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#231
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Bruce Hoult wrote:
In article , Tony Verhulst wrote: I've bought several versions of Microsoft Flight Simulator in the hope that a better version will spark my interest. So far, they bore me to tears. Yeah, well that's possibly because it's crap! MS Flight Sim is now a great *scenery* simulator, and ever since the days of 8 MHz Macs (maybe even earlier) it's been pretty decent for practising IFR using AH and VOR and ADF. But it's still got rubbish physics. X-Plane is a much better simulator, and actually feels quite real (and you can get some pretty good glider models for it, from http://www.x-plane.org/Aircraft/). It's a good enough sim that several real companies use it for pilot training and design evaluation for aircraft they are designing. With the right add-on hardware, it's also FAA approved for logging simulator time. Not bad for a $49.50 program. In older programs, I found the Mac-only A-10 Attack! to feel *very* realistic to fly -- of course I don't know what an A-10 feels like to fly, but it felt like it *could* be a real aircraft (and I *have* been at the controls of kinda similar size aircraft, such as the Harvard/Texan). It also had excellent emulation of the interaction of the landing gear and struts with the ground. I'm told the authors (Graphic Simulations) actually make high end simulations for the military as well as games. There are probably some good PC simulators, too, but I don't know what they would be -- the vast majority have very little to do with real aircraft, whether because the programmers didn't know how (probably), or because their customers (like the Sep11 pilots) didn't care about takeoffs or landings, I don't know. -- Bruce SFS-PC (www.sfspc.de) is the best soaring simulator I have used, although apparently there is a competitor with Sailors of the sky. Both are cheap, SFS has good physics, and weather models that actually work. Nothing replaces doing it though... |
#232
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Eric Greenwell wrote:
JJ Sinclair wrote: Maybe they should offer a trial membership, something like Good idea, Scott. I suggested that the SSA give a free 1 year membership to all newly licenced glider pilots. Nothing ever came of it. JJ Sinclair Sounds like a good idea. Maybe it's time to suggest it again - new management, elected and appointed. -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Any thoughts on rolling the SSA into the fold of the EAA, along with it's Classic, Warbird, Vintage Aircraft divisions. Lots of members, two conventions a year for exposure (Oshkosh, and Sun and Fun). Strong lobbying power, and a world wide network. Just thoughts. |
#233
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Any thoughts on rolling the SSA into the fold of the EAA, along with
it's Classic, Warbird, Vintage Aircraft divisions. Lots of members, two conventions a year for exposure (Oshkosh, and Sun and Fun). Strong lobbying power, and a world wide network. Just thoughts. If so.. how about creating a third convention for us west coasters.. SnF and Osh are a little far away.. BT |
#234
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At 17:30 28 December 2004, Snoop wrote:
Eric Greenwell wrote: JJ Sinclair wrote: Maybe they should offer a trial membership, something like Good idea, Scott. I suggested that the SSA give a free 1 year membership to all newly licenced glider pilots. Nothing ever came of it. JJ Sinclair Sounds like a good idea. Maybe it's time to suggest it again - new management, elected and appointed. -- ----- change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Any thoughts on rolling the SSA into the fold of the EAA, along with it's Classic, Warbird, Vintage Aircraft divisions. Lots of members, two conventions a year for exposure (Oshkosh, and Sun and Fun). Strong lobbying power, and a world wide network. Just thoughts. Ba-a-d Idea! With all due respect to the years of hard work the people at the very to of EAA put into it, we would not want to be under their control. It functions like a Fiefdom. They select all the second tier managers and the top slot stays in the family. They get all the benefits and the members do all the volunteer work and still have to pay to get into the show and are allowed but one museum visit per year without paying for that. The museum's aircraft are available only the the top 1-6 people to fly. They have absolute control over everything. We could not fit into their regime. |
#235
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![]() "snoop" wrote in message oups.com... Eric Greenwell wrote: JJ Sinclair wrote: Maybe they should offer a trial membership, something like Good idea, Scott. I suggested that the SSA give a free 1 year membership to all newly licenced glider pilots. Nothing ever came of it. JJ Sinclair Sounds like a good idea. Maybe it's time to suggest it again - new management, elected and appointed. -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA Any thoughts on rolling the SSA into the fold of the EAA, along with it's Classic, Warbird, Vintage Aircraft divisions. Lots of members, two conventions a year for exposure (Oshkosh, and Sun and Fun). Strong lobbying power, and a world wide network. Just thoughts. I'd rather merge with the HG and PG communities, at least they soar. I was an EAA member for many years. It's enjoyable, educational, and interesting, but so very different from the soaring community. Frank Whiteley |
#236
