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Old March 9th 12, 04:28 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Chip Bearden[_2_]
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Posts: 93
Default Article on glide strategy

Great article, John, and another valuable service (as usual)! I like
to think it analyzes and explains what many pilots have been doing
somewhat intuitively (based on experience) but I suspect we all have
our own style.

Often I will leave the MC set as speed to fly but keep climbing in
what may be the last thermal. If the climb rate is above MC, I just
keep climbing, of course. As the thermal weakens and they converge and
I'm now above glide path, I bump the MC setting up enough to push the
final glide margin down to zero (though I've still got my 300 or 500
goal margin set) to see how "fat" I am. I'm frequently surprised at
how quickly the MC settings increase to what seem to be absurd levels
in the East, which is another way of saying that using very high MC
settings doesn't give you nearly the unassailable safety margin (in
feet) you might think. I usually don't fly that absurdly high MC
setting until I'm fairly close in (and/or over landable terrain or
with good clouds and/or markers ahead to pick up a little extra). In
fact, I'll switch back and forth and to see what the MC setting is
that would take me all the way home and whether it's increasing or
decreasing vs. what is my margin over final glide at cruise MC and
whether that's increasing or decreasing. No wonder final glides are so
confusing.

This argues for decoupling final glide MC from speed to fly MC, as you
suggest.

Chip Bearden
ASW 24 "JB"
U.S.A.