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"The Future of rules and classes." This one is published (in German)
in this month's Segelfliegen. If you don't speak German (like me), here's the English version http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...nd_classes.pdf or, more generally http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...h/Papers/#misc Ok, this is the last one for a while. John Cochrane |
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On 05/12/2011 3:18 PM, John Cochrane wrote:
"The Future of rules and classes." This one is published (in German) in this month's Segelfliegen. If you don't speak German (like me), here's the English version http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...nd_classes.pdf or, more generally http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...h/Papers/#misc Ok, this is the last one for a while. John Cochrane --- Quote --- The US uses a start cylinder with a top well below cloudbase. The cylinder removes the concentration of traffic at the most favorable, upwind edge of the line. Pilots must spend two minutes below the top of the cylinder before starting. This is more practical than enforcing a speed limit. While anything can be improved, this geometry gives much less incentive for unsafe flying --- End Quote --- Hi John, As usual a well written article with interesting points. From personal experience I do not like the height and time restriction. I understand the reasoning behind the rule but I feel that it promotes unsafe flying by making the pilot spend too much time with his head down. Instead of looking out we are watching the altimeter and watch in order to get a valid start. Thanks for writing the articles, great food for thought. Luke Szczepaniak |
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--- End Quote ---
Hi John, As usual a well written article with interesting points. *From personal experience I do not like the height and time restriction.. * I understand the reasoning behind the rule but I feel that it promotes unsafe flying by making the pilot spend too much time with his head down. *Instead of looking out we are watching the altimeter and watch in order to get a valid start. Thanks for writing the articles, great food for thought. Luke Szczepaniak Yes, it has its limits. But wait until you try circling in the clouds with 50 other gliders, all gaming an unlimited-altitude gate, or dodging the guys diving out of the clouds at VNE to nick a gate with limited altitude but no time or speed limit. Can you think of a better way? That's a serious invitation. John Cochrane |
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On 05/13/2011 10:00 AM, John Cochrane wrote:
--- End Quote --- Hi John, As usual a well written article with interesting points. From personal experience I do not like the height and time restriction. I understand the reasoning behind the rule but I feel that it promotes unsafe flying by making the pilot spend too much time with his head down. Instead of looking out we are watching the altimeter and watch in order to get a valid start. Thanks for writing the articles, great food for thought. Luke Szczepaniak Yes, it has its limits. But wait until you try circling in the clouds with 50 other gliders, all gaming an unlimited-altitude gate, or dodging the guys diving out of the clouds at VNE to nick a gate with limited altitude but no time or speed limit. Can you think of a better way? That's a serious invitation. John Cochrane I obviously don't have the experience you do, the largest contest I have been in before the implementation of the new rules had about 60 gliders. The previous situation was much safer as there was a visual reference outside of the cockpit. It is much easier to stay "clear of cloud" rather than trying to stay below "5000 feet" on the altimeter let alone trying to guess what the Flight Recorder is doing. I rather be at cloud base knowing that the guys up there with me are looking out as opposed to being 1000 feet below the cloud with all of us looking at our altimeters and watches. The current rules haven't resolved the problem they simply shifted it down below cloud base. They have compressed the gaggles to a reduced volume of air, and added to pilot workload by unnecessarily complicating the start gate management. Luke Szczepaniak |
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On Thu, 12 May 2011 12:18:29 -0700 (PDT), John Cochrane
wrote: "The Future of rules and classes." This one is published (in German) in this month's Segelfliegen. If you don't speak German (like me), here's the English version I agree with you. There are differences between the US and EU situations, and even inside Europe many instances are different in some countries or groups of countries. Some parts of your analysis may be a little US-biased. There are a few points I'd like to discuss in your very interesting paper: the World Class - I am pretty sure there has been a marketing study, on behalf of the IGC by an US University. The conclusion predicted a market in the thousands of gliders of the (then) proposed World Class. That must have been a major issue in the approval of the Class by the IGC delegates. I have the impression that the current decision (the 13,5m Class) is already taken, and going to get only minor adjustments so your comments may have no chance to be seriously examined. The idea is probably something like "the World Class is dead, some gliders are there, we have received some proposals, there are also some new light gliders without a niche for competition.. let's give it a try". the Finish height - I am a strong believer in the need to separate the competitive stress of the final glide, from the survival stress of the actual landing. Nevertheless, when we tried it, we got a few very bad remarks. Indifferent was instead the word for the majority (something like, "it works but we don't need it"). There seems to be room for mistakes and new accidents: a) the pilot on a marginal final glide to the "hi-finish" will watch the altimeter, pull progressively back on the stick, then stall/spin on the finish line (happened), b) the pilot comes in fast, then pulls-up to the finish alt. creating danger for the followers (happened), c) the pilot makes it to the airfield with no speed points, then complaining for weeks about him "completing" the task under "natural" rules but failing to comply with the "arbitrary" rule (happened). d) the pilot's attention is moved mainly to the altimeter in the last few seconds (happens to me). aldo cernezzi (competition pilot) www.voloavela.it |
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not a competition pilot, yet.
