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#141
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Ramy,
The point is that you are responsible for self enforcing the FARS. What secondary oversight any other organization engages in shpould be irrevelent. If you are so focused on determining what is going to be looked at (with the implication that that is all you have to bother comply with), then you clearly need to be monitored closely. Ramy wrote: Doug, none of this mention any particular FAR. Since obviously you are not enforcing all FARs, when exactly was it decided which FARs are to be enforced? Ramy Doug Haluza wrote: Yuliy Gerchikov wrote: "Paul Remde" wrote in message news:KaRQg.200456$1i1.196173@attbi_s72... Fly your task so that you land before any known definition of sunset and ...and they'll come up with a new one. That is the problem with the rules being changed on the fly. You submit a flight and never know who, when and why will be scrutinizing it and for what violations. In this atmosphere of FUD, can you guarantee that the next flight that you submit does not break any rules -- including those that aren't defined yet? This whole subtext of arbitrary rule making is becoming an Internet myth, started and nurtured by people who assume that since they did it, it must have been OK, and the trolls they feed with this logic. The origin of the SSA FAR policy goes back more than a year, and is repeatedly documented in the SSA Board Minutes. So it was not arbitrary, or secret, or retroactive, or any of this nonsense. Now I know most SSA members probably do not regularly review the Board minutes, but they are published on the SSA website in the members section. At the risk of injecting facts into an otherwise assumption driven thread, here are the relevant quotes along with the links to the source: 6/5/05 Agenda Item 16.0 On Line Contest Update Report Mr. Garner reported on the work done to date on the development of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the On Line Contest owners concerning SSA's participation in the program. During discussion, an issue of posting flights to the OLC where there is a violation of a Federal Aviation Administration rule (such as an airspace restriction) came to the fore. The committee agreed that no badge or record should be approved if the flight involves unsporting behavior as set out in the FAI Sporting Code. The committee also agreed that a statement of policy on this issue must be carefully worded. The committee asked that this issue be referred to the Badge and Record Committee for a policy that can ultimately be approved by the Board of Directors. Chairman Carswell agreed to review the draft MOU again before proceeding. The sense of the committee indicates the desire to proceed with an agreement with the OLC officials. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 11. The Executive Committee asked that the Badge and Record Committee be asked for a statement of policy concerning the disallowance of any badge or record flight that involves the violation of an FAR. http://www.ssa.org/download/ExCom_2005_Jun_05_Final.pdf 9/30/05 Agenda Item 11.0 SSA/OLC/FARs Mr. Garner reported on the discussions that had taken place prior to the meeting concerning the issue of possible violations of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR) in flights posted on the On-Line Contest (OLC), flying in SSA sanctioned contests, and flying for badges and records. This issue would be further discussed at the meeting of the Board of Directors. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-Final...tes%209-30.pdf 10/1/05 Agenda Item 9.0 Vice Chair Member Services & Information (Garner) Mr. Garner reported on the On Line Contest (OLC). He advised a MOU had been signed which gives SSA exclusive right to the OLC in the U.S. This included hang gliders as well. SSA did not write the rules, just administer them. He reported that some flights had been posted which showed possible violations of FARs. He requested that a written policy be adopted addressing this problem. A lengthy discussion ensued and Mr. Spratt moved to table the discussion of this and form a task force to recommend SSA policy on FARs. Mr. Reid seconded the motion and it passed 14 in favor, 7 against. Mr. Reid moved the SSA adopt as official policy to FAR violations "The policy of the SSA is that FARs must be observed." Mr. Mockler seconded the motion, and it passed unanimously. A task force to study the application of this policy was formed with Mr. Reid as Chairman, and members, Ms. Brickner, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Garner. http://www.ssa.org/download/2005_Oct_01_draft.pdf 12/10/05 Agenda Item 11 OLC Enforcement Procedure Mr. Garner introduced a paper with a draft enforcement policy that would supplement the Federal Aviation Regulation Policy approved by the Board at its meeting in October, 2005. The enforcement policy was then discussed at length, the provisions of which were generally agreed to. The committee asked that a sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee be established to enforce this policy and to report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. The policy will be mounted on the web site. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 7. A sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee will be established to enforce the policy on FAR violations, and report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-PostedMinutes12-10.pdf 2/3/06 Agenda Item 7.0 - Vice Chair - Reid . . . Reid reported on detailed implementation of the SSA s general policy that FARs must be observed and referred to the draft motion in the Board Book. After discussion, Reid proposed and Hines seconded the following motion - "The SSA Board of Directors can, at its discretion, review the circumstances involving any flight and can, at its discretion after receiving the advice of any responsible committee, take any action at any time it deems appropriate". After discussion, the motion was passed with one vote against. http://www.ssa.org/download/2006_Feb_03_draft.pdf |
