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Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?



 
 
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  #101  
Old January 25th 14, 02:49 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
kirk.stant
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

On Friday, January 24, 2014 7:53:34 PM UTC-6, wrote:

For those airports with one runway and you can't land a bunch of gliders line-abreast, I've been thinking about the new GP start (BTW - thanks to BB for coming up with an elegant and flexible approach to make that happen). Judging from observations of GP contests it seems like you might end up with most of a class finishing in a narrow time window (start as a gaggle, fly the task as a gaggle, finish as a gaggle). What do you think is a reasonable amount of altitude buffer to allow, say 12 gliders to land within a few minutes on a single runway? Do we need to abide by the "one airplane on the runway at a time" rule or do people land in formation like the Thunderbirds (notice I didn't say Blue Angels)?


Well, if the runway is wide enough, and everyone stays heads-up, you should be able to put a bunch down as long as everyone lands long. Alternate sides and roll out as far as you can. If I know it's going to be crowded and (via flarm or 4 mile calls) i'm in the middle of the pack, I'm going to look for a pretty high finish! If I'm in front then I'm going to speed up and fly a short fast pattern and land real long. But we should be able to land with about 200' spacing (tow-rope length) as long as everyone goes long and easy on the brakes, and keeps to their side of the runway. First guy holds 60 knots until in the flare and everybody follows at the same speed.

Kirk
  #102  
Old January 25th 14, 04:00 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Wallace Berry[_2_]
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

In article ,
"Eric Bick (1DB)" wrote:

.

Wow. This whole thread is fascinating - I'm looking at flying my first
competitions this season, and finding I'm in way over my head. My comments
are a bit off the main thread, but relevant to me and perhaps others that
aren't competition pros.

The idea of thermaling at 500' AGL or lower is beyond my comprehension at
this point in my soaring career, and entering a landing pattern at 500' -
700' from a mile out contrary to all my student piloting lessons (even though
I can calculate that it is readily doable in my glider).

The rules themselves seem straightforward, even though I have little idea of
how they play out in a contest. And the start and finish cylinder concepts
seem straightforward. All I'm really interested in for my first tries is
finishing each day, flying safely, not doing anything stupid, leaving plenty
of margin, scoring some points, and having a challenge and fun (i.e. wanting
to do it again).

I expect as time goes on, flying more contests will lead to my learning and
appreciating the strategies and tactics discussed in a lot of this thread -
but my main concerns are whether the current rules are in fact safe for a
neophyte to contests and a relatively low-timer. From the discussions, I'm
not getting a clear sense of whether they are or not (specifically as related
to the finish).

I understand we are all subject to sometimes making dumb decisions, or the
weather making our plans (and margins) vanish - but the rules should
basically enable safe flying in contests, even accounting to some degree the
wide variance in risk different pilots are willing to take under varying
circumstances. Reassure me that the rules do enable basically safe flying in
contests. I have to assume they do since the fatality rate doesn't seem to be
something that draws headline attention.

Eric Bick


Hi Eric,

You are gonna love contest flying. I look at a contest as a way to go
spend a week flying cross country with a few dozen of my best friends, a
bunch of people around just to make sure I have great time with tow
availability guaranteed on a predictable schedule, weather forecasting
and tasking done for me, food and drink arranged if I want it, evening
socializing, retrieve crew spring-loaded. Sometimes the weather even
cooperates for a truly great day. What could be better?

As far as taking risks: How much are you willing to risk to win a little
bronze coin and your matchbook sized portrait in the December issue of
SOARING? Not much? Same here. Rules or not, fly to have fun and live to
fly again.

--- news://freenews.netfront.net/ - complaints: ---
  #103  
Old January 25th 14, 04:02 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

On Friday, January 24, 2014 6:49:25 PM UTC-8, kirk.stant wrote:
On Friday, January 24, 2014 7:53:34 PM UTC-6, wrote:



For those airports with one runway and you can't land a bunch of gliders line-abreast, I've been thinking about the new GP start (BTW - thanks to BB for coming up with an elegant and flexible approach to make that happen).. Judging from observations of GP contests it seems like you might end up with most of a class finishing in a narrow time window (start as a gaggle, fly the task as a gaggle, finish as a gaggle). What do you think is a reasonable amount of altitude buffer to allow, say 12 gliders to land within a few minutes on a single runway? Do we need to abide by the "one airplane on the runway at a time" rule or do people land in formation like the Thunderbirds (notice I didn't say Blue Angels)?




Well, if the runway is wide enough, and everyone stays heads-up, you should be able to put a bunch down as long as everyone lands long. Alternate sides and roll out as far as you can. If I know it's going to be crowded and (via flarm or 4 mile calls) i'm in the middle of the pack, I'm going to look for a pretty high finish! If I'm in front then I'm going to speed up and fly a short fast pattern and land real long. But we should be able to land with about 200' spacing (tow-rope length) as long as everyone goes long and easy on the brakes, and keeps to their side of the runway. First guy holds 60 knots until in the flare and everybody follows at the same speed.

Kirk



Okay all the "ifs" and "as long as" made me wonder about the odds of pulling that off. Would we need a procedure?

What if the first guy has minimal energy and ends up in the middle of the runway?

9B
  #104  
Old January 25th 14, 02:26 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Andy Gough[_2_]
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?


What if the first guy has minimal energy and ends up in the middle of the runway?
9B


Certainly if wishes were horses then beggars would ride.

But we are back to having to make rules again and god forbid... graduated penalties. If we have to accept someone will thermal at 500 ft on the edge of a 1 mile finish cylinder we have to accept someone will land in the middle of the runway and cause problems for everyone else that follows.

