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In thermic conditions I release from tow as soon as I think I'm entering
soarable lift - I don't hang on until an arbitrary height like 2,000' is reached. (I have been known to release at 700' - but my club now charges for a minimum of 1,000' even if one releases earlier so I tend to go a bit higher now - I might have become a bit wiser as well!) Since I must release from the high-tow position to ensure adequate clearance from the metal rings on the rope immediately after I release - if I'm in low tow I must go up to high-tow first - by which time I'm well past the lift and will probably fail to find it. Hence my preference for high-tow during a launch into a soarable sky. During a retrieve I will often go low-tow. At 11:45 01 January 2011, Doug Greenwell wrote: There do seem to be many advantages to low tow - I'm not sure why it's not used much in the UK. On the Junior the rope apparently fouls the nose in low tow, so perhaps its a problem with some hook positions? |
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