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Part of the reason for having a 5 hour requirement
is to experience changing weather conditions and prove the ability to find enough thermals in such conditions to be able to stay up that long. This means strong, tight thermals early in the day, and weaker, wider, lazy thermals in the afternoon -- usually. I think it is a good requirement. I once got 4:56 and it was another two years before I crossed the 5hr time line -- with a flight of 6:49 in a TG-3A. I found it to be an extremely rewarding challenge. Some of the intervening flights also exceeded 4:00. It is good practice for distance flights; there is a psychological/physical barrier around 2:30 - 3:30, and learning to get past that makes distance flights easier. One might argue that doing the distance also covers the time, but practicing the duration until one can handle that is less troublesome because it saves retrieve problems. I wouldn't want to eliminate the task. At 00:30 30 April 2007, Eric Greenwell wrote: Shawn wrote: In addition, I think the badge altitude requirements are unrelated to XC ability, especially given the sophistication of modern varios. A pilot who can stay aloft for more than an hour is familiar with cloud base. Altitude gain becomes entirely dependent on weather conditions. A XC pilot who can fly 500K, never getting 1200m off the ground (or 100m off the ridge) shouldn't have to travel to where the weather enables a 3000m climb to earn his or her Gold. The point of the badges (as I understand it) is to encourage cross country flight, not vacation planning ;-) My understanding is the badges were set up not just to encourage cross-country soaring, but to encourage pilots to extend themselves. The altitude requirement does that, though some pilots might have to travel to do it, just as some might have to travel to do a 500K. When the 3000m and 5000m requirements were first set, it was never intended that they be done exclusively in thermals, but also in cloud climbs and (later on, I think - not sure) in wave. While US pilots can't easily do cloud climbs, wave is a good option. I believe that most US pilots are no more than a day's drive from a gliderport near wave, and the remainder are no more than two days drive. A couple days drive to a new soaring location for a week of flying doesn't seem to onerous to me! I do think the badges could be adjusted to encourage more pilots extend themselves in their flying, but I don't haven't thought about it much, except to wonder if it should/could be integrated with the OLC. Reducing the paperwork would encourage more participation. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change 'netto' to 'net' to email me directly * 'Transponders in Sailplanes' http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * 'A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation' at www.motorglider.org |
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