Thread: Final glide
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Old September 25th 19, 08:11 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Final glide

On Wednesday, September 25, 2019 at 2:31:32 PM UTC-4, wrote:
On Wednesday, September 25, 2019 at 2:14:48 PM UTC-4, Eric Greenwell wrote:
unclhank... wrote on 9/25/2019 5:41 AM:
On Tuesday, September 24, 2019 at 8:14:29 PM UTC-4, wrote:
Truth, and a final glide made at max l/d tells me that the guy already screwed up. The perfect final glide is one that gets you home at the proper altitude and at the max speed. He just screwed up on both counts.

The "perfect" final glide has the pilot crossing the finish at his selected height and at at the same speed as the average for the flight.


You don't really do that, do you? I'll bet you fly the final glide rather slowly
if your final thermal is weak, and rather fast if that thermal is strong, and
don't pay any attention to how fast the flight was before the final thermal.


That depends on the task. The MacCready theory for final glide speed that depends only on the climb rate in the last thermal applies to assigned tasks. AATs (TATs) are different, *if* your decision (last thermal) happens before the last turn, so that you can then choose, e.g., to fly farther into the last turn area but do the whole final glide (from the last thermal to the turn to the finish) slower. In that case, the optimal speed is the MC STF that corresponds to the average climb rate over the whole task. Yeah I know it sounds weird. Reference: the Brigliadoris' book.


I was commenting related to a preceding post that mentioned being very fast at the line. To have enough energy to be very fast one usually will have flown too slowly earlier in the final glide (assumes that one did not encounter surprise of very good air along the way). We used to do that so we had enough energy to pull up to fly a pattern. We pretty much don't do that any more.
UH