[NSRCA-discussion] Fwd: Another discussion topic relating tonewFAIrules

Bob Richards bob at toprudder.com
Sun Feb 5 16:15:15 AKST 2012


Well, in this case, he did not mention expense. I think the point was that people could fly something they likely already had. The Osiris (and others like it) are not expensive, but they still are pattern specific so sport flyers are less likely to have them.
 
JMHO.
 
Bob R.


--- On Thu, 2/2/12, Peter Vogel <vogel.peter at gmail.com> wrote:


From: Peter Vogel <vogel.peter at gmail.com>
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Fwd: Another discussion topic relating tonewFAIrules
To: "General pattern discussion" <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Cc: "General pattern discussion" <nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org>
Date: Thursday, February 2, 2012, 6:42 PM




I don't buy the expense argument anymore.  The $200-$400 Osiris from 3DHobbyShop winds up at $400-$800 all-up, depending on how you choose to equip it and is more than capable of turning in very respectable showing. 


Now the $650 Vanquish even puts a full 2M plane in an affordable range. 


Peter+

Sent from my iPhone4S

On Feb 2, 2012, at 12:50 PM, "Del" <drykert2 at rochester.rr.com> wrote:







Your right Peter.. The beauty of that period of flying anyone with an Ugly stick or under powered kadet could enter and fly pattern. Attendance at meets was amazing at most parts of country. That style did get some heat as blamed for loss of fields from over flights of homes etc. but if the full truth were to be looked at all flying endeavors loud and noisy aircraft flying near and over homes was the bigger culprit. Pattern was at the forefront of addressing that and mandating a reasonable sound level at the nats especially but bonus points could be award for quiet aircraft and penalties for noisy planes.  
 
The other big advantage was as recently petitioned people would come out and enjoy themselves flying after only practicing the weekend before if at all and do fairly well sometimes. The changes have hurt overall mass attendance but the quality of the flying by competitors has improved dramatically. Some like that tradeoff. Others not so much. Partially because of increased expenses to compete means they can't participate and still feel they made a reasonable showing. 
 
    Del

----- Original Message ----- 
From: Peter Vogel 
To: General pattern discussion 
Sent: Thursday, February 02, 2012 3:15 PM
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Fwd: Another discussion topic relating tonewFAIrules

OK.  Looking at some of the old rule books, I'm confused.  Take for example the novice sequence from 86-87: 
Takeoff
Straight flight out (U)
Procedure turn
Straight flight back (D)
Stall Turn (U)
Immelmann Turn (U)
3 inside loops (U)
One horizontal roll (D)
Landing


The procedure turn, stall turn, and Immelmann sure seem like turnarounds to me, granted to meet the mandatory directions relative to wind you would need to have a free turnaround between the straight flight back and the stall turn, and another free turnaround between the stall and the Immelmann, etc.  So were all the "stunt" turns intended to be executed at show center with a free turnaround outside the box between each maneuver?  


I'm amazed at the amount of "heat" (aka: passion) there seems to have been in the K-factor around the change to turnaround schedules.  I admit I like my 2 "free" turnarounds outside the box in Sportsman between maneuvers 6+7 and 11+12 but I could muddle through without them if I had to, and I honestly can't imagine flying such a disjoint sequence as the ones I'm seeing in the old rulebooks.  Hardly feels like a "sequence".


Peter+



On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 11:43 AM, J N Hiller <jnhiller at earthlink.net> wrote:




The sequences flown were published in the old rule books. Be aware that over the years some of the class names changed.
Some time back I applied K-factors to those non-turnaround schedules to try to understand the migration of increasing difficulty, concluding that the K-factor alone is a poor indicator of actual difficulty. But we all step up to the challenge regardless of the difficulty.
Jim 
 
 

-----Original Message-----
From: nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org [mailto:nsrca-discussion-bounces at lists.nsrca.org]On Behalf Of Peter Vogel
Sent: Tuesday, January 31, 2012 11:23 AM
To: General pattern discussion


Cc: NSRCA Discussion List
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Fwd: Another discussion topic relating tonew FAIrules



 
I was reading some of the archived K-factors and it got me curious, is there an archive of the sequences pre-turnaround?
 
Peter+

Sent from my iPhone4S

On Jan 31, 2012, at 11:18 AM, Joe Lachowski <jlachow at hotmail.com> wrote:
You can log on at the NSRCA website and then proceed to the judges section and click on archived documents. Thanks to Jim Hiller who provided me a lot of these, I was able to scan them in and put them into the PDF Format. Anyone who has anything older than whats up there, send a hard copy to me to scan and I'll have Derek put them up.
 




Date: Tue, 31 Jan 2012 08:45:38 -0800
From: derekkoopowitz at gmail.com
To: nsrca-discussion at lists.nsrca.org
Subject: Re: [NSRCA-discussion] Fwd: Another discussion topic relating to new FAIrules

We have a pretty good collection of AMA and FAI rule books on the website if anyone wants to see what rules were like, or how much they have changed over the years... 
 
Click on the link below:
 
http://nsrca.us/index.php/archiveddocuments 
 
On Tue, Jan 31, 2012 at 8:17 AM, Jon Lowe <jonlowe at aol.com> wrote:

It would appear that the FAI is going down the same road as IMAC, with IMAC's subjective "airspace control" factor.  The smoothness and gracefulness 25% gives a judge a non-objective way to give a downgrade of 2 to 3 points.  Since there is no scoring criteria for it that I could find, other than Michael Ramel's instructions to the judges at the WC, I'm not sure what we do with it.  I would think that his instructions would have been protestable, if anyone had wanted to go down that path, since I'm unaware of any official FAI rule interpretation saying, for example, that constant speed is a part of smoothness and gracefulness.  I'm sure he was just trying to give meaning to a poorly writen criteria.
 
Very sorry to see the FAI going this way.
Jon
 

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