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#11
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
On Feb 8, 5:38*pm, Chris wrote:
On Feb 8, 12:57*pm, wrote: On Feb 8, 1:48*pm, Chris wrote: I'm a relatively new pilot to racing and plan on flying at Montague this summer. Several other young, eager pilots from my club (Evergreen Soaring / SGC) would like to race standard class nationals as well, but have been hesitant to sign up because they feel uncompetitive in a ship like a DG300. I'm in favor of a limited handicap because I'd rather have them fly at Montague than go to Parowan for sports nats. For what it's worth, this won't benefit me since I'll be flying a ship that doesn't get the proposed handicap. Chris Young 42DJ PS: I promise I'll get my act together and sign up. What kind of glider do you fly? UH UH: I fly an LS8. Chris 42DJ- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - So you'll be going to Montegue anyway. Now I recognize the number- it is a VERY good glider. Have fun and sign up soon so they know you're coming. UH |
#12
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
On Feb 8, 8:38*am, wrote:
The US competition Rules Committee is considering doing a one time test of limited handicapping in the Standard Class at the 2012 nationals in Montegue. This would be done under a waiver. The objective is to try to improve participation and determine if this is an effective means of doing so. All conforming Std gliders may compete as usual. Std class gliders only. US handicap list will be used to handicap gliders with a maximum adjustment of 3 1/2%. This range is .915 to .950. Gliders such as Discus, ASW-24, DG300, and LS-4 would get full adjustment relative to current .915 gliders such as '28, Discus 2, LS-8. Gliders with numerical *handicaps above .950 get maximum of 3 1/2% adjustment. We have done limited informal polling and have good acceptance among those we have talked to. We would like input from other Standard class pilots who may be affected. Please feel free to comment here and/or directly to me. UH US RC Chair Wow!!! Haven't I asked for this possibility in the past :-) The odds have just gone to nearly 100% that I will now take my SZD-55 to this contest and NOT Parowan. I always said that I would take my "last generation" ship to Standard Nationals if I got a true handicap according to SSA handicaps. Please confirm if I get this correct: My SZD-55 with an SSA handicap of .941, should get a 2.84% bump on those with a .915? I'll take that and get raceey in Std Class! Sincerely, Tim McAllister EY |
#13
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
Respectfully....
Has the competition committee identified the problem? Could it be that Montegue ( I actually wish I lived there) is next door to China. With 10 in 09' and three this year, and 16 last year in Cordele...I believe the problem is site location and the inablility of working people to get to those sites. Couple that with the technical challenge of the area, a low turnout in a dying class is expected. I race Standard and my limit is NM or east of and willing to give up the Eastern 1/4. I believe , if possible, a more centralize US site is a must , even to the point of using the same site consecutively if necessary. It the Nationals ......You cancel the contest and let the few race with the 18m. If the class dies , it dies. You don't *******ize it with voodoo formulaes and hopes that never prove to be a plan. I understand that there may not be choices in selecting the contest site and Montegue may have been the only site willing. I seriously doubt if I would race in a handicap Standard National. I would change over to 18m and kick their ass......as they leave me in the dust. R |
#14
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
A couple of thoughts as I read through this thread:
(1) If adding a handicap to standard class nationals will help sustain this class by making relatively modern ships competitive, then I'm all for this. It's all well and good to say, let this class die if it isn't viable, but then the value of all current standard class gliders will take a hit. I'd be very happy to see standard class keep Discus, ASW24, DG300, and similar ships competitive, and thus more valuable, since it keeps the value of my ship (an LS8) from dropping. Knowing that my LS8 isn't going to be worth $10k less as standard class dies will make me feel a lot better about Tim McAllister kicking my ass in his handicapped SZD-55. And frankly, I'm fairly certain he'd still beat me even without the handicap, so the better pilot wins anyway. (2) While I recognize Montague is a long haul for a lot of pilots coming from the East, Midwest, and Southwest, the converse is true for those of that live in the Northwest and Central/Northern California and need to go in the other direction. I think it's worth pointing out that over 15% of the US population live on the West Coast and can easily access Montague in less than a day's drive. It's all well and good to say that we should just choose a site in the geographic center of the United States that's no more than 2 days for anyone, but (a) I suspect that this is just far enough that some folks from the East Coast will say its too far, and some folks form the West Coast will say it's too far, and you'll end up with mediocre turnout anyway. And (b) I personally look forward to the challenge of a technical site-- whether it's Montague, Logan, or a place like Perry on the East Coast. If I'm going to take nearly 2 weeks off from work, family, etc to indulge in this chronic disease known as gliding, then at least I'd like to fly in some interesting places. Just my two cents. Chris 42DJ |
#15
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
I agree with UH's suggestion of a handicap at Montague. May not be
able to fly myself at the Nats in my Discus 2a, but will make sure someone can fly the ship there. Walt Rogers, WX |
#16
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
Good idea. What a shame standard class dying. I think handicapping is logical and attractive. Why not widen below LS4 too? What's to lose? So what if it sounds like club? Club is killing it. Club is growing. Standard is dying.
