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#11
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![]() Once again, real slow. John, I really appreciate you taking the time to explain things "real slow" to me, the 2 brain cells I have left after beating my head against the wall couldn't keep up with you before. Recognize that this is a very tough decision. If you just say "I won't be tempted" you are in deep, deep denial, totally fooling yourself and ripe to make the wrong decision. Think very very hard about this little coffin corner before you get there, have a set of quantitative guidelines ready. Pilots who get this right do it by knowing they will be tempted and guarding against that. After unsuccessful attempts to explain, due to possible brain damage, I will be more direct; I realize that I will be tempted, I accept it as a part of soaring, I welcome it as a test of personal constitution. But, welcome to soaring. Sometimes things don't work out as planned. This is precisely what keeps me coming back. It isn't an experiment under controlled laboratory conditions boiled down to a mathematical formula. I fly on the good days, I fly on the bad days, each flight is a totally different experience that feeds the dark lump of coal which beats inside my chest. And now, despite all your great planning, you're 5 miles out, Mc 0 + 100 feet. 750 feet AGL. You're doing great in the contest so far. Last field below. Trees ahead. Hero stories ringing in your ears. You know they'd do it -- they've said so a hundred times. This is how contests are won, no? Are you really going to stop, with 750 feet still remaining, while the computer says you can make it? Risk management is a big part of soaring, most racing pilots aren't dare devils, they manage the risk according to any number of factors. Gliding is much more than the MacCready theory and technique, it's not just numbers on a spread sheet. Knowing how to control your emotions and distinguishing impulse from intuition are a key part of the game. Maybe yes. I have known a lot of pilots who made the decision to throw away a nationals in this circumstance and land. I have. I know a lot of pilots who went for it, and made it, and were heroes. I know a few pilots who went for it and did not make it. You are diluting the sport to statistics and probability. Being an excellent pilot and a smart man you realize that, mathematically speaking, one of the few ways for the other guy to beat you is by taking a bigger risk. Based on your posts in this thread it appears to me that you are trying to mitigate that possibility by changing the rules to meet your own criteria and are using "safety" as a battling ram. Last year one of my goals was to stop trying to beat the other guy and just fly my own flight. As a result my enjoyment of contests has been increased exponentially - highly recommended. Luke Szczepaniak |
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