[NSRCA-discussion] Weight
Ron Van Putte
vanputte at cox.net
Wed Jun 3 19:19:24 AKDT 2009
As one of the guys who is often called on to weigh airplanes at the
Nats, I agree that routine weighing of airplanes is impractical. We
have to build a plywood barricade around the weighing area at the
Site 1 pavilion or do the weighing in an enclosed area like the
garage by the AMA farmhouse or inside the big trailer out at Site 4.
That's doable for the top five or six in the classes, but not for the
entire group.
What's a furnace? <VBG>
Ron
On Jun 3, 2009, at 10:11 PM, Verne Koester wrote:
> Paul,
>
> Weighing a plane right before flight at the Nats is impractical at
> best. The slightest breeze will wreak havoc on the scales. I
> actually have to wait for my furnace blower to kick off when I’m
> trying to weigh my wings in the shop and that breeze is
> significantly less than anything we typically see at the Nats.
>
>
>
> Verne
>
>
>
> From: nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org [mailto:nsrca-
> discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org] On Behalf Of Paul LaChance
> Sent: Wednesday, June 03, 2009 10:24 PM
> To: General pattern discussion
> Subject: [NSRCA-discussion] Weight
>
>
>
> Hi all,
>
>
>
> I do not think we should look at it as a glow versus E discussion,
> but a way to make it fair for both. I agree neither really has an
> advantage everything else being equal. I can see the argument from
> both sides. The weight issue will never be a truly EQUAL thing.
> The glow gets to weigh without fuel , but the plane becomes lighter
> throughout the flight. This can create a disadvantage or
> advantage. The E has to make weight WITH batteries in place, but
> the weight stays the same the entire flight. This can also create a
> disadvantage or advantage.
>
>
>
> Maybe the answer is keep the size and sound restrictions as they
> are and remove the weight limit. There is only so much the planes
> can weight before glow or E will both start to lose massive
> performance.
>
>
>
> Just a thought but seems it is the only way things can become fair
> either direction.
>
>
>
> As someone else mentioned (I think Chris) the planes should be
> weighed BEFORE the flights in the finals. It kind of defeats the
> purpose of making weight if the planes are weighed AFTER the flight
> and they remove items to make weight. The advantage was still
> there to assist with the wind if the plane was overweight during
> the flight.
>
>
>
> Like I said, these are just thoughts.
>
>
>
> Paul
>
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