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Thanks, Ken! Lots
Wow, the TAT/MAT proposal is a tough one! "Favoring" long-distance landouts over short-distance finishers would be an interesting change of philosophy. Right now all tasks are set up so that finishing the task that is assigned to you is the top priority, and your decision- making flows from there. This proposal seems to introduce the idea that completing the task is NOT top priority; scoring at least a certain distance is top priority, with a good finish being a secondary objective. Hrmm... If this applied only to MATs I might be cool with it; but I'm inclined to say "no" simply because TATs comprise the bulk of the contest tasks I've flown and it seems odd to put a premium on distance instead of finishing the course. I don't like giving short-distance finishers too much credit for "wimping out"; but sometimes getting home and making a good finish is the smart/commendable move! Encouraging people to fly into iffy weather or risk landing out more often in order to lengthen their TATs I've only been racing for two seasons. The poll description is brief and doesn't really describe all of the ramifications of the scoring change. The examples don't show much of the scoring change in terms of long-landouts beating short-finishers (only 1); it mostly shows how the change increases the points-spread between finishers when people finish under-time or with a short flight. If no one had finished under-time in example two, would their scores have still been spread- out by a similar amount, under these new rules? Is this someone's idea of bringing back the "distance tasks" of the old days? Does anyone with more racing experience than I want to provide clarity or more info? Thanks, --Noel |
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On Sep 21, 10:56*am, "noel.wade" wrote:
Thanks, Ken! *Lots Wow, the TAT/MAT proposal is a tough one! * Well, you can probably guess who came up with that one! I did my best to write a poll question that explained the issue sufficiently, but yet was somewhere near short enough to put on the poll. I'm happy to answer questions directly or via r.a.s. I know it's a complex issue, but if we do what is, I think, the right answer, we need to all understand that means a 60 mile, one hour "finish" might score less than a 250 mile landout. It does apply mostly to MAT, but can apply to turn area tasks. Some CDs love 30 mile circles, so it is possible to nick the circles, fly 60 miles and "finish" in one hour, while the "real" task flies 250 miles in 3.5 hours. Current rules guarantee you 600 points (i.e. give you the same as the winner's distance points) for this little gambit; the proposal will not. That's especially a problem in sports class; the circles have to be set large enough so a short course is available for the 1-26; but then the nimbus 4 gets the "nick the circle and finish" option. John Cochrane |
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On Sep 21, 1:21*pm, John Cochrane
wrote: On Sep 21, 10:56*am, "noel.wade" wrote: Thanks, Ken! *Lots Wow, the TAT/MAT proposal is a tough one! * Well, you can probably guess who came up with that one! I did my best to write a poll question that explained the issue sufficiently, but yet was somewhere near short enough to put on the poll. I'm happy to answer questions directly or via r.a.s. *I know it's a complex issue, but if we do what is, I think, the right answer, we need to all understand that means a 60 mile, one hour "finish" might score less than a 250 mile landout. It does apply mostly to MAT, *but can apply to turn area tasks. Some CDs love 30 mile circles, so it is possible to nick the circles, fly 60 miles and "finish" in one hour, while the "real" task flies 250 miles in 3.5 hours. Current rules guarantee you 600 points (i.e. give you the same as the winner's distance points) for this little gambit; the proposal will not. *That's especially a problem in sports class; the circles have to be set large enough so a short course is available for the 1-26; but then the nimbus 4 gets the "nick the circle and finish" option. John Cochrane Hmm, is this an unintended side-effect of an earlier rule change to give long landouts more points (from 400 to 600 IIRC)? Before that change, scores for finishers were spread over 600 pts. The larger spread meant that a 'short finisher' was more heavily punished, relative to the day winner. If the two rule changes are viewed together, they represent a very significant change away from the philosophy that it is more important to finish than it is to rack up distance. I'm not sure that's all bad, but it is a significant change TA |
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Hmm, is this an unintended side-effect of an earlier rule change to
give long landouts more points (from 400 to 600 IIRC)? *Before that change, scores for finishers were spread over 600 pts. *The larger spread meant that a 'short finisher' was more heavily punished, relative to the day winner. If the two rule changes are viewed together, they represent a very significant change away from the philosophy that it is more important to finish than it is to rack up distance. I'm not sure that's all bad, but it is a significant change TA A little bit, but really it is more an unintended effect of applying assigned task rules to MAT and TAT. In an assigned task, if you "finish" you made it all the way around the course, so it makes sense to give everyone who does that the same distance points. In the TAT and MAT, there is the option to "finish" by flying 61 miles, when everybody else goes 250. On an assigned task, this would be counted as "landing at an airport near the first turn" and get very few points. On TAT and MAT, you get to call that a "finish" and get the same distance points as everyone else who went 250 miles. Whether that's 400 or 600 points is a bit of a difference, but minor. We would still be giving everyone who went from 60 to 249 miles the same distance points. So it's really about what do we think of as "finishing the task" when everybody goes different distances. John Cochrane |
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On Sep 22, 11:21*pm, John Cochrane