#142
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No Quebec Tango, this wasn't the point. The point is that Doug claims
that the sunset rule was not arbitrarily enforced, but the quotes he provided do not mention any particular FAR. So my question remains: When exactly was it decided which FAR to enforce and which not, and when/where was it communicated? Quebec Tango wrote: Ramy, The point is that you are responsible for self enforcing the FARS. What secondary oversight any other organization engages in shpould be irrevelent. If you are so focused on determining what is going to be looked at (with the implication that that is all you have to bother comply with), then you clearly need to be monitored closely. Ramy wrote: Doug, none of this mention any particular FAR. Since obviously you are not enforcing all FARs, when exactly was it decided which FARs are to be enforced? Ramy Doug Haluza wrote: Yuliy Gerchikov wrote: "Paul Remde" wrote in message news:KaRQg.200456$1i1.196173@attbi_s72... Fly your task so that you land before any known definition of sunset and ...and they'll come up with a new one. That is the problem with the rules being changed on the fly. You submit a flight and never know who, when and why will be scrutinizing it and for what violations. In this atmosphere of FUD, can you guarantee that the next flight that you submit does not break any rules -- including those that aren't defined yet? This whole subtext of arbitrary rule making is becoming an Internet myth, started and nurtured by people who assume that since they did it, it must have been OK, and the trolls they feed with this logic. The origin of the SSA FAR policy goes back more than a year, and is repeatedly documented in the SSA Board Minutes. So it was not arbitrary, or secret, or retroactive, or any of this nonsense. Now I know most SSA members probably do not regularly review the Board minutes, but they are published on the SSA website in the members section. At the risk of injecting facts into an otherwise assumption driven thread, here are the relevant quotes along with the links to the source: 6/5/05 Agenda Item 16.0 On Line Contest Update Report Mr. Garner reported on the work done to date on the development of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the On Line Contest owners concerning SSA's participation in the program. During discussion, an issue of posting flights to the OLC where there is a violation of a Federal Aviation Administration rule (such as an airspace restriction) came to the fore. The committee agreed that no badge or record should be approved if the flight involves unsporting behavior as set out in the FAI Sporting Code. The committee also agreed that a statement of policy on this issue must be carefully worded. The committee asked that this issue be referred to the Badge and Record Committee for a policy that can ultimately be approved by the Board of Directors. Chairman Carswell agreed to review the draft MOU again before proceeding. The sense of the committee indicates the desire to proceed with an agreement with the OLC officials. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 11. The Executive Committee asked that the Badge and Record Committee be asked for a statement of policy concerning the disallowance of any badge or record flight that involves the violation of an FAR. http://www.ssa.org/download/ExCom_2005_Jun_05_Final.pdf 9/30/05 Agenda Item 11.0 SSA/OLC/FARs Mr. Garner reported on the discussions that had taken place prior to the meeting concerning the issue of possible violations of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR) in flights posted on the On-Line Contest (OLC), flying in SSA sanctioned contests, and flying for badges and records. This issue would be further discussed at the meeting of the Board of Directors. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-Final...tes%209-30.pdf 10/1/05 Agenda Item 9.0 Vice Chair Member Services & Information (Garner) Mr. Garner reported on the On Line Contest (OLC). He advised a MOU had been signed which gives SSA exclusive right to the OLC in the U.S. This included hang gliders as well. SSA did not write the rules, just administer them. He reported that some flights had been posted which showed possible violations of FARs. He requested that a written policy be adopted addressing this problem. A lengthy discussion ensued and Mr. Spratt moved to table the discussion of this and form a task force to recommend SSA policy on FARs. Mr. Reid seconded the motion and it passed 14 in favor, 7 against. Mr. Reid moved the SSA adopt as official policy to FAR violations "The policy of the SSA is that FARs must be observed." Mr. Mockler seconded the motion, and it passed unanimously. A task force to study the application of this policy was formed with Mr. Reid as Chairman, and members, Ms. Brickner, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Garner. http://www.ssa.org/download/2005_Oct_01_draft.pdf 12/10/05 Agenda Item 11 OLC Enforcement Procedure Mr. Garner introduced a paper with a draft enforcement policy that would supplement the Federal Aviation Regulation Policy approved by the Board at its meeting in October, 2005. The enforcement policy was then discussed at length, the provisions of which were generally agreed to. The committee asked that a sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee be established to enforce this policy and to report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. The policy will be mounted on the web site. