![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#11
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Fri, 07 Jan 2011 20:58:35 -0800, Morgan wrote:
Planning and preparation will probably help with the fear more than anything. Confidence in your ability to land the glider exactly where you want at minimum energy without using the altimeter is critical in my mind. Yes, good points - especially the point about not using the altimeter, which *will* be telling lies during a field landing since you won't know how high the field is. Along with that goes not getting reliant on ground features round the home field. It strikes me that a decent final glide computer might be a good pre-xc confidence builder. I'm thinking of something cheap and portable like XCSoar or LK8000 running on a Binatone B.350 satnav. Of course, that does require a way to mount it in the glider you're using. The advantages are two-fold: (1) you can get familiar with this type of instrument before you use it on xc flights (2) if you set a cautious safety altitude[1], make sure the glider's polar is selected and load a task with your home field as the single turn point, the glide computer will continuously show you where home is and how much you're above the glide path back to there. In the right conditions you can extend the local soaring[2] quite considerably. I'll do this if I'm just local soaring on a non xc day. On one of those flights I knew that I had reached the local soaring limit when I was 35 km away from home, but I was upwind of home and at 5300 ft at that point. I'd also confirmed that the final glide computer was, if anything, conservative in its calculations on previous, shorter flights. Using such an instrument in the way I've described and gradually extending your local soaring radius should give you confidence that your instruments and (hopefully, steadily improving judgment) aren't misleading you about your ability to spot your home field and get back to it. You can also fly mini-triangles[3] round your field, which will vastly improve your navigational skills and your ability to use lift to fly along a predetermined course. [1] The 'safety height' is the target arrival height AGL at the turnpoint. The computer uses this along with wind speed, wind direction and the glider's polar when deciding if you're above or below the glide path. [2] 'Local soaring' in the UK means being within gliding distance of home, i.e. that you can get there without needing a climb. UK rules also require you to have a map onboard if you're more than 5 miles from the home airfield. [3] Mini-triangles are small practise tasks that you mark on your map and/or set as a task in the glide computer before take-off. You fly them as though they are an xc task. They are quite short (15 - 20 miles) and with the turnpoints chosen so you're never more than 5-8 miles from home. In good conditions you might fly two or more laps in the same flight. -- martin@ | Martin Gregorie gregorie. | Essex, UK org | |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Country Comfort for EAA | writewoodz | Home Built | 1 | September 30th 10 09:52 AM |
Enhancing and extending your internet presence by aero-domains | secura | Soaring | 0 | September 8th 09 04:51 PM |
"Expanding My Flying Comfort Zone" | Bob Fry | Piloting | 1 | December 8th 07 07:18 PM |
Expanding my flying comfort zone (long) | Ron Lee[_2_] | Piloting | 2 | December 8th 07 03:02 AM |
Extending shelf life of two part epoxy chemicals | Michael Horowitz | Home Built | 17 | August 30th 07 07:09 PM |