![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]() In the real World, for the last 40 years, my teaching and practice, in UK/NW Europe conditions, has been: default setting 1 knot, if you're getting low or it doesn't look good ahead set 0 knots, if it's a really good day and you're high and going well set 2 knots, if it's a fantastic day, the best you've ever flown on and you look like setting a record, set 3 knots. If you are tempted to set 4 knots, land, take 2 asperin and lie down, you're feverish. For strong thermal areas like the American South West, South Africa and Australia, add one knot to all the above, except perhaps the 0 knot case. You go faster flying between 6 knot thermals with 2 knots set than you do flying between 4 knot thermals with 4 knots set. The lower setting you use, the greater your range and the greater your chance of finding the really good thermals. This reflects current practice, and it's really interesting. "Range" doesn't really describe the reason, I think. In the southwest USA at 10,000' we have tons of range, we don't stop for under 6 knots, yet flying at 100 knots does better than 120 (go look up mc 6 speed!), and 95 won't kill you. I think the reason is more that flying at warp speed, you (or at least I) lose the feel of the air; I can't adjust slightly to benefit from gliding through rising air. And, I might fly right through that great thermal and not feel it. John Cochrane |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Personal flight computers | kd6veb | Soaring | 26 | January 30th 13 07:15 PM |
Question about flight computers | Some Other Guy | Piloting | 0 | December 5th 10 12:02 AM |
In Flight computers and softwa | Walt Connelly | Soaring | 15 | November 21st 10 01:01 AM |
Zander 940/941 or ZS-1 Flight Computers??? | Tim[_2_] | Soaring | 8 | August 10th 08 10:01 PM |
Zander flight computers | rhwoody | Soaring | 0 | May 7th 08 04:30 AM |