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I read the last few posts to this thread and decided to do a quick
survey of some of the people in my extended work group (Info Tech) just to understand what they knew/thought about soaring. I talked to about ten people, none were pilots, one had taken a small airplane flight or two ... about half were involved in moderate risk sports like motorcycling, scuba diving, kayaking and skiing. After discussing their current hobbies, I asked all if they had ever heard of soaring/gliding. Half immediately thought I meant hang gliders ... and the group as a whole had little to no knowledge of gliders/sailplanes or capabilities ... although one person knew gliders were aero towed. Three said they had no interest in aviation of any type in small aircraft. Most was not sure about seeing magazine or movie coverage of glider/sailplane operations. The surprise was a middle-aged female motorcycle driver/skier who had been interested in gliders, and thought the 'plane' gliders looked cool and probably would have tried it, but thought you had to go out west to fly over the mountains as that was the 'background' in the few soaring photos or movie segments she had seen. I asked her how many times she remembers seeing soaring photos or TV/movie segments ... she thought about it and said not many ... could remember three, but it could have been as many as six in her lifetime ... although, she does seem to remember quite a few hang gliding sequences/photos on TV in movies or magazines. She also had limited knowledge of glider ops. OK, a quick survey like this doesn't mean much ... although I probably had a typical mix of people ... 30% have to be dragged into aircraft; 10% were interested, but uninvolved; and the remaining 60% had virtually no knowledge of soaring/gliding. The latter is not new news. I think we all know people don't know about soaring because it is just not part of the main stream in America. We have had a number of big and small screen series using scuba diving, skiing, motorcycling, sky diving, etc. backdrops ... and some of these also get frequent sport coverage ... it's rare to see soaring included as even a minor theme in any media. The new ad campaigns being discussed/developed ... and the individual efforts undertaken by clubs and other business operations .... seem to be our best soaring info outlets at this time. What we need is big exposure ... maybe a weekly series like "Desparate Soaring Wives" ... or have one of Trump's Apprentices project manage a soaring contest ... "Charlie, you're fired !!!" Ken Kochanski (KK) |
#237
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How about hosting a Nationals down there, Bert? Its
got to be a whole bunch better than that place a little north of you. Have gone to 3 nationals 'up there' and haven't seen anything worth the drive yet. JJ At 15:30 29 December 2004, Burt Compton wrote: What decline? My commercial soaring operation is slowly growing. Maybe it is because of our good soaring location, good marketing, good 'meet & greet', good training, good equipment. We ain't gettin' rich, but we realize that each customer/student/v isiting pilot is golden, brings in a few dollars, and so we show them a good time. Burt Compton Marfa Gliders, west Texas www.flygliders.com |
#238
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Marfa will be hosting the 2006 World Class (PW-5) National Contest. It
will be perfect "first" contest for our small staff / small town(with final SSA approval - due Feb 2005.) Yes, the mountain scenery around the grasslands of the Marfa Plateau is quite good. Marfa Airport is about 5,000' msl, so summer temperatures are not as hot as the rest of the southwest. Cloudbases can go to 17,999' msl. For higher, we have an ATC wave window to 30,000'. We fly year-round, primarily offering glider ratings (PVT to CFIG) in the mild winter months. The annual Marfa Wave Camp will be March 19-26, 2005. Register (required) with Dick Johnson at More Marfa info: www.flygliders.com Burt Compton, CFIG, DPE Marfa Gliders, west Texas John Sinclair wrote: How about hosting a Nationals down there, Bert? Its got to be a whole bunch better than that place a little north of you. Have gone to 3 nationals 'up there' and haven't seen anything worth the drive yet. JJ At 15:30 29 December 2004, Burt Compton wrote: What decline? My commercial soaring operation is slowly growing. Maybe it is because of our good soaring location, good marketing, good 'meet & greet', good training, good equipment. Burt Compton Marfa Gliders, west Texas www.flygliders.com |
#239
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In article ,
Burt Compton wrote: What decline? My commercial soaring operation is slowly growing. Maybe it is because of our good soaring location, good marketing, good "meet & greet", good training, good equipment. Don't forget, you have the bugs worked out. When people show up for something, they get it. Straightforward, on the nose, no hidden charges. Contrasted with my experience. Over the course of visiting hundreds of FBOs, and dozens of gliderports one thing I've strongly noticed is inconsistency. Some FBOs end up charging up to 5 times as much as others to achieve a license. The students never even know that they could be doing all of their training in a 2-33 for $7 a flight instead of a Duo Discus that they have to reserve two weeks ahead of time and pay for two hours at $180 whether in the air or not. I met a guy who got his Private Pilot Glider license for over $10,000. His best and will solo soon for about $500 total at a differnet