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#17
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
So I've been flying gliders since early 2007 and competing in
Regionals, in the Sports Class, around the western US since 2009. I've placed well enough in 2010 and 2011 competitions to garner a good pilot-ranking and am looking to compete in my first Nationals. Since I'll admit that I was one of the first people UH approached about this idea during the Reno Convention, I'll toss in my $0.02 here. 1) I would appreciate the handicap (since I own a DG-300) and I won't turn it down if offered. I really like the idea of flying somewhere technical like Montague, and its an easier drive for me than Parowan (I can only take so much vacation time in a single chunk). I am sure that with or without a handicap, I'm likely to get my ass kicked in my first Nats. So this isn't about some grand illusion that I can win or that this handicap suddenly levels the playing-field between myself and the more-experienced pilots. But it does lessen the sense that I can't *possibly* win, given that my ship just won't run with a Discus 2 or an ASW-28. On any day where we're cruising at ~75 to 80 knots, I'm going to lose ground - its written into the polar curves of these gliders. Its not as much fun to go to a contest to know that you're at a physical disadvantage and that you have to _rely_ on the mistakes of others, in order to do as well as them. Here's what I mean, using some rough back-of-the-envelope calcs: Look at the difference between my DG-300 polar and a D2 polar. I'm going to ignore the magnifying effects of water-ballast and stick with dry polars for simplicity. MacCready settings in the 3-4 range roughly correspond to the 70-80 knot cruise speed range for both ships. But now look at the sink-rate difference at those speeds. The D2 has a 30-45 fpm advantage in these speed ranges. Now imagine a 3-hour thermal task, which will roughly have about 25% of the time spent thermalling and roughly 75% in cruise. That works out to 135 minutes cruising, and if we apply a 20+% fudge-factor for time spent accelerating or horsing around we wind up with about 105 minutes in cruise with the D2 taking advantage of its lesser sink-rate. 105mins * 30fpm = 3150 feet! So over a 3 hour thermal task in my DG-300 I have to basically find an extra 3000+ feet of extra climb, while taking 0 extra minutes to do so. That's no small feat, considering that normally a 3000 foot climb would take more than 7 minutes in a 4 knot thermal! ....And let's remember that the people who are most likely to have built up their finances to the point where they can afford a latest- generation ship are the same people who are older and more experienced in the sport - so its not like you have a lot of people in hot glass that don't know how to use it. One of the upsides of the Sports Class is that it allows people (like me) to buy our first glider with an eye on basic XC performance and then go race whatever it is we bought. If we decide we like racing, we don't *have* to sell our first glider and buy a different one in order to be moderately competitive. But of course the "downside" is that we may not consider the racing pedigree of our early aircraft purchases because it doesn't matter a whole lot at the Regional/Sports- Class level and that can box us into a corner when it comes time to move up (for example, I bought my DG-300 because it had excellent ergonomics and the safety-factor of automatic hookups, while being a 40:1 ship - its high speed performance was never considered). Now when the price-gap between ships isn't big, its no great hassle. But when you look at having to _double_ your equipment costs in order to make any meaningful upward move in performance, this becomes a bigger deal. 2) While I am hesitant about opening the Std Class up to handicapping (yes, it could prove to be a can of worms and I too wonder about multiple handicapped classes), let's look at the Standard Class aircraft and participation for a minute - First, don't cherry-pick two years and try to make some claim about geography. If you look at the last 4-5 years of Std Class Nationals (as I did), there have consistently been about 12 - 14 ships no matter where the contest was held. This is lower than the numbers in the Sports, 15m, and 18m classes (well, except perhaps the World Class - ugh). Now let's examine why that might be. The performance difference between latest-generation 15m ships and Std ships is not that big; but the 15m ships definitely offer a lot more versatility. With a 15m ship you can use the flaps to make slight gains in climb AND cruise, as well as adjusting your performance to the conditions a bit better. You can also use a 15m ship to be reasonably competitive in 15m, Sports, AND 18m classes (if the 18m contest is held at a site with moderate-to-strong conditions). Given the way that Nationals are scheduled to happen on one coast or another (which is a totally separate topic I'd love to debate some day), being able to compete in 3 classes is VERY nice for those of us with 8-to-5 jobs and/or families that we cannot leave for 3+ weeks at a time to travel across the country. Being able to always attend _some_ kind of National contest in your local region is a boon. But what about the cost difference? How much more do you pay for that 15m ship performance and versatility (versus a Std class ship)? Almost Nothing. On W&W at the time of this posting, there are ASW-27s and ASW-28s going for almost the exact same price. That's why I've been looking at selling my DG-300 and buying an ASW-27. This would be a serious stretch for me, but if I'm going to stretch why the hell WOULDN'T I get something that gives me more class flexibility? A '27 isn't the ideal ship in all 3 classes, but its a heck of a lot closer in all 3 than my DG is in any one of those classes (much less all 3). 