most glider cockpits I've seen have (at least!) two varios, so I suppose a person might argue that - when I still had the Ball in place - I was using two varios to do what the C4 (with which I'm 100% ignorant) implements in a single unit...save for the fact it 'continually subtracts' that aforementioned 200 fpm/2 knots when in cruise mode. I'm also a Libelle driver, though of the two vario variety: I carry a Borgelt B.40 as backup to the C4 and fins its extremely rapid response is a useful addition to the C4, especially for finding the hot spots under large clouds. * I've wondered why the C4 uses super netto rather than plain netto in cruise mode. My current best guess is that maybe the switch from netto to TE modes causes the vario to step its reading. The C4 never produces a sudden reading change that I've noticed when it switches between modes. Anyhow, returning to the O.P.'s O.Q. (original question), my vote would be to use 'unadjectivized "Netto"' for at least a couple of 'longish soaring flights' or until such time as what I've tried to describe makes conceptual/in-flight sense. Agreed. I suggest the OP does a few flights with each netto setting, *in each case staying with the same netto type long enough to get used to what its telling him in cruise mode. Then he should simply use the one he likes best. -- martin@ * | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org * * * | Thank you for your for your answer. The owner manuel says; netto is what the airmass is doing, relative vario is what you would get if you stop for thermaling. After 50 hours with netto I will try relative netto for a while. The best of lift. S6 |
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On 7/31/2011 2:02 PM, Martin Gregorie wrote:
To me, "netto" means a vario display indicating the actual vertical air motion, relative to the earth's surface...i.e. 'net air motion' once the glider's own speed-dependent sink-rate contribution has been subtracted/eliminated from the picture. In other words, 'my netto display' always indicates actual air motion, independent of glider speed (the 'glider speed' bit being the 'compensation' part). No interpretation needed - that's the beauty of it, so far as my brain is concerned. And that's also why the speed ring doesn't require the pilot to iterate in on the speed to fly...because the glider's increasing sink rate with increasing speed has already been subtracted out of the display. Hence the vario needle *always* points to 'absolute air motion,' and in consequence to the whatever speed to fly your ring setting calls for. Yes, I agree, but 'super netto' or 'relative netto' are alternative terms for something different from either TE vario of 'netto'. A 'super netto' vario shows what a glider would be doing if it was flying in the current air mass at its thermalling speed, so as well as the TE input, it also needs the current IAS and the glider's polar. Snip... Trying to keep things simple (for my simple brain), here's my understanding of the following terms... Unadjectivized "netto" - subtracts out the glider's (presumed known) straignt line, speed-dependent polar from (the common, everyone-is-comfortable-with-it) 'pure TE vario' display...(theoretically) yielding a speed-independent display of actual vertical air motion, relative to the earth's surface. Super/Relative "netto" - *FURTHER* aubtracts out the glider's (also presumed known) circling-in-lift sink rate *increment* (i.e. the bit exceeding the straight line sink rate at thermaling speed) *FROM* the 'unadjectivized "netto"' display...(theoretically) yielding a speed-independent display NOT of vertical air motion, but of 'theoretical projected climb rate' should Joe Glider Pilot decide to stop and thermal. The former subtracts out a speed-dependent, quadratically-approximate polar curve, while... the latter subtracts out [the former + a thermaling increment/constant]. - - - - - - Both quantities subtracted are approximations of reality, though a good argument can be made that speed-dependent polars are more precisely known (at least in the public world of shared, measured data) than are circling sink rates (and by implication, their increment above the non-circling sink rate at thermaling speed). - - - - - - My guess is 'actual vertical air motion' is what every hawk intuitively is interested in. Certainly an interesting, discussion-worthy topic for those non-soaring times. Is there a 'best display'? It depends!!! Regards, Bob W. |
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