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 7. A sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee will be established to enforce the policy on FAR violations, and report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-PostedMinutes12-10.pdf 2/3/06 Agenda Item 7.0 - Vice Chair - Reid . . . Reid reported on detailed implementation of the SSA s general policy that FARs must be observed and referred to the draft motion in the Board Book. After discussion, Reid proposed and Hines seconded the following motion - "The SSA Board of Directors can, at its discretion, review the circumstances involving any flight and can, at its discretion after receiving the advice of any responsible committee, take any action at any time it deems appropriate". After discussion, the motion was passed with one vote against. http://www.ssa.org/download/2006_Feb_03_draft.pdf |
#143
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No Ramy, you just don't get it. You consistently argue that it is OK
to cheat if no one is watching. Why whould I ever want you in a game with me? Your entire premise is wrong and unsportsmanlike. Ramy wrote: No Quebec Tango, this wasn't the point. The point is that Doug claims that the sunset rule was not arbitrarily enforced, but the quotes he provided do not mention any particular FAR. So my question remains: When exactly was it decided which FAR to enforce and which not, and when/where was it communicated? Quebec Tango wrote: Ramy, The point is that you are responsible for self enforcing the FARS. What secondary oversight any other organization engages in shpould be irrevelent. If you are so focused on determining what is going to be looked at (with the implication that that is all you have to bother comply with), then you clearly need to be monitored closely. Ramy wrote: Doug, none of this mention any particular FAR. Since obviously you are not enforcing all FARs, when exactly was it decided which FARs are to be enforced? Ramy Doug Haluza wrote: Yuliy Gerchikov wrote: "Paul Remde" wrote in message news:KaRQg.200456$1i1.196173@attbi_s72... Fly your task so that you land before any known definition of sunset and ...and they'll come up with a new one. That is the problem with the rules being changed on the fly. You submit a flight and never know who, when and why will be scrutinizing it and for what violations. In this atmosphere of FUD, can you guarantee that the next flight that you submit does not break any rules -- including those that aren't defined yet? This whole subtext of arbitrary rule making is becoming an Internet myth, started and nurtured by people who assume that since they did it, it must have been OK, and the trolls they feed with this logic. The origin of the SSA FAR policy goes back more than a year, and is repeatedly documented in the SSA Board Minutes. So it was not arbitrary, or secret, or retroactive, or any of this nonsense. Now I know most SSA members probably do not regularly review the Board minutes, but they are published on the SSA website in the members section. At the risk of injecting facts into an otherwise assumption driven thread, here are the relevant quotes along with the links to the source: 6/5/05 Agenda Item 16.0 On Line Contest Update Report Mr. Garner reported on the work done to date on the development of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the On Line Contest owners concerning SSA's participation in the program. During discussion, an issue of posting flights to the OLC where there is a violation of a Federal Aviation Administration rule (such as an airspace restriction) came to the fore. The committee agreed that no badge or record should be approved if the flight involves unsporting behavior as set out in the FAI Sporting Code. The committee also agreed that a statement of policy on this issue must be carefully worded. The committee asked that this issue be referred to the Badge and Record Committee for a policy that can ultimately be approved by the Board of Directors. Chairman Carswell agreed to review the draft MOU again before proceeding. The sense of the committee indicates the desire to proceed with an agreement with the OLC officials. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 11. The Executive Committee asked that the Badge and Record Committee be asked for a statement of policy concerning the disallowance of any badge or record flight that involves the violation of an FAR. http://www.ssa.org/download/ExCom_2005_Jun_05_Final.pdf 9/30/05 Agenda Item 11.0 SSA/OLC/FARs Mr. Garner reported on the discussions that had taken place prior to the meeting concerning the issue of possible violations of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR) in flights posted on the On-Line Contest (OLC), flying in SSA sanctioned contests, and flying for badges and records. This issue would be further discussed at the meeting of the Board of Directors. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-Final...tes%209-30.pdf 10/1/05 Agenda Item 9.0 Vice Chair Member Services & Information (Garner) Mr. Garner reported on the On Line Contest (OLC). He advised a MOU had been signed which gives SSA exclusive right to the OLC in the U.S. This included hang gliders as well. SSA did not write the rules, just administer them. He reported that some flights had been posted which showed possible violations of FARs. He requested that a written policy be adopted addressing this problem. A lengthy discussion ensued and Mr. Spratt moved to table the discussion of this and form a task force to recommend SSA policy on FARs. Mr. Reid seconded the motion and it passed 14 in favor, 7 against. Mr. Reid moved the SSA adopt as official policy to FAR violations "The policy of the SSA is that FARs must be observed." Mr. Mockler seconded the motion, and it passed unanimously. A task force to study the application of this policy was formed with Mr. Reid as Chairman, and members, Ms. Brickner, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Garner. http://www.ssa.org/download/2005_Oct_01_draft.pdf 12/10/05 Agenda Item 11 OLC Enforcement Procedure Mr. Garner introduced a paper with a draft enforcement policy that would supplement the Federal Aviation Regulation Policy approved by the Board at its meeting in October, 2005. The enforcement policy was then discussed at length, the provisions of which were generally agreed to. The committee asked that a sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee be established to enforce this policy and to report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. The policy will be mounted on the web site. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 7. A sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee will be established to enforce the policy on FAR violations, and report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-PostedMinutes12-10.pdf 2/3/06 Agenda Item 7.0 - Vice Chair - Reid . . . Reid reported on detailed implementation of the SSA s general policy that FARs must be observed and referred to the draft motion in the Board Book. After discussion, Reid proposed and Hines seconded the following motion - "The SSA Board of Directors can, at its discretion, review the circumstances involving any flight and can, at its discretion after receiving the advice of any responsible committee, take any action at any time it deems appropriate". After discussion, the motion was passed with one vote against. http://www.ssa.org/download/2006_Feb_03_draft.pdf |
#144
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![]() Quebec Tango wrote: No Ramy, you just don't get it. You consistently argue that it is OK to cheat if no one is watching. Why whould I ever want you in a game with me? Your entire premise is wrong and unsportsmanlike. Ramy wrote: No Quebec Tango, this wasn't the point. The point is that Doug claims that the sunset rule was not arbitrarily enforced, but the quotes he provided do not mention any particular FAR. So my question remains: When exactly was it decided which FAR to enforce and which not, and when/where was it communicated? Quebec Tango wrote: Ramy, The point is that you are responsible for self enforcing the FARS. What secondary oversight any other organization engages in shpould be irrevelent. If you are so focused on determining what is going to be looked at (with the implication that that is all you have to bother comply with), then you clearly need to be monitored closely. Ramy wrote: Doug, none of this mention any particular FAR. Since obviously you are not enforcing all FARs, when exactly was it decided which FARs are to be enforced? Ramy 12/10/05 "Agenda Item 11 OLC Enforcement Procedure Mr. Garner introduced a paper with a draft enforcement policy that would supplement the Federal Aviation Regulation Policy approved by the Board at its meeting in October, 2005. The enforcement policy was then discussed at length, the provisions of which were generally agreed to. The committee asked that a sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee be established to enforce this policy and to report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. The policy will be mounted on the web site." http://www.ssa.org/download/00-PostedMinutes12-10.pdf "A posted flight that shows an FAR violation (such as entering Class A airspace without a clearance or flying past sunset without lights) begs for FAA action." http://www.ssa.org/download/SSA%20Po...Violations.pdf Are we done yet? |
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QT, If you read carefully the thread you may understand what my (and
few others) point is, but some people don't get. But I am not going to continue arguing with you in public, you can email me privately and I can explain it to you. Quebec Tango wrote: No Ramy, you just don't get it. You consistently argue that it is OK to cheat if no one is watching. Why whould I ever want you in a game with me? Your entire premise is wrong and unsportsmanlike. Ramy wrote: No Quebec Tango, this wasn't the point. The point is that Doug claims that the sunset rule was not arbitrarily enforced, but the quotes he provided do not mention any particular FAR. So my question remains: When exactly was it decided which FAR to enforce and which not, and when/where was it communicated? Quebec Tango wrote: Ramy, The point is that you are responsible for self enforcing the FARS. What secondary oversight any other organization engages in shpould be irrevelent. If you are so focused on determining what is going to be looked at (with the implication that that is all you have to bother comply with), then you clearly need to be monitored closely. Ramy wrote: Doug, none of this mention any particular FAR. Since obviously you are not enforcing all FARs, when exactly was it decided which FARs are to