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#21
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On Feb 10, 5:35*am, wrote:
On 9 fév, 12:54, wrote: On Feb 8, 8:45*pm, wrote: Anyone else here see Carl Herolds talk at the convention a couple years ago titled, If you fly Mcdready you will lose"? *Actually, he said that was a title just to get attention but that the real title was Fly Slower to Fly Faster, or something like that. *It was fascinating to see all this graphs and flight traces. *It was very convincing to see his data that indicated staying high and not circling was ultimately faster. *I think there may be a threshold L/D value particular to specific conditions in which his technique worked. *Regardless, I now circle as little as possible. MM As had been already mentioned, there are a bunch of reasons why flying slower than McCready theory makes sense. Some are consistent across flying conditions, others are situation-specific. Fist, in my experience, your perceived climb rate may not be your actual climb rate - even using you vario or computer averager, depending on how it calculates average. I consistently find average climb rates looking at SeeYou to be a knot or more slower than was my perception in the air. This is mostly because pilots (and perhaps some instruments) don't adequately count the time centering a thermal with no climb or include "trys", thermals that don't pan out. These two effects reduce your realistic expected climb rate. Maybe your computer properly adjusts for this maybe it doesn't, only some experimentation can tell you for sure. Flying slower keeps you higher, which has a number of direct and indirect benefits that I've tried to quantify through the following example. *Imagine a flight where the lift band is 10,000' to 17,500', the average (achieved) climb is 5 knots, the distance between climbs is 35 miles and there are cu present. For my glider the theory gives an expected cruise speed of 98 knots (dry) and an altitude loss between thermals of 7,100'. *If I slow down and fly 15 knots slower (83 knots) instead, I end up with an altitude loss between thermals of 5,600' and an average achieved cross-country speed that is about 1.7 mph slower. So why fly slower? *By staying higher my average cruise altitude is 14,700 rather than 13,900 so I gain back about 1.5 mph in true airspeed difference. *You only need to find a 0.04 knot better climb to close the remaining cross-country speed gap, or a 0.4 knot faster climb if you ignore the TAS effect. Since we are flying higher on average it is reasonable to expect you'll be able to do this under the described conditions for several reasons. *You will be closer to the clouds and will have a slightly better change of aligining on them to find lift. You will also be higher in the lift band so less likely to fall into weaker lift or will be less inclined to accept weaker lift as you get lower. You will have a greater search distance to find better lift. If I fly McCready in this scenario I can go about 35 miles between thermals before I get out of the lift band. If I fly 15 knots slower I can fly 45 miles for the same altitude range. Lastly, I have found that I have a somewhat harder time sensing and successfully pulling up into and quickly centering thermals if I am cruising at 100 knots versus 85 knots. In the extreme case, flying faster ups you risk of getting stuck down low and having to take a sub-standard thermal to get back up or even landing out. Individual flying style will determine which of these effects matters most for any individual pilot. How you think about this varies with the conditions of the day. If it is blue with a very wide lift band, large, closely-spaced thermals with very consistent thermal strengths you won't get as much benefit from slowing down. The TAS effect is also reduced for lower altitude lift bands. If the thermal strengths are lower overall, you actually have to find a thermal that is more significanly above average (on a % basis) to make up the cruise speed difference. If I change the example to flying 20 or 25 knots slower than McCready it gets harder to see the benefits because the incremental climb rate you need to achieve to make up for the sub-optimal cruise speed goes up substantially. 9B Hi, Here's Ingo Renner rules to achieve fast x/c speed flying a Duo- Discus. -Ignore MaCready and fly one of three speed; 55 for thermaling, 70-80 kts for low weaker condition 90-110 kts for strong condition -Fly straight to your goal with very minor deviation for lift. -Slow down gently in lift and centre thermal in one circle or keep going, no second chance -Leave as soon as climb falls off, -Fly carefully with smooth control movement, no abrupt pull up or push over. -Always fly with the yaw string straight and centered. Taken from a text entitle "Soaring with the master", by Ian Sutcliffe in Free Flight,the Canadian magazine on soaring. S6- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Ingo is a great pilot so I wouldn't quibble that his technique works for him in the conditions he was thinking of when he gave this advice. That said, I can say from personal experience that I have seen world- class pilots pursue very different strategies with great success under conditions that may or may not be similar to what Ingo was thinking of. In particular I see a lot of very good pilots in the high desert of the western US make significant deviations from courseline to seek out lift. This may have something to do with the topography of the site and the lift distribution on any given day. With respect to speeds, it all depends on what Ingo means by "low and weak" versus "strong". His speed ranges cover the gamut and in the end the basic idea is right - don't fly the speed director. 9B |