club. I'll tell you, he felt that $10,000 was no bargain. The guy is not happy about it, and curses the fact he didn't know what was going on sooner. I know an airplane instructor who regularly does over 100 hours of DUAL instruction for each rating. He tells me it isn't him, his students just need it... There is nothing wrong with offering slick, super duper gliders, or brand new aircraft, or training people to ATP standards before their first solo. As long as they WANT it. But a lot of brand new students come in the door (which takes a LOT of courage to begin with) and they are so excited they are hungry and will take anything. Their ignorance is flat out preyed upon by what I consider to be marginally unethical business practices. Training to 2 degrees of heading or 1 foot of landing spot or perfectly centered yawstrings sure does line the pocket. But not giving a student a accurate assessment of when they can reliably pass a checkride, or harping that training must be done until one can fly an ASW-20 when someone asks for a glider license is a bit of bait-and-switch, and a bit of car salesmanship. Part of the hesitation people have approaching flying is downright inconsistency. I've watched potential pilots try to sort out the prices and requirements, and walk away because the CFI or FBO is just a bit too shifty. I've started recommending to students to use instructors who have a Gold Seal, or who have ratios of dual given to practical test signoff of at most 50:1. Beyond that, I've outlined the widely varying cost of tows and aircraft rental. I'm not saying that charging a lot for rental or doing a ton of dual for a rating is in itself unethical. Granted, there are soaring sites that are in very expensive areas, and there are students who sometimes require more training, or need more instruction in the more tricky aircraft available for rent. And if the operation only wants Duo Discuses, then hey, taht's their choice. But the "black magic" and fog surrounding newbies seeking glider instruction, and the inconsistencies of price and "requirements" sure don't add to the overall reputation of flying in general. Whether it is ethical or not at some point takes a backseat to the damage it causes to the reputation of the industry. I've always been a little leary of operations that don't advertise their prices, either. Maybe that's the gliding "consumer" in me ![]() It doesn't mean they charge too much, it just means now I have to ask a lot of questions. How many of you actively seek to buy an item that says for price: "inquire." When I see that, I usually figure I can't afford it :P If you have a website, and you don't have prices on it, I'm less likely to come visit. You're going to have to get my business, and the business of my students, through referrals. We ain't gettin' rich, but we realize that each customer/student/visiting pilot is golden, brings in a few dollars, and so we show them a good time. Burt Compton Marfa Gliders, west Texas www.flygliders.com Burt is a NAFI Master instructor, DPE, and Gold Seal! That means he gets people through license and at the very least subscribes to a professional group with a code of ethics. That's the attitude that gets referrals. A good value, and giving a customer what they asked for, instead of selling them something you think they "should" want. We are "ambassadors" to the sport. We need to ensure we avoid even the appearance of impropriety. With so few gliderports in the country, each one is an embassy. I think each one should do its best to provide value and be a source of pride to this industry. -- ------------+ Mark J. Boyd |
#240
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Mark;
I'm not aware of any FBO doing ab initio training in a Duo Discus although someone, Dean Carswell I think, said something in a review of the DG-1000 to the effect that there was no reason not to train a new student in that aircraft other than the concern over sending him solo in a very expensive glider. I don't think there's any question but what its easier to get in trouble in fast glass than a 2-33 though. While I agree that the sport could benefit from some standardization of training methods, the decision as to when a student is ready to solo or move up in aircraft performance involves, IMHO, too many variables to codify precisely. As to licensing, I got my private ticket long before I learned to fly. I suspect that well thought-out national standards of training would cause the "time to solo" and "time to license" to increase in more places than to decrease, BTW. Our accident, injury and fatality rate suggests that we are not training glider pilots adequately for the conditions they encounter once on their own. Whether this is the fault of the quality or quantity of training I'm not qualified to say. Most likely it's some combination of both. The training requirements are, it seems to me, somewhat site-specific as well. Western wave sites with the possibility of coming home from a cross-country to 50 knot plus cross winds or even rotor on the airport or east coast ridge sites with high-speed close to the ground operations and limited landout potential require a different skill set (and more training hours) than local flying in gentler places. Because my work kept me on the road, I took my initial training all over the country. My pre-solo logbook shows four separate glider types at least five different locations. Opinions as to the "right way" to do things at these locations differed markedly. As a result, the instructor who ultimately soloed me (in a 2/33, BTW) took a