wrote: Hmm, is this an unintended side-effect of an earlier rule change to give long landouts more points (from 400 to 600 IIRC)? *Before that change, scores for finishers were spread over 600 pts. *The larger spread meant that a 'short finisher' was more heavily punished, relative to the day winner. If the two rule changes are viewed together, they represent a very significant change away from the philosophy that it is more important to finish than it is to rack up distance. I'm not sure that's all bad, but it is a significant change TA A little bit, but really it is more an unintended effect of applying assigned task rules to MAT and TAT. In an assigned task, if you "finish" you made it all the way around the course, so it makes sense to give everyone who does that the same distance points. In the TAT and MAT, there is the option to "finish" by flying 61 miles, when everybody else goes 250. On an assigned task, this would be counted as "landing at an airport near the first turn" and get very few points. On TAT and MAT, you get to call that a "finish" and get the same distance points as everyone else who went 250 miles. Whether that's 400 or 600 points is a bit of a difference, but minor. We would still be giving everyone who went from 60 to *249 miles the same distance points. So it's really about what do we think of as "finishing the task" when everybody goes different distances. John Cochrane Hmm, good point about the meaning of 'finisher'. I can see this change also increasing the motivation to avoid coming home early, even at the cost of a significantly higher chance of landing out. Right now, coming home early is much more preferable to landing out, so the decision to turn back in the face of deteriorating weather is usually a no-brainer. However, if turning back and taking a significantly under-time finish is going to put your score among the landouts anyway, why not continue and see what happens - maybe I'll make it through that man-eating thunderstorm over unlandable terrain after all? ;-). Do we, as an organization, really want to be biasing the 'Sporting Risk' equation in that direction? TA |
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On Sep 23, 7:26*am, Frank wrote:
Do we, as an organization, really want to be biasing the 'Sporting Risk' equation in that direction? TA Exactly my concern with this rule, too. I understand your arguments, John; they make a fair amount of sense... I don't want to reward someone who "took it easy" because their glider has long legs. But a big part of me also thinks its just weird to reward someone who didn't make it around the course! Even though ATs, TATs, and MATs are all very different, they start with the core idea that you have a start, some waypoints, and a finish. And the overriding theme is to make it around the course and to the finish. Screwing up that fundamental "getting to the finish" part can be interpreted as a bad performance and/or bad decision-making. I don't want to reward that, simply because the pilot has big cojones and is willing to fly into a bad situation on the gamble that he or she will rack up more distance points than others before hitting the dirt. And when does one "flip the switch" mentally, to go for that instead of speed points? Would it be on the worst of days, when everyone's cutting the task really short (isn't this when we usually see MATs called most-often, too)? That's when we want to encourage people to strike out on their own? hrrm... Also: What other sport defines a course and a finish, but gives some people more credit if they DON'T cross the finish-line? Like I said befo It seems to me that we're turning the system on its ear. We're moving away from "the course" as the underlying foundation, and moving towards "speed and distance are more important than the course"; which is a big shift IMHO. I'm not vehemently opposed to this, but I still am not comfortable with it. In some ways, it seems like a fix primarily for the Sports Class, since the "1-26 vs Nimbus4" argument only applies there. Performance levels are so much closer in the FAI classes, you're "fixing" anything (no one can use min-distance to gain a big advantage over others). In the FAI classes, the way I see it, you're flat-out shifting the focus of the TAT & MAT away from "fly the course and return at minimum time, go for max speed". You're moving the focus towards "make nominal (or greater) distance in a reasonable time without sacrificing much speed and if it starts to go bad screw getting home and make max distance you can". I see the "problem" with the current system; but if you view competition tasks through the lens of "complete the course, first and foremost" then its only a problem for the Sports Class with its wide performance-level variance. For the other classes its more about how you want to view tasks and what should be the _most-important_ criteria for judging someone's performance. Is it speed around the course and across the finish line? Or is it distance? --Noel P.S. BTW, since other threads on RAS are talking about the Worlds - just out of curiosity do any other countries (or the IGC) have scoring rules like this, wherein non-finishers can score higher than finishers? |
#7
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On 9/23/2010 9:29 AM, noel.wade wrote:
I see the "problem" with the current system; but if you view competition tasks through the lens of "complete the course, first and foremost" then its only a problem for the Sports Class with its wide performance-level variance. For the other classes its more about how you want to view tasks and what should be the _most-important_ criteria for judging someone's performance. Is it speed around the course and across the finish line? Or is it distance? In the olden days, when we had waypoints that were actually points, we had a well defined course, and it was reasonable to talk about completing it. Now we no longer have points, but huge areas, and you can draw millions of courses, so maybe we should drop the idea of "the course" and just talk about the Task. That's what people are trying to complete - "the course" no longer exists, as each pilot picks his own course. And while that is the backbone of the Sports Class, it is also the reason I had little interest in it, and eventually stopped racing as the other classes flew fewer and fewer assigned speed tasks. But I digress... -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "Transponders in Sailplanes - Feb/2010" also ADS-B, PCAS, Flarm http://tinyurl.com/yb3xywl - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
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