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Ian
10 km and Cots has just one thing in common. We glider pilots are so keen to discuss technical topics, that really is not significant for the survival of our beloved sport. As you, I am an engineer, but I have realized that we engineers, and there are plenty of us in gliding, just love to solve every poblem with a technical solution, even if the optimal solution is not technical. I mean, logger security, the distance between TP:s, GPS altitude or pressure saltitude etc etc, which we spend so much time on, will we get more new members if we use GPS altitude, skip the 10 km rule or allow COTS? NO...... but it is is damn fun to discuss! May be it is a bit annoying, but I support your proposals for free flight for badges. As always Ian, it is stimulating to debate with you. Robert Ian Strachan wrote: In article , Robert Danewid writes Ian I was present at the 1991 IGC meeting in Queeenstown, just a couple of months after Rays flight, which he presented at the meeting. Perhaps I was fouled again at an IGC meeting, but my impression was clearly that to fly so long tasks we needed more TP:s. OK, I was not at the meeting at Queenstown in New Zealand so I bow to your memory. We have seen all this stuff several times, I amquite sure that eventually we will have COTS loggers apporved. I fail to see what these issues of distance flying rules have to do with the use or otherwise of COTS GPS units. Could it be a fixation of yours, more appropriate for another thread on newsgroup r.a.s.? Anyway as I am sure that you know, I and others are working on rules that might be approved by IGC for the use of such COTS GPS units for badge flights up to Diamonds. The "up to Diamonds" IGC-approval level is currently used for the EW series of GPS flight recorders which are recorder units that need a NMEA feed from specified Garmin GPS receiver units. Do you remember when we went from marking the TP:s with ground markers to cameras? Too right, in the mid-1960s I wrote the rules for and than ran a trial of photographic evidence on behalf of the BGA at a competition at Bicester in the UK. It was successful and I drafted the first BGA rules for photographic evidence as a result. These included the use of Kodak Instamatic cameras which were at the time simple and almost glider-pilot-proof. I remember that at the Bicester trial, one guy with a 35mm camera managed to fail to load the film properly and thought that he had taken 24 or 36 pictures when in fact none were exposed because the film was not winding on. And now we have 24 satellites whizzing around giving position to 10 metres or so. Amazing! BTW, it is more fun to debate with you Ian than to agree with you! Ah, that explains it. PS: what about my other points on no need for declarations for free flights, and why not allow free flights for badge distance requirements on the basis that proven distance is just that, a distance achievement? |
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