[NSRCA-discussion] Emailing: Omega

J N Hiller jnhiller at earthlink.net
Wed Nov 11 15:14:31 AKST 2009


George if it is to be flown with equal radiuses it looks considerably
different than the attached drawing. An equal R drawing is attached here.
In any case it would be interesting to fly.
Jim Hiller

-----Original Message-----
From: nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org
[mailto:nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org]On Behalf Of GEORGE KENNIE
Sent: Wednesday, November 11, 2009 3:22 PM
To: General pattern discussion
Subject: [NSRCA-discussion] Emailing: Omega


I've been thinking about this maneuver for quite a long time and thought I'd
pass it along for consideration by the Sequence Proposal guys.

It's meant to be a Masters level maneuver and while it contains no
integrated rolling elements it has some challenging elements. It's a center
maneuver like an M and requires a deft hand to present with symmetry and
grace while still being a "safe type" execution maneuver, in that it's a
looping maneuver performed AWAY from ground level from an upright position
with an upright exit, so the pucker factor is minimized.

It's called an Omega, which should be easily understood by it's apparent
shape. Here's how it goes.  See what you think :


We're approaching center flying from left to right. At a point before
center, a distance equal to 1/4 the radius of the loop, the model pulls
through
a radius of 135 degrees to a 45 degree up line and immediately pushes into
the arc of an outside loop which is flown to the nine O'Clock position
where the model performs a 1/4 roll to knife edge and continues the radius
of the loop to the 12 O'Clock position where the model performs a One
and one-half snap and continuing the loop radius to the 3 O'Clock position
where the model once again performs a 1/4 roll and immediately pushes
to complete the remaining looping segment and completing the maneuver by
pulling through a 135 degree radius to exit in upright level flight.

There's nothing really hard here guys, but the maneuver does demand
respectable concentration. Think of it as a strangely entered loop with a
knife-
edge loop across the top 180 degrees with a snap and a half avalanche at the
top. Roll and snap direction are pilot's option.

Don't be too quick to discount it. I've only done it on the Sim, but if I
can do it, it should be cake for the Masters guys.

G.




































































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