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On Mar 23, 5:08 pm, Dan wrote:
On Mar 23, 6:29 pm, Gary Emerson wrote: I've peered into the code, but I'm not 100% sure about this. Say I declare a straight flight to a Goal. Start point and Goal are declared. The definition of "Goal" is a "finish point specified in Declaration". Does that mean any flight beyond that point is moot? Or, is that the finish point for the declared task, but flight beyond that may still count for a "free" task????? Once you achieve your Goal, the flight performance is over (GOAL 1.1.14 A FINISH POINT specified in a DECLARATION (see 4.3.3).) But... I don't think you want to use the term "goal" here! Assume I make the Goal, and the day is still going, could I continue from the Goal in any direction I wanted to towards a landing point and claim records/badges for flights beyond the declared "Goal"? In particular, say distance to my goal is 500k and then I go another 500k to a landing (or GPS logged fix) would I have earned my 1000k? According to the SC AL 8 valid from 1 Oct 07, by my reading, once you finish your declaration, your badge flight is over. But, if you declare your 500k point as a "turn point" instead: (SC - WAY POINT 1.1.2 A precisely specified point or point feature on the surface of the earth using a word description and/or a set of coordinates. A WAY POINT may be a START POINT, a TURN POINT, or a FINISH POINT and has an associated OBSERVATION ZONE.), you can then continue your flight performance to a finish point (SC - FINISH 1.1.11 The end of the SOARING PERFORMANCE. It occurs on: a. Landing the glider, or b. Entering the OBSERVATION ZONE of the FINISH POINT, or c. Crossing a FINISH LINE, or d. Starting an MoP.), that is, your landing point, then the 1000k diploma should count (if you satisfy the other requirements), and the 500k leg should count (under SC 2.0.1 A flight may count towards any badge performance for which the conditions are fulfilled.). Note, you can't just use a GPS logged fix - it must be from a fix from a flight recorder/data logger approved to the level of the badge, and it must be landing or a declared way point, or starting the means of propulsion - of these, landing is the easiest (assuming a non-motor glider). Pedantic, but that's the SC for you... You would have to do the declaration with the 500k point in as a turnpoint, and leaving the finish blank, for this to count. You want to be very careful of the terminology you use, and try to use the SC terminology, which is very specific, and less forgiving... Two things - I know little about records, so someone else should chime in on them; second, you would be very lucky to get the 500k and 1000k in one flight - good luck! Too much misreading here, next we'll be having people think this is complicated :-) Most fundamentally, it seems there is an apparent misunderstanding of "soaring performance" in both the original question and the reply by Dan. There very clearly can be multiple "soaring performances" per flight. The soaring performance for a goal flight is over once you meet the requirements to be in the finish OZ/ pass the finish line etc. etc. Whatever other soaring performances may happen on that flight have nothing to do with this, except those that would conflict with the one declaration per flight. I'm lost as to what is meant about "waypoints" the whole point is the flight goal is declared as the finish point. You can of course combine the (at least) 500km diamond distance and the (at least) 300km goal flights as an 500km or longer goal flight and just meet the sum of all requirements, and still keep going and get the 1,000km diploma if you can. My diamond distance flight would have qualified as a 500km+ diamond goal flight but since I'd done an 300km+ goal the day before I submitted them as two separate flights. Lets make it simple you don't need to declare a 1000km diploma, flight. You fly the Diamond goal and you keep on going. Pass 1,000k and other standard requirements and you get your pat on the back from the FAI. Again, there is no concept of every other possible badge award on the flight goes "puff" the moment you flight logger (or camera) records you are in the finish OZ. It's only over if you land (or start the engine) at the finish/goal. Combining various badges or parts of badges that require declared task and those that don't required into one flights are awfully common. And you don't for example have to meet your altitude badge or duration requirements in the flight before you reach the declared finish. At least one of my badges would not have been granted had this been the case. For the original questioner - again if your really care about this take your questions to Judy and get an official response. Darryl |
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