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CAL
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 1:57 pm    Post subject: THE BIG VARIO DEBATE, LETS HAVE FUN ! Reply with quote #1   
i am wondering ?

if your goal was to learn how to thermal not using a vario as an end result

would the pilot be better off not using a vario ever or

using a vario first then as an end result not use one

my next question is if you are going to use a vario as an end result

is it better to start right out using a vario or

better to fly without then fly with one

with all questions being a pilot ready to thermal , please state your reasons, if someone has stated the reason all ready, please right down the same answer or use ditto, i am interested in how many pilots think one way or the other,

Keep in mind that there is no right or wrong just your opinion

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 2:15 pm    Post subject: THE BIG VARIO DEBATE, LETS HAVE FUN ! Reply with quote #2   
CAL,

Sorry, man, but there is only one right way to do these things,
which is MY way. Laughing

Mr. Green

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CAL
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 2:18 pm    Post subject: Re: THE BIG VARIO DEBATE, LETS HAVE FUN ! Reply with quote #3   
red wrote:
CAL,

Sorry, man, but there is only one right way to do these things,
which is MY way. Laughing

Mr. Green


Laughing i hear you, so what is the right way

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jyoder111
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 5:23 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #4   
I'm a relatively new pilot (14 hours) who has flown primarily without a vario. My local sites are in the DC area on the east coast. Every site I fly regularly is ridge soarable in 10-12mph winds. With this buffer against sinking out, learning to thermal has been possible without a vario, especially due to the ridge topography that allows you to visually judge if you are rising or sinking, abeit roughly.

In less familiar locations or conditions, a vario would be reassuring, and increase my safety margin. The few times I have flown with one have been educational. I'll probably buy one when the budget permits.
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CAL
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 5:54 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #5   
jyoder111 wrote:
I'm a relatively new pilot (14 hours) who has flown primarily without a vario. My local sites are in the DC area on the east coast. Every site I fly regularly is ridge soarable in 10-12mph winds. With this buffer against sinking out, learning to thermal has been possible without a vario, especially due to the ridge topography that allows you to visually judge if you are rising or sinking, abeit roughly.

In less familiar locations or conditions, a vario would be reassuring, and increase my safety margin. The few times I have flown with one have been educational. I'll probably buy one when the budget permits.


i have the same luxury at some sites as well, where if you screw up in a thermal ridge lift will save you and you can try your luck on the next one. budgeting is a very good skill to have, glad to see you have your head on straight, when the time comes i hope you have a great time with one thumbsup

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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 7:15 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #6   
Launched a new site the other day with vario turned off by accident. Did quite well well working thermal lift. But things became less stressful/challenging once I got it switched on. I wasn't gonna mess up and have my first flight cut short . I was able to relax and enjoy a very good day.
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AIRTHUG
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PostPosted: Mon Feb 13, 2012 7:49 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #7   
IMHO- it's not about with or without a vario, it's about THINKING and LEARNING.

A huge part of thermalling, WITH or WITHOUT a vario, is FEEL. Feeling whether you should turn right or left, turn tighter or wider, fly faster or slower...

An interesting fact about the human body- we are amazingly sensitive accelerometers. We are also terrible speedometers or variometers. When you step into an elevator and press a button, you feel when the elevator begins to move. Once it reaches a constant speed, we can detect if we are moving or still... until of course it slows as it approaches the next stop. The same with riding a train, in a car, so on... We feel ACCELERATION only.

When flying around, I can FEEL when I hit sink or lift. Once in it, though... it becomes much harder to feel. There is also the feel of the feedback the glider gives us when we hit sink or lift.

FLYING WITH A VARIO A NEW PILOT CAN LEARN TO "CONNECT" THE FEELINGS WITH WHAT THE VARIO IS REPORTING. After a while, the pilot will recognize what they feel as either lift or sink.... but only if they pay attention to what they feel vs what the vario says. If they aren't trying to learn the feel, and just trusting the vario, then it's a crutch more than it is a learning tool.

