![]() |
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 |
|
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I totally agree with Matt's comments!
When they see Condor, the first question out of most people's mouths is "Does it have my home airport?" But I've come to the conclusion that the LAST thing you want to do in Condor is fly your home airport! It will never match the real life location 100%, and changes to the real-life landscape over time won't be reflected in the computer. Plus, it will encourage people to fly via ground-references; which most instructors and books DIRECTLY caution against doing! Learning to fly the traffic pattern by launching from a bunch of "foreign" airfields will teach pilots to use visual angles like we're all supposed to. Its much easier to do this with a student in Condor, than to actually take them to a couple of different airfields in real life - illustrating another great way in which Condor is a valuable learning tool. I stopped flying Condor after I got my glider endorsement (I was already a PPL SEL pilot). But then after I read all of the various Cross-country books and manuals I returned to Condor and found it to be a GREAT tool for learning how to safely stretch a glide (and find out what happens when that doesn't work out), how to figure out which clouds or markers to go for, how to set a goal and work towards it, and how to center thermals (Condor thermals are a little more stable / ideal than in real life - but that consistency actually makes for really good practice at centering thermals if you set the strength to be weak and the width to be moderate or narrow. If you can keep the vario steady throughout an entire circle, you know you've nailed it). I recently discovered how much fun the Speedbattle tasks are, and how flying these tasks online can really help my real-life flying. In our real-life club we deal with weak weather conditions and so XC flying is very casual - we launch and then see what conditions will permit, and work our way slowly along from marker to marker. It was very easy for me to never get far from the airfield as a result. With a pre- determined Goal, the Speedbattle tasks and other online competitions FORCE you to head out on course and make the most of what you can find. Being on the computer, there's no risk to being daring and trying different techniques. And Speedbattle lets you try each task 5 times - so you can fly it in different ways and see how the outcome varies based on your tactics and risk-level. There are benefits to flying these online tasks even if nobody else is logged into the Speedbattle servers and you fly it solo. This practice has fed back into my real-life flying and made me a better cross-country pilot. I'm still SLOW in my real-life flying; but I'm making better distances and having more fun! I just posted my first real-life flight to the OLC, in fact. Its not too impressive on the surface, but considering that I was dealing with 3000 to 4000 foot cloudbases and only ~4 knot lift, I'm pretty happy with the flight: http://www.onlinecontest.org/olc-2.0...Id=-1550701213 Take care, --Noel |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
New Colibri Tips Document | Paul Remde | Soaring | 0 | June 22nd 05 05:26 AM |
Pocket PC Tips & Glide Navigator II Tips | Paul Remde | Soaring | 0 | December 14th 04 08:21 PM |
Hi, GuyN2Latex here´s the document | Steve Foley | Aviation Marketplace | 0 | August 21st 04 11:43 PM |
Need Pawnee Tech Document | Roy Bourgeois | Soaring | 0 | May 13th 04 05:25 PM |
Hi, techtarget here´s the document | Geo Silver | Military Aviation | 0 | March 14th 04 03:55 AM |