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#19
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aren't electronics fun... just do it the old fashion way.. with cameras and
baro.. can't help a baro spring breaking during calibration.. Sh%% happens.. your crew finding you at the remote airport is not a "landing witness"?? hmmm BT "Mark James Boyd" wrote in message ... I really think that a pilot who flies from release to a point more than 50km away should get Silver distance (as long as that point meets the altitude loss requirements). I also think it's probably so hard to falsify an .IGC file that verifying the logger and the pilot are in the plane for takeoff can be an alternate method instead of needing a landing witness. My first Silver badge attempt flew to an airport 55km away. Circled for an hour waiting for the tow/retrieve pilot to show up and witness the landing. Sent in the paperwork, sent the baro for calibration. Baro spring broke during calibration. Couldn't calibrate. Second attempt Volklogger auto-declared some random course for me. Invalidated previous declaration on paper. Flew 5+ hours, furthest point was 80+ km away. Came back and landed. Sent in paperwork. Got altitude and duration only, no distance. (Fortunately the logger altimeter calibrated fine). Third attempt It was the day after the 5 hour flight. Figured out how to declare electronically. Got off tow, flew the out and return total over 160+ km. Didn't have a landing witness. Apparently towpilot verifying the logger is in the glider and then towing and releasing is not enough. Fourth attempt Took off for an out and return of 300km. Made it halfway, then started back and landed out about 60+ km from off tow. Since I got off tow at 2800, despite hovering over the landout at 5000 for a while, at landing there was too much altitude loss. No Silver distance. Fifth attempt Plugged the logger in, then got the declaration signed. Flew a 120km+ triangle just as declared, including 10K+ altitude gain. Since the more recent declaration (written) counted and the flight was completed, and one leg was greater than 50km, it counted for silver distance. Observer watched the landing (but had to wait around to witness it). Does this seem a little complex? |
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