3) Since I mentioned Handicapping... Someone brought up the Club/ Sports class. I may be one of the less-experienced folks in the room here, but IMHO if you think that the Sports/Club class is the "beginner" class (at the National level), you're dead wrong. Go look at the experienced accomplished pilots who are running in the Sports Class Nats every year, trying to get selected for the WGC teams. See them hunting the optimal handicap and buying a SECOND AIRCRAFT (or third aircraft, in some cases) to optimize their chances? This class may be great at the Regional level for encouraging participation and newbies (something I have very much appreciated) - but its a whole different animal at the National level. If we're worried about new pilots being able to afford one competitive glider, how on earth can more than a small handful of guys afford two or three gliders, and/or change every few years as handicaps change? Its not like the current Std Class ships are renowned for having the optimal handicaps for Sports/Club class, either - so its not like new folks can run out to buy a single latest-generation ship and be at the top of the pile in both classes. And let there be no confusion: The people doing this are not "evil" in any way. They're perfectly within the rules and their rights to do so. You simply have the conflation of two goals wrapped up into a single contest: US Team Selection and crowning a National Champion. Each has their own set of incentives and side- issues, and they don't necessarily overlap at all points; but it is what it is. 4) There are some fuzzy gray areas in all of this, which you're going to have to delineate by drawing lines in the sand. As John Cochrane has pointed out in some of his writing, people adjust their behavior based on how you measure their performance and what incentives you provide them. For example: Do you handicap in order to try to allow people to be competitive in less-than-ideal gear? Or do you refuse handicapping and effectively make the statement that this is a National Championship and a "serious deal", and just like other high- order sports (whether its downhill skiing or open-wheel race-cars) you have a really hard time winning without the absolute top equipment and a budget to match? (A key difference with those other sports is that they pay athletes and have TV deals; but perhaps you think that shouldn't factor into the equation). It mostly comes down to personal opinions and judgement in this area. The same tradeoff/judgements have to be made about what the role of the Standard Class Nationals is. There's not necessarily a right or wrong answer; but collectively the soaring pilots have to come to a consensus about these topics and then pick the course of action that supports or encourages the behavior an the type of event they want to see. --Noel |
#18
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
On Feb 9, 5:08*am, "noel.wade" wrote:
So I've been flying gliders since early 2007 and competing in Regionals, in the Sports Class, around the western US since 2009. I've placed well enough in 2010 and 2011 competitions to garner a good pilot-ranking and am looking to compete in my first Nationals. *Since I'll admit that I was one of the first people UH approached about this idea during the Reno Convention, I'll toss in my $0.02 here. 1) I would appreciate the handicap (since I own a DG-300) and I won't turn it down if offered. *I really like the idea of flying somewhere technical like Montague, and its an easier drive for me than Parowan (I can only take so much vacation time in a single chunk). *I am sure that with or without a handicap, I'm likely to get my ass kicked in my first Nats. *So this isn't about some grand illusion that I can win or that this handicap suddenly levels the playing-field between myself and the more-experienced pilots. *But it does lessen the sense that I can't *possibly* win, given that my ship just won't run with a Discus 2 or an ASW-28. *On any day where we're cruising at ~75 to 80 knots, I'm going to lose ground - its written into the polar curves of these gliders. *Its not as much fun to go to a contest to know that you're at a physical disadvantage and that you have to _rely_ on the mistakes of others, in order to do as well as them. Here's what I mean, using some rough back-of-the-envelope calcs: *Look at the difference between my DG-300 polar and a D2 polar. *I'm going to ignore the magnifying effects of water-ballast and stick with dry polars for simplicity. *MacCready settings in the 3-4 range roughly correspond to the 70-80 knot cruise speed range for both ships. *But now