be enforced? Ramy Doug Haluza wrote: Yuliy Gerchikov wrote: "Paul Remde" wrote in message news:KaRQg.200456$1i1.196173@attbi_s72... Fly your task so that you land before any known definition of sunset and ...and they'll come up with a new one. That is the problem with the rules being changed on the fly. You submit a flight and never know who, when and why will be scrutinizing it and for what violations. In this atmosphere of FUD, can you guarantee that the next flight that you submit does not break any rules -- including those that aren't defined yet? This whole subtext of arbitrary rule making is becoming an Internet myth, started and nurtured by people who assume that since they did it, it must have been OK, and the trolls they feed with this logic. The origin of the SSA FAR policy goes back more than a year, and is repeatedly documented in the SSA Board Minutes. So it was not arbitrary, or secret, or retroactive, or any of this nonsense. Now I know most SSA members probably do not regularly review the Board minutes, but they are published on the SSA website in the members section. At the risk of injecting facts into an otherwise assumption driven thread, here are the relevant quotes along with the links to the source: 6/5/05 Agenda Item 16.0 On Line Contest Update Report Mr. Garner reported on the work done to date on the development of a Memorandum of Understanding (MOU) with the On Line Contest owners concerning SSA's participation in the program. During discussion, an issue of posting flights to the OLC where there is a violation of a Federal Aviation Administration rule (such as an airspace restriction) came to the fore. The committee agreed that no badge or record should be approved if the flight involves unsporting behavior as set out in the FAI Sporting Code. The committee also agreed that a statement of policy on this issue must be carefully worded. The committee asked that this issue be referred to the Badge and Record Committee for a policy that can ultimately be approved by the Board of Directors. Chairman Carswell agreed to review the draft MOU again before proceeding. The sense of the committee indicates the desire to proceed with an agreement with the OLC officials. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 11. The Executive Committee asked that the Badge and Record Committee be asked for a statement of policy concerning the disallowance of any badge or record flight that involves the violation of an FAR. http://www.ssa.org/download/ExCom_2005_Jun_05_Final.pdf 9/30/05 Agenda Item 11.0 SSA/OLC/FARs Mr. Garner reported on the discussions that had taken place prior to the meeting concerning the issue of possible violations of the Federal Aviation Regulations (FAR) in flights posted on the On-Line Contest (OLC), flying in SSA sanctioned contests, and flying for badges and records. This issue would be further discussed at the meeting of the Board of Directors. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-Final...tes%209-30.pdf 10/1/05 Agenda Item 9.0 Vice Chair Member Services & Information (Garner) Mr. Garner reported on the On Line Contest (OLC). He advised a MOU had been signed which gives SSA exclusive right to the OLC in the U.S. This included hang gliders as well. SSA did not write the rules, just administer them. He reported that some flights had been posted which showed possible violations of FARs. He requested that a written policy be adopted addressing this problem. A lengthy discussion ensued and Mr. Spratt moved to table the discussion of this and form a task force to recommend SSA policy on FARs. Mr. Reid seconded the motion and it passed 14 in favor, 7 against. Mr. Reid moved the SSA adopt as official policy to FAR violations "The policy of the SSA is that FARs must be observed." Mr. Mockler seconded the motion, and it passed unanimously. A task force to study the application of this policy was formed with Mr. Reid as Chairman, and members, Ms. Brickner, Mr. Sorenson and Mr. Garner. http://www.ssa.org/download/2005_Oct_01_draft.pdf 12/10/05 Agenda Item 11 OLC Enforcement Procedure Mr. Garner introduced a paper with a draft enforcement policy that would supplement the Federal Aviation Regulation Policy approved by the Board at its meeting in October, 2005. The enforcement policy was then discussed at length, the provisions of which were generally agreed to. The committee asked that a sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee be established to enforce this policy and to report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. The policy will be mounted on the web site. ACTION ITEMS RESULTING FROM THE MEETING 7. A sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee will be established to enforce the policy on FAR violations, and report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. http://www.ssa.org/download/00-PostedMinutes12-10.pdf 2/3/06 Agenda Item 7.0 - Vice Chair - Reid . . . Reid reported on detailed implementation of the SSA s general policy that FARs must be observed and referred to the draft motion in the Board Book. After discussion, Reid proposed and Hines seconded the following motion - "The SSA Board of Directors can, at its discretion, review the circumstances involving any flight and can, at its discretion after receiving the advice of any responsible committee, take any action at any time it deems appropriate". After discussion, the motion was passed with one vote against. http://www.ssa.org/download/2006_Feb_03_draft.pdf |
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Yes, thanks Doug. Now I wish it would have been communicated better...