what would the problems be with defining a start and finish similar to that used for FAI badges and records? perhaps not a 1 km sector but maybe just use an unlimited altitude cylinder. whenever you leave the cylinder last is your start, and whenever you re-enter the cylinder is your finish, but you must finish within 1000 m vertically of the start. |
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On Fri, 13 May 2011 10:53:06 -0400, Luke wrote:
I rather be at cloud base knowing that the guys up there with me are looking out as opposed to being 1000 feet below the cloud with all of us looking at our altimeters and watches. You'll not only be looking at altimeters - you'll be looking at airspeed indicators, too. The procedure in question was first used in the Luesse WGC. The German 15m class team members described the situation like this: 15 gliders at maximum altitude in the same circle, trying to gain as much energy (read: speed) as possible. One of the most dangerous situations they ever experienced - day after day. Cheers Andreas |
#8
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![]() The procedure in question was first used in the Luesse WGC. The German 15m class team members described the situation like this: 15 gliders at maximum altitude in the same circle, trying to gain as much energy (read: speed) as possible. One of the most dangerous situations they ever experienced - day after day. Cheers Andreas Interesting. My experience at Szeged (and otherwise with unlimited altitude gates) is exactly the same -- except it's in clouds! If the top of the start area is properly set, it's easy to climb up to it. Therefore, you do not need to spend any time at all in such a monster gaggle. Stay a few hundred meters below the top, then climb up when it's time to go. In the US you are allowed to start out the top of the cylinder, which makes it even easier. There is just no need to spend lots of time in such a dangerous situation. It sounds to me like your pilots had not evolved the right strategy to deal with an altitude limited gate. That's understandable. US pilots were doing the same thing for a while after the limited altitude start was implemented. By and large we've all learned it's not necessary. John Cochrane |
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On May 12, 2:18*pm, John Cochrane
wrote: "The Future of rules and classes." This one is published (in German) in this month's Segelfliegen. If you don't speak German (like me), here's the English version http://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john...Papers/future_... or, more generallyhttp://faculty.chicagobooth.edu/john.cochrane/research/Papers/#misc Ok, this is the last one for a while. John Cochrane As usual, John, a great article. Just one minor nitpick - Top Gun is Navy, not Air Force (AF has the Weapons School, and Red Flag). And the hard deck (it was 10,000' when I flew in F-4s, it's 8000' now for F-15s, I think, due to their better dive recovery capabilities) is in use throughout the Air Force and Navy, and probably all other airforces when practicing air-to-air combat. As you say, it's the simulated ground, so if you punch through it during a fight - you lose. Of course, if you can sucker the guy chasing you below it, he loses! I still think we need to work on some aspects of our starts and finishes. The altitude limit means that on a good day, we have several gliders running around at high speed/high G winding up to pop up through the top when the gate opens or the 2 minutes are up. It shouldn't happen ("why the rush") but it still does. Not sure how to fix this. And the finishes still require too much clock-watching. I do not want to be staring at my altimeter on final glide - I want to be looking out the window! We are getting better with the graduated penalty if below the finish height - ideally it should be a finish window that is points-neutral within a reasonable altitude spread (if lower, then subtract points - or add time - equal to the time that would have been spent in the last thermal to get the height needed, for example). Cheers, Kirk 66 |
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On May 13, 10:13*am, Tony wrote:
not a competition pilot, yet. what would the problems be with defining a start and finish similar to that used for FAI badges and records? *perhaps not a 1 km sector but maybe just use an unlimited altitude cylinder. *whenever you leave the cylinder last is your start, and whenever you re-enter the cylinder is your finish, but you must finish within 1000 m vertically of the start. Tony, imagine a weak day, with a few good thermals, and 40 gliders launching. First glider launches, finds a good thermal, starts slowly climbing. An hour later, the last glider launches and starts looking for lift - down at 2000' agl. 15 minutes later, the gate opens, and the first glider, having worked his way up to 6000', starts. Last Guy, meanwhile, is still struggling at 2500'. An hour later, he finally starts... The idea of the altitude limit is to give everyone an equal chance to get up after launch and get setup to start. Otherwise, grid position can win the day! Kirk 66 |
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