look at the sink-rate difference at those speeds. *The D2 has a 30-45 fpm advantage in these speed ranges. *Now imagine a 3-hour thermal task, which will roughly have about 25% of the time spent thermalling and roughly 75% in cruise. *That works out to 135 minutes cruising, and if we apply a 20+% fudge-factor for time spent accelerating or horsing around we wind up with about 105 minutes in cruise with the D2 taking advantage of its lesser sink-rate. *105mins * 30fpm = 3150 feet! *So over a 3 hour thermal task in my DG-300 I have to basically find an extra 3000+ feet of extra climb, while taking 0 extra minutes to do so. *That's no small feat, considering that normally a 3000 foot climb would take more than 7 minutes in a 4 knot thermal! ...And let's remember that the people who are most likely to have built up their finances to the point where they can afford a latest- generation ship are the same people who are older and more experienced in the sport - so its not like you have a lot of people in hot glass that don't know how to use it. One of the upsides of the Sports Class is that it allows people (like me) to buy our first glider with an eye on basic XC performance and then go race whatever it is we bought. *If we decide we like racing, we don't *have* to sell our first glider and buy a different one in order to be moderately competitive. *But of course the "downside" is that we may not consider the racing pedigree of our early aircraft purchases because it doesn't matter a whole lot at the Regional/Sports- Class level and that can box us into a corner when it comes time to move up (for example, I bought my DG-300 because it had excellent ergonomics and the safety-factor of automatic hookups, while being a 40:1 ship - its high speed performance was never considered). *Now when the price-gap between ships isn't big, its no great hassle. *But when you look at having to _double_ your equipment costs in order to make any meaningful upward move in performance, this becomes a bigger deal. 2) While I am hesitant about opening the Std Class up to handicapping (yes, it could prove to be a can of worms and I too wonder about multiple handicapped classes), let's look at the Standard Class aircraft and participation for a minute - First, don't cherry-pick two years and try to make some claim about geography. *If you look at the last 4-5 years of Std Class Nationals (as I did), there have consistently been about 12 - 14 ships no matter where the contest was held. *This is lower than the numbers in the Sports, 15m, and 18m classes (well, except perhaps the World Class - ugh). *Now let's examine why that might be. *The performance difference between latest-generation 15m ships and Std ships is not that big; but the 15m ships definitely offer a lot more versatility. With a 15m ship you can use the flaps to make slight gains in climb AND cruise, as well as adjusting your performance to the conditions a bit better. *You can also use a 15m ship to be reasonably competitive in 15m, Sports, AND 18m classes (if the 18m contest is held at a site with moderate-to-strong conditions). *Given the way that Nationals are scheduled to happen on one coast or another (which is a totally separate topic I'd love to debate some day), being able to compete in 3 classes is VERY nice for those of us with 8-to-5 jobs and/or families that we cannot leave for 3+ weeks at a time to travel across the country. *Being able to always attend _some_ kind of National contest in your local region is a boon. *But what about the cost difference? *How much more do you pay for that 15m ship performance and versatility (versus a Std class ship)? *Almost Nothing. *On W&W at the time of this posting, there are ASW-27s and ASW-28s going for almost the exact same price. That's why I've been looking at selling my DG-300 and buying an ASW-27. *This would be a serious stretch for me, but if I'm going to stretch why the hell WOULDN'T I get something that gives me more class flexibility? *A '27 isn't the ideal ship in all 3 classes, but its a heck of a lot closer in all 3 than my DG is in any one of those classes (much less all 3). 3) Since I mentioned Handicapping... Someone brought up the Club/ Sports class. *I may be one of the less-experienced folks in the room here, but IMHO if you think that the Sports/Club class is the "beginner" class (at the National level), you're dead wrong. * Go look at the experienced accomplished pilots who are running in the Sports Class Nats every year, trying to get selected for the WGC teams. *See them hunting the optimal handicap and buying a SECOND AIRCRAFT (or third aircraft, in some cases) to optimize their chances? *This class may be great at the Regional level for encouraging participation and newbies (something I have very much appreciated) - but its a whole different animal at the National level. *If we're worried about new pilots being able to afford one competitive glider, how on earth can more than a small handful of guys afford two or three gliders, and/or change every few years as handicaps change? *Its not like the current Std Class ships are renowned for having the optimal handicaps for Sports/Club class, either - so its not like new folks can run out to buy a single latest-generation ship and be at