CAL- you are an example! Your Flytec 6030 displays Speed to Fly. After getting the vario, you told me that you learned you were flying too slowly a lot of the time. If you flew tomorrow and your vario died, you would be able to fly a lot closer to the proper speed to fly even without your 6030... because you used it as a TOOL to LEARN.

Notice I haven't said whether new pilots SHOULD or SHOULDN'T have a vario.... That is because I think it depends on the student, and how they would use a vario if they had one Wink

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 8:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #8   
AIRTHUG wrote:
IMHO- it's not about with or without a vario, it's about THINKING and LEARNING.

A huge part of thermalling, WITH or WITHOUT a vario, is FEEL. Feeling whether you should turn right or left, turn tighter or wider, fly faster or slower...

...

FLYING WITH A VARIO A NEW PILOT CAN LEARN TO "CONNECT" THE FEELINGS WITH WHAT THE VARIO IS REPORTING. After a while, the pilot will recognize what they feel as either lift or sink.... but only if they pay attention to what they feel vs what the vario says. If they aren't trying to learn the feel, and just trusting the vario, then it's a crutch more than it is a learning tool.


As a brand new H2 who only got his first soaring flight a few weeks ago I think this describes exactly how I feel about varios. It's important for me to have the audio feedback that tells me if I'm doing it right or not.

I will admit that during my first ever soaring flight I spent the first 4 or 5 minutes glued to the vario, but as I became less interested in the climb rate and the novelty of the instrument beeping away at me, I began focusing on the feeling of glider above me and how that related to entering or leaving the lift. Now, I don't have any interest in flying without a vario if the conditions are even remotely soarable. It will give me the means to continue improving how I behave in lift.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 9:55 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #9   
Scorl wrote:
AIRTHUG wrote:
IMHO- it's not about with or without a vario, it's about THINKING and LEARNING.

A huge part of thermalling, WITH or WITHOUT a vario, is FEEL. Feeling whether you should turn right or left, turn tighter or wider, fly faster or slower...

...

FLYING WITH A VARIO A NEW PILOT CAN LEARN TO "CONNECT" THE FEELINGS WITH WHAT THE VARIO IS REPORTING. After a while, the pilot will recognize what they feel as either lift or sink.... but only if they pay attention to what they feel vs what the vario says. If they aren't trying to learn the feel, and just trusting the vario, then it's a crutch more than it is a learning tool.


As a brand new H2 who only got his first soaring flight a few weeks ago I think this describes exactly how I feel about varios. It's important for me to have the audio feedback that tells me if I'm doing it right or not.

I will admit that during my first ever soaring flight I spent the first 4 or 5 minutes glued to the vario, but as I became less interested in the climb rate and the novelty of the instrument beeping away at me, I began focusing on the feeling of glider above me and how that related to entering or leaving the lift. Now, I don't have any interest in flying without a vario if the conditions are even remotely soarable. It will give me the means to continue improving how I behave in lift.


i agree that was a good write up that Ryan did, that is what is so good about Ryan not only does he have a lot of experience, he knows how to put it in words,

thanks for you reply Scorl, i am with you, i have no interest in flying without a vario, it is a good way to know the time, how long you have been flying, it logs your flight for you, i remember when my batteries went out on mine, i had no idea how long i was flying, had to guess when i logged it, i had no problem staying aloft, but i sure wanted to know all the info, when you log your flight you can learn a lot as well, you can down load it to google earth and see what type of terrain that creates thermals by where it shows you circling up, so the next time you fly you know what to look for.