Ramy Doug Haluza wrote: "Agenda Item 11 OLC Enforcement Procedure Mr. Garner introduced a paper with a draft enforcement policy that would supplement the Federal Aviation Regulation Policy approved by the Board at its meeting in October, 2005. The enforcement policy was then discussed at length, the provisions of which were generally agreed to. The committee asked that a sub-committee of the Badge and Record Committee be established to enforce this policy and to report to the Board of Directors on the number of pilots that are sanctioned under the terms of this policy. The policy will be mounted on the web site." http://www.ssa.org/download/00-PostedMinutes12-10.pdf "A posted flight that shows an FAR violation (such as entering Class A airspace without a clearance or flying past sunset without lights) begs for FAA action." http://www.ssa.org/download/SSA%20Po...Violations.pdf Are we done yet? |
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Paul Remde wrote:
"Andy" wrote in message oups.com. Given the uncertainty of the actual official sunset time I repeat my request that SAA's sunset time be used only to determine the "end of soaring flight" and not used to determine the validity of the entire flight. I must respectfully disagree. If we just use sunset as the end of soaring flight that gives an unfair advantage to a pilot that is far from home or at altitude when the sun sets. He/she should have planned ahead and landed on time. I think calling sunset the end of soaring flight for the OLC is fine if the pilot is given a few minutes more to land. If the flight continues beyond that it could be considered sufficient evidence of poor planning, or bad faith, and the whole flight automatically disallowed. "SS + 0:05" might work for everybody in determining when to disqualify an entire flight, and not require the services of both defense counsel and a battery of astronomers just to mollify a nanny SSA-OLC. And who cares how far from home the pilot is? Let him land out and walk home, as long as the ship touched down within a few minutes of whatever "FAA Official Sunset" might have been at that place and time. There are no declarations necessary, nor is OLC an assigned task. Next thing we know, we'll be needing Official Observers. Jack |
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Ramy wrote:
Well, SeeYou shows the sunset time, so I guess this is what Doug is using. Paul, your suggetion will work for short to medium or yoyo tasks when one can plan to land way before sunset or can abort the task. But this does not work for long O&R and triangle tasks, especially in the great basin, where weaker conditions on course can slow you down significantly. When this happens there are only two choices, to fly back home and potentially land after sunset, or landout in the middle of nowhere before sunset, hope you don't break anything, then spend a freezing night in the cockpit waiting for your retrieve. We'd all choose to fly home, but we don't have to post that flight on the OLC. Doug isn't suggesting you do something stupid to get some OLC points, but he is asking you don't post flights that clearly go beyond sunset. -- Note: email address new as of 9/4/2006 Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA "Transponders in Sailplanes" on the Soaring Safety Foundation website www.soaringsafety.org/prevention/articles.html "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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Ramy wrote:
No Quebec Tango, this wasn't the point. The point is that Doug claims that the sunset rule was not arbitrarily enforced, but the quotes he provided do not mention any particular FAR. So my question remains: When exactly was it decided which FAR to enforce and which not, and when/where was it communicated? Could we stop using phrases like "enforce the FARs"? Doug isn't/can't/won't enforce FARs; these are contest rules he is enforcing. And it should be clear by now that the FARs that concern the SSA are those that can be checked by looking at the flight file. I agree that there wasn't much communication about following the FARs, but I wouldn't have thought much was needed, either. I seem to be wrong. -- Note: email address new as of 9/4/2006 Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA "Transponders in Sailplanes" on the Soaring Safety Foundation website www.soaringsafety.org/prevention/articles.html "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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![]() Eric Greenwell wrote: Ramy wrote: Well, SeeYou shows the sunset time, so I guess this is what Doug is using. Paul, your suggetion will work for short to medium or yoyo tasks when one can plan to land way before sunset or can abort the task. But this does not work for long O&R and triangle tasks, especially in the great basin, where weaker conditions on course can slow you down significantly. When this happens there are only two choices, to fly back home and potentially land after sunset, or landout in the middle of nowhere before sunset, hope you don't break anything, then spend a freezing night in the cockpit waiting for your retrieve. We'd all choose to fly home, but we don't have to post that flight on the OLC. Doug isn't suggesting you do something stupid to get some OLC points, but he is asking you don't post flights that clearly go beyond sunset. Just one thing, it's not just me asking. When I got drafted for the SSA-OLC Committee assignment earlier this year, this was all a done deal. I had no part in making it at the SSA level. And I had no part in making it at the field level either, because I have been landing (just) before sunset even before the OLC existed. |
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