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Finish Gate Accident no. 2



 
 
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  #1  
Old March 26th 05, 02:39 PM
Justin Craig
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Default Finish Gate Accident no. 2

As a pilot who practices high speed low finishes, I
think that attention needs to be drawn to the fact
that 85knots is simply not fast enough when finishing
at 50 ft. At that speed, the height gained from a pull
is not going to be enough to complete a safe circuit.

I would agree that this low energy low finish was
possibly as a result of dehydration.

Justin


  #2  
Old March 26th 05, 02:57 PM
bumper
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Default

Obviously there are variables, but the rule-of-thumb I use for trading speed
for altitude is 1 knot = 9 feet. One should try this at altitude first, of
course.

As Justin said, 85 knots wouldn't buy you much assuming you stop the climb
at 50 - - and I prefer 60.

bumper

"Justin Craig" wrote in message
...
As a pilot who practices high speed low finishes, I
think that attention needs to be drawn to the fact
that 85knots is simply not fast enough when finishing
at 50 ft. At that speed, the height gained from a pull
is not going to be enough to complete a safe circuit.

I would agree that this low energy low finish was
possibly as a result of dehydration.

Justin




  #3  
Old March 26th 05, 03:11 PM
John Sinclair
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That's exactly the problem, Justin. The dehydrated
mind doesn't pick up on the fact that speed is bleeding
off, too much, before arriving at the finish line.
A properly functioning mind will see what's happening
and opt for a rolling finish.

Oops, Typos.........make 1986, not 1086 and pre GPS,
not per GPS
At 15:00 26 March 2005, Justin Craig wrote:
As a pilot who practices high speed low finishes, I
think that attention needs to be drawn to the fact
that 85knots is simply not fast enough when finishing
at 50 ft. At that speed, the height gained from a pull
is not going to be enough to complete a safe circuit.

I would agree that this low energy low finish was
possibly as a result of dehydration.

Justin






 




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