A vario is a great instrument that highly extends your learning experience, i feel the sooner you get one, the faster you will learn what is happening around you, though i would never opt to fly without one, now that i have, i could do much better without, i am trying to get a better feel for speeds to fly, my 6030 vario gives the speed to fly so you can get to the next thermal at the highest altitude, this has been fun to work with i will first seek the speed i feel is right, then check to see if it is in line with my vario, this has been the hardest one for me to get the feel for because of the ever changes in conditions, the 6030 vario also tells you what your airspeed is this one is easy because it never changes in relationship with the position of your bar, put the bar to your neck and you will have the exact same airspeed every time, so you can know your airspeed by where you position the bar and never have to look at the instrument for that knowledge again

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:00 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #10   
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Once you're high enough to not worry about sinking out, turn the audio off your vario and try to FEEL where the thermal is. When you think you hit lift, you can glance at the vario to see if you're right.

The goal is to know the feeling, so you don't need the vario any more.

I have been with H4 pilots who have anxiety and won't even set up if they forgot to charge their vario crazy I give them mine, then sit on their top surface all day ROFL

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #11   
Echoing pretty much what has been said, I have always recommended using a vario to CALIBRATE YOUR SENSES.

I learned to soar in the late '70's without a vario, primarily in ridge lift, but also in slope/thermal (slermal) conditions. I developed a decent feel, but then I got my Seagull 10 Meter and a Hummingbird vario.

The vario helped me to get my senses calibrated. Once I had a good feel, I would fly with the audio off, and fly just by feel, referencing to the dial just to confirm if what I was feeling was correct.

If I flew XC or in competition I would have a vario, but since I only fly for the Simple Joy of it, I never use a vario. For me, they're a crutch. I love the simple purity of HG without any instruments or radios. I started in airplanes and just hated all that extraneous stuff like motors and instruments and radios. When hang gliding found me I was simply overjoyed to have nothing more than was minimally required for flight, and 35 years later I still feel the same way.

But I'm an anomaly. It's very rare to see a glider flying without anything hanging off the control bar. To each his own.
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:10 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #12   
AIRTHUG wrote:


I have been with H4 pilots who have anxiety and won't even set up if they forgot to charge their vario crazy I give them mine, then sit on their top surface all day ROFL


I have flown with pilots like that before too. Laughing I have to remember to take mine out of my harness and leave it it home, since all it does now is sit on the ground under my helmet bag next to where I set up my glider. I don't even know if the battery is still good..... ahh


That being said I do sometimes still like having a vario and altimeter when flying the mountains and they can be a good learning tool, if like Ryan said,they don't become a crutch.....

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Last edited by fly,surf,&ski on Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:14 am; edited 1 time in total
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CAL
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:13 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #13   
AIRTHUG wrote:
thumbsup

Once you're high enough to not worry about sinking out, turn the audio off your vario and try to FEEL where the thermal is. When you think you hit lift, you can glance at the vario to see if you're right.

The goal is to know the feeling, so you don't need the vario any more.

I have been with H4 pilots who have anxiety and won't even set up if they forgot to charge their vario crazy I give them mine, then sit on their top surface all day ROFL


ya the day you let me try your 6030, i was working hard to get high, you decided i think i am going to link up with Cal, in a heartbeat you was there on my side, with little effort, when on the ground i asked how you got there so quick, you smiled and said i just have a great vario, it was then i reminded you that i had your vario Evil or Very Mad

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 10:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #14   
AIRTHUG wrote:
The goal is to know the feeling, so you don't need the vario any more.


I tend to rely more on SEEing the terrain getting smaller, though I always use the feeling as a cue for my visual check.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 11:15 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #15   
The most fun air to play in is light, light thermal scratch.
Nothing in your flying career will ever match the joy of doing this.
It can not be done without a vario.

Robin Peterson wrote:
You do NOT need lift to soar. You can soar forever in Zero Air.
You can stay up so long they have to fly up the pine box to plant your ashes in..

In just got an Android 4G phone. Installed
XC Soar with the needed airspace and map files installed first
http://xcsoar-android.blogspot.com/

Then Gaggle.
http://www.appstorehq.com/gaggle-android-172612/app

GPS comes with the phone.

Might be all I ever need again.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 11:22 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #16   
Fred Wilson wrote:
It can not be done without a vario.