lot on faith. It worked out, obviously, but luck probably played more of a part than it should have. The FBO renting an aircraft is entitled to set the standards for that rental. I suspect that more revenue is lost, short-term, than gained by FBOs as a result of such standards. Finally, I've visited and flown at many sites around the country and in Europe and, while I've encountered some rudeness and indifference, not one of them has left me with the feeling that I was being "preyed upon"; quite the opposite, many of them would favor their own well-being, even survival, by being a bit more "predatory". Training a student to ASPIRE to "2 degrees of heading or 1 foot of landing spot or perfectly centered yawstrings" is, IMHO, what a good instructor should be doing and passing the checkride shouldn't be the end of that aspiration. Ray Warshaw Claremont, CA 1LK "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message news:41d311db$1@darkstar... In article , Burt Compton wrote: What decline? My commercial soaring operation is slowly growing. Maybe it is because of our good soaring location, good marketing, good "meet & greet", good training, good equipment. Don't forget, you have the bugs worked out. When people show up for something, they get it. Straightforward, on the nose, no hidden charges. Contrasted with my experience. Over the course of visiting hundreds of FBOs, and dozens of gliderports one thing I've strongly noticed is inconsistency. Some FBOs end up charging up to 5 times as much as others to achieve a license. The students never even know that they could be doing all of their training in a 2-33 for $7 a flight instead of a Duo Discus that they have to reserve two weeks ahead of time and pay for two hours at $180 whether in the air or not. I met a guy who got his Private Pilot Glider license for over $10,000. His best and will solo soon for about $500 total at a differnet club. I'll tell you, he felt that $10,000 was no bargain. The guy is not happy about it, and curses the fact he didn't know what was going on sooner. I know an airplane instructor who regularly does over 100 hours of DUAL instruction for each rating. He tells me it isn't him, his students just need it... There is nothing wrong with offering slick, super duper gliders, or brand new aircraft, or training people to ATP standards before their first solo. As long as they WANT it. But a lot of brand new students come in the door (which takes a LOT of courage to begin with) and they are so excited they are hungry and will take anything. Their ignorance is flat out preyed upon by what I consider to be marginally unethical business practices. Training to 2 degrees of heading or 1 foot of landing spot or perfectly centered yawstrings sure does line the pocket. But not giving a student a accurate assessment of when they can reliably pass a checkride, or harping that training must be done until one can fly an ASW-20 when someone asks for a glider license is a bit of bait-and-switch, and a bit of car salesmanship. Part of the hesitation people have approaching flying is downright inconsistency. I've watched potential pilots try to sort out the prices and requirements, and walk away because the CFI or FBO is just a bit too shifty. I've started recommending to students to use instructors who have a Gold Seal, or who have ratios of dual given to practical test signoff of at most 50:1. Beyond that, I've outlined the widely varying cost of tows and aircraft rental. I'm not saying that charging a lot for rental or doing a ton of dual for a rating is in itself unethical. Granted, there are soaring sites that are in very expensive areas, and there are students who sometimes require more training, or need more instruction in the more tricky aircraft available for rent. And if the operation only wants Duo Discuses, then hey, taht's their choice. But the "black magic" and fog surrounding newbies seeking glider instruction, and the inconsistencies of price and "requirements" sure don't add to the overall reputation of flying in general. Whether it is ethical or not at some point takes a backseat to the damage it causes to the reputation of the industry. I've always been a little leary of operations that don't advertise their prices, either. Maybe that's the gliding "consumer" in me ![]() It doesn't mean they charge too much, it just means now I have to ask a lot of questions. How many of you actively seek to buy an item that says for price: "inquire." When I see that, I usually figure I can't afford it :P If you have a website, and you don't have prices on it, I'm less likely to come visit. You're going to have to get my business, and the business of my students, through referrals. We ain't gettin' rich, but we realize that each customer/student/visiting pilot is golden, brings in a few dollars, and so we show them a good time. Burt Compton Marfa Gliders, west Texas www.flygliders.com Burt is a NAFI Master instructor, DPE, and Gold Seal! That means he gets people through license and at the very least subscribes to a professional group with a code of ethics. That's the attitude that gets referrals. A good value, and giving a customer what they asked for, instead of selling them something you think they "should" want. We are "ambassadors" to the sport. We need to ensure we avoid even the appearance of impropriety. With so few gliderports in the country, each one is an embassy. I think each one should do its best to provide value and be a source of pride to this industry. -- ------------+ Mark J. Boyd |
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