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On Jun 16, 1:48*pm, Andy wrote:
SSA contest report indicates that 2 gliders made contact on the first day. *If the gliders are identified correctly then one continued to win the day and the other returned to the airport missing part of one wing and so far has no log posted. As I mull over what this event means for how we should run contests, two things come to mind 1) If you have a midair, you should be scored for a landout at that point. We need to take the temptation to continue the flight and score points off the table. Even the best pilots can be tempted to do silly things when points are on the table. We could allow a pilot to land, inspect the glider, persuade the CD it's ok, and take off again. But any impact raises questions about airworthiness that just can't be answered for the purposes of continuing a contest flight by an in-fight examination. (In-flight exam helps you to decide whether to nurse it home or jump, but this is an issue of managing an ongoing crisis, not competing in a race.) 2) If we need pilots to abandon the task and help with a serious and ongoing safety issue, the CD needs to call the day off. In this case, it might have been helpful for someone to ferry the glider missing 5 feet of wing back to the airport. If he lost control or had to bail out over the boondocks, a pair of eyes would make a huge difference. Others have suggested that the other pilot of the midair should do that, but that doesn't make much sense. Typically the other pilot in a midair has his own bits of dangling fiberglass, and may not be in the best mental state to fly top cover anyway. The reports didn't suggest anyone else volunteering to help here. A yellow flag might have produced some. We've had other cases of crashes where it was vital for competitors to abandon the task and stick around the crash site or parachute impact. It's asking a lot to expect pilots to do that, especially at a nationals, when their competitors are blasting on earning points and world team spots (with their "radios off"). It's only fair, and we'll only really get the needed cooperation, if points are off the table. Getting another day in, compromised by unfairness to those who stuck around to help, does not seem worth danger to life and limb. If someone needs to abandon the task to help with a serious safety situation, we all should abandon the task to do so. I emphasize, this is only appropriate when we need help from competitors for an ongoing issue, not as a knee-jerk reaction to any event. Does this seem like the sensible approach? John Cochrane |
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