Sure it can. It just takes practice.

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 12:18 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #17   
TomGalvin wrote:
AIRTHUG wrote:
The goal is to know the feeling, so you don't need the vario any more.


I tend to rely more on SEEing the terrain getting smaller, though I always use the feeling as a cue for my visual check.



not often, but some times your eyes can play tricks on you, one of our sites POM NS, when you bench you start out by going to the low side so you can get as much ridge lift, then follow the ridge to the highest point, it actually appears like you are sinking, when you are going up at a good rate, it also appears the other way around going from a high point to a lower point it appears that you are rising, when you are actually sinking.

that is just in ridge lift, when circling in a thermal you can definitely see the terrain getting smaller as you mentioned, however the higher you get from the terrain the more difficult it becomes, there are several times when making turns high above the terrain that i am registering good lift through out the turn and getting much higher, as i am looking down i personally can't tell i have gained till i look at my altitude registered an my vario, but as you said maybe with practice i could get better at it, i had this problem loosing battery to my vario, my eyes could not tell a difference, i had to rely on feel

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CAL
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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 12:25 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #18   
here is a very good example of my post above

when themaling you will notice when close to the terrain that you can tell i am going up, as i get high above the terrain i am still circling getting higher and higher but it doesn't appear that i am

http://youtu.be/RsOhRrEWLMc

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 12:40 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #19   
I started at Marina so you really did not need one. When I started to fly inland I could not afford one at first. A few times I borrowed one for going inland. It is nice in light conditions. It is much harder to tell if you are maintaining or going up.

I finally bought one. I got a ball 651 it was very slow in reaction time. I was already turning before it started to beep. I call it my cheerleader. At least once my vario battery went dead and even the backup was dead. It was one of my best flight to this day or at least I rank it up there. Laughing No I do not worry if I have a vario or not. I did buy another vario baurunigur (sp) it is a good vario for simplicity.

My sink alarm is set very high ~1500fpm. I do not need to know I am going down I can tell. Laughing One time I did have it on and I started to turn. I just ignore the vario and turned out. good thing that was my sink alarm....

This year I upgraded my vario to the flytec. I like the GPS plus a few other functions are handy to have. I have not come close to using my vario the way it is supposed to. I have yet to download my flights to computer. Laughing Embarassed

BUT my vario is my cheerleader. cheer

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PostPosted: Wed Feb 15, 2012 1:02 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #20   
Skyhighwoman wrote:
I started at Marina so you really did not need one. When I started to fly inland I could not afford one at first. A few times I borrowed one for going inland. It is nice in light conditions. It is much harder to tell if you are maintaining or going up.

I finally bought one. I got a ball 651 it was very slow in reaction time. I was already turning before it started to beep. I call it my cheerleader. At least once my vario battery went dead and even the backup was dead. It was one of my best flight to this day or at least I rank it up there. Laughing No I do not worry if I have a vario or not. I did buy another vario baurunigur (sp) it is a good vario for simplicity.

My sink alarm is set very high ~1500fpm. I do not need to know I am going down I can tell. Laughing One time I did have it on and I started to turn. I just ignore the vario and turned out. good thing that was my sink alarm....

This year I upgraded my vario to the flytec. I like the GPS plus a few other functions are handy to have. I have not come close to using my vario the way it is supposed to. I have yet to download my flights to computer. Laughing Embarassed

BUT my vario is my cheerleader. cheer


i love that write up Carm Laughing i was hoping you would comment , when i have as many flights as you i will probably stop downloading as well, for me i am still learning from the downloads, but then again when i have your skills i won't be needing to do that as well Laughing

having known you for a while, i remember you commenting that varios are a bit slow, i remember thinking no way, now that i have gained some experience i would fully agree. however the speeds to fly on the 6030 reacts before the rate of climb on that vario so when the vario tells you to slow you know you are going to get lift, it is an amazing instrument,

with that said you could out fly me if i had one and you did not

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