#22
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Frank wrote:
I'm curious what others are using for inter-thermal cruise speeds for modern 15m (and 18m I guess) gliders like the Ventus 2bx, Ventus 2cx, ASW-27, ASG-29, Diana 2, etc (add models as necessary). According to a fellow club member (Discus 2), if the day is booming, fly 80 kts, if the day is good, fly 70 kts, if the day is so so, fly 60 kts. YMMV. Tony V. |
#23
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On Feb 12, 8:01*pm, Tony Verhulst wrote:
Frank wrote: I'm curious what others are using for inter-thermal cruise speeds for modern 15m (and 18m I guess) gliders like the Ventus 2bx, Ventus 2cx, ASW-27, ASG-29, Diana 2, etc (add models as necessary). According to a fellow club member (Discus 2), if the day is booming, fly 80 kts, if the day is good, fly 70 kts, if the day is so so, fly 60 kts. YMMV. Tony Those sound like east coast conditions with no water. They correspond to 2.5, 1 and 0 knot McCready settings on my ASW 27 - a D2 wouldn't be too far off. It would have to be a truly weak day for me to fly best L/D (60 kts) all the time. Andy |
#24
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On Feb 7, 6:50 pm, Frank wrote:
I'm curious what others are using for inter-thermal cruise speeds for modern 15m (and 18m I guess) gliders like the Ventus 2bx, Ventus 2cx, ASW-27, ASG-29, Diana 2, etc (add models as necessary). Here in the U.S. we have been moving toward cruise speeds much lower than would normally be dictated by using straight McReady settings, but how low is too low? I've also been flying a V2bx & V2cxt in Condor a lot, and cruise speeds there are all over the map, from 90kt to 125kt (fully ballasted) in the same race/weather conditions, with varying results. Any thoughts? TIA, Frank (TA) As someone who changed from an LS4 to an ASW27 last year I did wonder about this quite a bit and how best to learn to fly in a different speed range. I like the idea of 3 speeds as mentioned by some other writers, tip-toeing (best glide), normal (75-80 kts) and flat-out (90+kts), because it's easy to do. I like setting Macready and just using it as guidance, because it's easy to do. I like paying attention to other gliders around me and seeing how they're getting on, because it's easy to do. All that leaves you with plenty of capacity for the important jobs - picking the right pieces of sky, making an excellent job of climbing if you choose to stop, and changing to Plan B if you get the first 2 jobs wrong. After several beery evenings analysing flight traces, it seems I perform best late in the afternoon when you either correctly find, reach and use the few large thermals that are left or you don't get home before the bar closes. If only I could apply that selection process at other times of the day I'd be getting somewhere. And I think I go faster on Condor because if you get it wrong you can just hit restart. For those of you who enjoy other's mistakes, see if you can spot an example of Plan B taking it's time to kick in ... http://www.bgaladder.co.uk/dnload.asp?DSN=77TC3IR1.igc Martin (UK) |
#25
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Mike the Strike wrote:
Stephen wrote: My understanding of the theory is that you will ALWAYS be worse off if you set a MC higher than the thermal strength and therefore fly faster than optimum. Flying slower however does have several advantages, as others have described. That is true if all thermals have the same strength. In reality, thermals have a strength (and size) distribution. On a day with a 5- knot average thermal strength you will find thermals as strong as 8 knots or as weak as 3 knots. McCready theory is based on what *you* get for thermal strength, not what a random sampling of the thermals in the area would produce, so I have to agree with Stephen. Set your MC higher than the thermals you are encounter will slow you down. Of course, we're assuming you are flying a classic thermal flight, and not convergence, wave, ridges, etc. Probably no one reading this thread anymore - I was traveling and got here late! -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#26
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Bill Daniels wrote:
I really liked John Cochrane's paper "A little Faster Please". The message I took from that was that the MacCready setting can be used as a general "optimism setting". I tend to set MacCready with a "gut check" about how I feel conditions will be ahead. If you are bumping along above 17,000 feet, there's no thermal that's worth stopping for since you don't want to go any higher so M could be infinity. On the other hand, if you are low in tiger country, you'll take any thermal (M=0). There's a sliding scale in between. I use GPS_LOG which can average the last three thermals and automatically set M. That almost always gives me a M setting higher than my gut says I should use. Maybe that's why I fly slow. Maybe, but probably not - I think a lot of good pilots do the same. My experience is, if I use a MC setting the same as the average climbs I'm making, two things usually happen: 1) My speed director tells me to fly scary fast in medium or stronger sink (like 110-120 knots), and 2) I get low frequently! So, I usually set it as high as I can without getting stuck low somewhere, and that's generally around one-third of the climb average. I flew contests for many years, and the really good pilots weren't flying much faster, if any, than I was, but they sure chose better places to go, and they knew when to shift gears sooner than I did. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
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