the top of the pile in both classes. *And let there be no confusion: The people doing this are not "evil" in any way. They're perfectly within the rules and their rights to do so. *You simply have the conflation of two goals wrapped up into a single contest: US Team Selection and crowning a National Champion. *Each has their own set of incentives and side- issues, and they don't necessarily overlap at all points; but it is what it is. 4) There are some fuzzy gray areas in all of this, which you're going to have to delineate by drawing lines in the sand. *As John Cochrane has pointed out in some of his writing, people adjust their behavior based on how you measure their performance and what incentives you provide them. *For example: Do you handicap in order to try to allow people to be competitive in less-than-ideal gear? *Or do you refuse handicapping and effectively make the statement that this is a National Championship and a "serious deal", and just like other high- order sports (whether its downhill skiing or open-wheel race-cars) you have a really hard time winning without the absolute top equipment and a budget to match? *(A key difference with those other sports is that they pay athletes and have TV deals; but perhaps you think that shouldn't factor into the equation). *It mostly comes down to personal opinions and judgement in this area. The same tradeoff/judgements have to be made about what the role of the Standard Class Nationals is. There's not necessarily a right or wrong answer; but collectively the soaring pilots have to come to a consensus about these topics and then pick the course of action that supports or encourages the behavior an the type of event they want to see. --Noel All, This is very valuable input to the RC in working the participation challange. Keep going. QT |
#19
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
As I wrote privately:
1) I think a reasonable handicap range as proposed makes a ton of sense. As an owner of a current generation standard class ship (LS8), I can only see upside to having more guys participate. I manage to lose by 7-8% to the big guns in the class pretty routinely, so I don't see somebody coming out of the woodwork and winning the nats thanks to a 2% bump. If a guy/gal in a DG-300 can get 98% of Chip Garner's or Mark Keene's score, he/she won the contest in my book. 2) More importantly, I think we HAVE to come to grips with the fact that the combination of a very large country (long way to drive), proliferation of classes, decrease in gliding population, and change in the lifestyle for all but the very rich or retired means that the traditional idea of a single nationals may be due for a review. As much as I enjoy the stories of Dick Schreder packing the family into the Winnebago and rushing from Ohio to Dry Gulch California on a Thursday night, it ain't happening for this 40-something with 2 kids, 2 cats, a dog, and a very understanding wife. Using Montague as an example, it's 4 days of hard driving each way. Realistically, that means 3 full weeks off from work at a bare minimum, assuming I get there and have to hope for the two practice days to get a handle on the "lay of the land." To have any shot at being there with enough time to relax and regroup and get in a few flights ahead of time (what I need to do well at a "technical" site), it means 4 weeks. Last time I checked, I have 4 weeks of vacation plus 2 personal days. Sorry honey, you and the kids have fun at the beach, I can't make it... Since contest sites and people willing to host a nationals are in short supply, I don't think we can try to "mandate" central locations. We have to take what we can get. But, maybe we need to look at "national ranking contests" as opposed to a single nationals. Perhaps offer the option for a West, Central, and East "national ranking contest" which can be run in conjunction with regionals (shooting for 2 out of three - e.g. West/East, West/Central, East/Central). Most nationals already are either doubling up or running along with a regionals to get the volume, so that's not a big change in terms of logistics. The big challenge is to figure out the critera for this. There has to be "qualilty competition", but I expect that something like "a minimum of X pilots with a ranking above Y" could be handled without too much fuss. Something to think about... P3 |
#20
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Attention US Standard Class Pilots
I’m still learning to be a contest pilot, so the proposed use of
handicaps in Standard Class is OK by me. And if pure handicapping attracts more people to participate in Standard Class, great! What puzzles me, though, is the use of pure handicapping being proposed for Standard Class itself, but a fixed 2% distance bonus being used when a Standard Class ship flies in 15m Class. The LS8, D2b, and ASW-28 have a 0.915 handicap, while an ASW-27 has a 0.880 handicap and a V2c and a LS10 have a 0.885 handicap. This is a 3% to 3.5% difference, not 2%. And I think that a LS4 and a SZD55 would also just get 2%, just like the top of the line Standard Class ships do. Why not use the correct handicap when fielding a mixed FAI class at a US contest? -John |
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