[NSRCA-discussion] FAI flight time rule

rcmaster199 at aol.com rcmaster199 at aol.com
Thu May 15 13:16:00 AKDT 2008


Troy,


 


You have 8 minutes from start of engine to touch down. I would recommend that one did not waffle after he or she exits the box


 


MattK










-----Original Message-----

From: Troy Newman <troy at troynewman.net>

To: General pattern discussion <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>

Sent: Thu, 15 May 2008 1:34 am

Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] FAI flight time rule









The penalty for going over time is all scored figures after time has elapsed get a score of zero. The flight is not a zero...Just those figures not completed.


 


SO once you exit the box all figures are complete....If you are still not on the ground there would be no penalty per the rules even if 8mins has expired


 


Only if you were not "out of the box" yet when the time expired you would get zeros on all figures not completed.


 


Which by the way in F3A you are not required to call entering or leaving the box. So if you complete the last figure and have the 15meter of straight flight wings level...you are done....After than you can take as much time as you like to land and that would even include go arounds...the rule doesn't say you can't and there is no penalty for it. The landing score is gone so you didn't violate the landing sequence. Before a go around was a zero score because it didn't follow the landing sequence. There is no more landing sequence. Even applying the AMA rule for extra passes because the FAI book is silent you could not zero any of the figures, as the AMA rules state the next maneuver gets a zero. Since all maneuvers are already scored there is nothing to zero and you can't go backwards into the sequence and start taking zeros on figures completed properly under the rules.


 


 


Troy Newman






From: nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org [mailto:nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org] On Behalf Of Dave

Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 8:52 PM

To: 'General pattern discussion'

Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] FAI flight time rule











Jeff,


 


10 minutes for schedules with 23 maneuvers is not much different than 8 minutes for schedules with 19 maneuvers (including takeoff and landing).  With the older P schedule, it was not difficult to exceed 10 minutes if the takeoff and landing sequences were very large and slow (1 minute for takeoff seq, 45 sec to land – pretty easy to save 30 seconds on these alone), and the sequence was big and relaxed.  Now, the Prelim sequences are 19 maneuvers (as are the finals sequences) – which means about 90 seconds less airtime – so dropping the clock from 10 to 8 minutes is not a biggy.


 


My understanding is that the Prelim sequences were shorted to shorten the duration of the Prelims at the Worlds – 2 minutes x 4 rounds x 100 pilots makes a huge difference.


 


Regards,


 


Dave Lockhart


DaveL322 at comcast.net


 


 









From: nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org [mailto:nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org] On Behalf Of Jeff Hill

Sent: Wednesday, May 14, 2008 11:33 PM

To: NSRCA Mailing List

Subject: [NSRCA-discussion] FAI flight time rule



 




While reading up on the new FAI rules I came upon the following paragraphs regarding flight time:





 



from Section 5.1.11






If there is a frequency conflict, the competitor must be allowed a maximum of one 





minute for a radio check before the start of the 3 minute starting time. The timer will audibly notify 





the competitor when the minute is finished and immediately start timing the 3-minutes starting time. 







 





The starting time ceases when the model aircraft commences its take-off roll. The timing device is re-started when 





the model aircraft commences its take-off roll, and time will stop when the model aircraft first 





touches the runway after completion of the flight. The total flight time allowed is 8 minutes. 





 





from Section 5.1.12







 The competitor has eight minutes to complete the flight; timing to start when the flight line 





official gives the signal to the competitor to start his model aircraft  and ending when the model 





aircraft first touches the runway after completing the flight. 





 





5.1.11 seems to say that the competitor gets 8 minutes from the time the TO roll starts. 5.1.12 says the competitor gets 8 minutes from the time s/he is told to start the model aircraft. 





 





If it is 8 minutes total that seems short to me because someone could spend 3 minutes of the time getting the engine started and only have 5 for the flight. I know sequences are shorter now, but, we've had pilots exceed 10 minutes at the Nats so I would think 2 fewer minutes would make even the shortest sequences tough to do. 





 





Any rules gurus out there want to comment? Perhaps electric fliers are getting a break after losing out on the batteries-as-fuel issue. 





 





Jeff Hill





 








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