There are solutions but we won't like them because they increase organizer overhead or infringe on our sense of liberty. The simple solutions are lots of manpower to move the offenders or some straightforward hard discipline.

Operating in confined spaces requires much higher standards and discipline. When we have to ask the question: "What if the first guy has minimal energy and ends up in the middle of the runway?", it is an acceptance that we are unable to rise to the standards because we do not have universal and effective discipline, hence the rules to attempt to overcome these deficits.

The finish can often be an over crowded place. We need high standards and discipline to operate in this environment. The alternative is to spread the field out and give everyone more time and space.

Andy Gough
  #105  
Old January 25th 14, 03:34 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

On Saturday, January 25, 2014 6:26:50 AM UTC-8, Andy Gough wrote:
What if the first guy has minimal energy and ends up in the middle of the runway?


9B


Certainly if wishes were horses then beggars would ride.

But we are back to having to make rules again and god forbid... graduated penalties. If we have to accept someone will thermal at 500 ft on the edge of a 1 mile finish cylinder we have to accept someone will land in the middle of the runway and cause problems for everyone else that follows.

There are solutions but we won't like them because they increase organizer overhead or infringe on our sense of liberty. The simple solutions are lots of manpower to move the offenders or some straightforward hard discipline.

Operating in confined spaces requires much higher standards and discipline. When we have to ask the question: "What if the first guy has minimal energy and ends up in the middle of the runway?", it is an acceptance that we are unable to rise to the standards because we do not have universal and effective discipline, hence the rules to attempt to overcome these deficits.

The finish can often be an over crowded place. We need high standards and discipline to operate in this environment. The alternative is to spread the field out and give everyone more time and space.

Andy Gough


Well said - you have to make an assessment of the environment and the capabilities of the people in it. Then you try to set it up so that the odds of exceeding the ability of the entire system to operate within acceptable limits are low. Wishing the limits were different or that people's capabilities were different won't make either one true.
  #106  
Old January 25th 14, 05:01 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
kirk.stant
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

On Friday, January 24, 2014 10:02:49 PM UTC-6, wrote:

What if the first guy has minimal energy and ends up in the middle of the runway?


You have to plan for that - which is why you keep extra energy in the pattern until committed to land. In this case, until the guy can hop out and get his glider off the runway, you now have 2 choices - land long (same as before, just a shorter runway to do it on) or land short (not a good choice unless you are last in the gaggle landing or are also low on energy, then probably best to land on brick one and get off runway as soon as possible - anyone following you should be able to see that soon enough to land long.

Maybe we need a Condor mission made up that simulates this situation?

Kirk
  #107  
Old January 25th 14, 06:05 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Dale Watkins
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

I read this RAS with thread as a non contest pilot and outside observer. The flying community will never be able to tell a pilot what he/she can/should do to mitigate risk (instructors can only suggest) - a competitive pilot will find a way to work the rules. However, I think the simple flight test would help change the risk taking out of the program.

You are found circling looking for lift (subject to trace) below 700 ft any where on course (ridge maybe lower) you are scored as a landout with a small bonus for making a good landout with downwind final pattern. No pattern no bonus. period. (hard deck)

If you have not started the task (i.e. relight scenario seen in Ionia) in start cylinder below 500 your DQ'ed (why not land a relight?)

You are found looking for lift between 1 mile and 2 miles from finish below 500 FT - scored as a landout with bonus for airport landing and/or bonus for making a pattern good landout.

I my mind all everyone is saying is "Hey PIC - Make a good risk free landing judged by a good pattern for any landing pattern - no crap short cuts - considering each ship has different flying performances - it has to be hard to determine a MFH with balanced equity. 500 ft might be easy for some and harder for others. So just complete a good pattern.

ZEN
  #108  
Old January 25th 14, 07:14 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

On Saturday, January 25, 2014 9:01:08 AM UTC-8, kirk.stant wrote:
On Friday, January 24, 2014 10:02:49 PM UTC-6, wrote:

Maybe we need a Condor mission made up that simulates this situation?


Might be interesting to see what potential issues are. I've only done a little Condor flying and I don't know if it's all that great at "head on a swivel" spontaneously trying to set up landing sequencing from 300 feet.

The only reason I'm curious is that I'm guessing a CD would really want to know what the finish would look like before calling it under GP conditions. It's a bit of a speculation as it remains to be seen how much it gets called.
  #109  
Old January 25th 14, 10:28 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Dave Springford
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

At the 2001 15 m Nationals in Uvalde, we used a finish line and had 69 gliders in the contest. I think this meets the criteria of lots of gliders and limited runway space.

I don't recall any problems recovering 69 gliders on the runway and taxiway with the line finish. Everyone was told to land long and clear the runway.. Crews were waiting at the mid-field taxiway and pulled their pilots out of the way. We crew-less pilots made sure we rolled well clear while we retrieved the car.

You don't need to simulate this, we have lots of experience with it, you just have to go back a bunch of years.

As has been said before in this thread, all it requires is discipline and organization on the part of the pilots, the organizers and the crews.

The finish line is by far my preferred finish gate. A 500 ft cylinder with speed points all the way to a rolling finish is my next favoured finish.

The concept of navigating to some point in 3D space at the edge of a cylinder with a floor for a finish requires too much head in the cockpit at the wrong time. With a line or 500 ft cylinder to the ground, the final glide can be accomplished visually within the last 5 miles and keeps the heads out of the cockpit.

  #110  
Old January 26th 14, 01:45 AM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Sean F (F2)
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Default Is the 200ft below Min Finish Height Rule Working?

Watch the reaction of this kid at the very end of this finish gate...

http://youtu.be/n3i-z2CCeCM
 




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