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axo
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 9:48 am    Post subject: First hour flight Reply with quote #1   
Yesterday was amazing. Personal record on altitude and flight duration.
1 hour 11 minutes, 4800 feet top, 8000 feet gain mosh haha! what a noob you might think.
I flew with 4 or 5 more pilots, in the same clouds. Epic experience and feelings.

We, (me and my friend) got at the park at 11am and flew in dead air. Stable conditions. Other pilots also flew for the sled ride and packed, then left. I was upset but saw the clouds coming in the distant so i heard other pilots talking about a front coming our way. So i waited and in one more hour, we got hit by this front and conditions turned to be amazing.

I enjoyed the flight A LOT and learned even more.

I learned it gets chilly when you are higher and suddenly you want to pee, but then you have a cocoon harness and jeans, so it sucks not to be able to produce some rain to the houses below. Laughing

I played with strong thermals and got spit out of them quickly cuz i still suck. Mr. Green

This group of clouds were drifting slowly and all of us away from the park, so at some point i saw i was on the edge of it and then blue sky in the direction of the landing field, with the next group of clouds very far away. I saw all the other guys were in higher performance wings so i thought, "these guys keep drifting away without worrying because they will be have better glide than me to come back" so i started to wonder if i was gonna make it with my single surface wing. I got paranoid and left the fun zone. Came back finding lots of spots with sinking air -600+ fpm... but still made it ok above the park with around 1200 feet of altitude.

So without a GPS, how do you know if you are getting too far from the LZ to come back? It is just practice or it is better to get a GPS just in case? I do not want to end up having to land elsewhere because i got distracted drifting away playing with the thermals. I consider getting a GPS a distraction for me too. I think its too soon.

I guess i could do some math with the polars and measure spots close to the LZ in google earth to give me an idea of how much altitude i need before starting to get too far away? Not that i will TRY to get as far as i can every time but now i think i need at least a visual reference so i kind of know the limits.

I got my neck and back tired too, i need more work out.

It was a sweet day for me. And flying gets more interesting and full of new things and "first time's" every time.

HG rocks! mosh

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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 10:08 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #2   
congrats axo.You will figure out your glide slope,just keep at it.I still underestimate my glide slope and i have flown the combat for 7 years.1 hell of a view ay,my friend Shocked
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Redbeard
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 10:16 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #3   
right on AXO !!!!! mosh mosh
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day dreamer
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 10:18 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #4   
..
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Last edited by day dreamer on Thu Oct 30, 2008 7:02 am; edited 1 time in total
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wilburleft
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 10:29 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #5   
Axo were you at the Ridge? Dammit I should have gone yesterday instead of being responsible...crap. Glad you got you some!
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PilotGuy
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 11:36 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #6   
Axo, congrats on your flight. It's awesome to get some real air time, and to do it with other pilots in the air is always exciting.

As for learning how far you can go from the LZ, it's experience that will help you. Don't rely on a GPS because someday you'll be flying with one and the batteries will poop out or something.

The farthest point you can reach in calm air will always be at the same angle below the horizon. So tow up on a calm morning and pick a spot below the horizon, let's say 30 degrees (90 degrees being straight below you, 0 degrees being the horizon itself). Fly at your best glide speed for a few minutes and determine if you are going to be able to glide to that spot that you picked out. If it moves lower in your field of view, down closer to 40 degrees, then 50 degrees below the horizon, you're going to make it. If it moves up closer to the horizon you're not going to make it, and if it stays in the same relative spot, then it's the point your going to land on.

Once you learn this point you'll be able to reasonably judge how far you can glide, but of course you don't want to glide as far as possible, you want to end up above your landing field with a safe enough altitude to look at wind indicators and set up an approach.

Also, once you've learned how far your glider glides you'll have to adjust your mental picture in each different condition like headwinds and tailwinds, and also keep in mind that if you hit sink you're not going to make it as far as you hope.

Anyway, keep flying! I had my best flight ever recently and I'm still thinking about it!
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Pete B
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 11:47 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #7   
Sooweeet mosh
Sound advice. Fly where the clouds are thumbsup
Pete
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red
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 12:19 pm    Post subject: Re: First hour flight Reply with quote #8   
axo wrote:
Yesterday was amazing. Personal record on altitude and flight duration. 1 hour 11 minutes, 4800 feet top, 8000 feet gain mosh haha! what a noob you might think.

Axo,

Nope, I think that's a great flight! Smile You're getting the "hang" of this, now. Smile Also, never put yourself down.
The world has volunteers, *on staff,* who will do this for you, at no extra charge.
Quote:
I flew with 4 or 5 more pilots, in the same clouds. Epic experience and feelings. I waited and in one more hour, we got hit by this front and conditions turned to be amazing. I enjoyed the flight A LOT and learned even more.

Some days, you gotta be there, when it starts happening.
Quote:
I learned it gets chilly when you are higher and suddenly you want to pee, but then you have a cocoon harness and jeans, so it sucks not to be able to produce some rain to the houses below. Laughing

One gal that used to fly here could cut loose from her cocoon; she said guys have it easy, they get a six inch head start. Laughing
Quote:
I played with strong thermals and got spit out of them quickly cuz i still suck. Mr. Green

Yeah, I'm sure glad that never happens to us expert pilots Rolling Eyes
http://www.hanggliding.org/viewtopic.php?p=67616#67616
Quote:
This group of clouds were drifting slowly and all of us away from the park, so at some point i saw i was on the edge of it and then blue sky in the direction of the landing field, with the next group of clouds very far away. I saw all the other guys were in higher performance wings so i thought, "these guys keep drifting away without worrying because they will be have better glide than me to come back" so i started to wonder if i was gonna make it with my single surface wing. I got paranoid and left the fun zone. Came back finding lots of spots with sinking air -600+ fpm... but still made it ok above the park with around 1200 feet of altitude.
So without a GPS, how do you know if you are getting too far from the LZ to come back?

Getting back with 1200 feet with a single-surfaced glider, and crossing unknowable areas of sinking air to do it? That sounds like excellent piloting, to me. Even a GPS can't factor in the sink, you just need to allow a healthy (your health) safety margin.

Quote:
I guess i could do some math with the polars and measure spots close to the LZ in google earth to give me an idea of how much altitude i need before starting to get too far away? Not that i will TRY to get as far as i can every time but now i think i need at least a visual reference so i kind of know the limits.

Well, okay. Somebody shoulda told ya... Smile You do have a visual reference on board. It's attached to the end of your arm. Hold your arm out straight in front of you, fingers straight and pointing straight up, looking at the back of your hand. Your thumb points straight at the horizon (for your right hand, that would be the left horizon). There is a vertical distance from your thumb, to your index finger tip. Your glide angle is somewhere on this measurement. Just for the discussion, we will say, it is half the distance from your thumb to fingertip. Put this "mark" on the horizon, in flight, and any LZ above your thumb is out of range. Any LZ below your thumb in within your glide range. If you are flying into a headwind (often that's the case), and prone, you will have a built-in safety margin, due to body mechanics (your head is closer to the hand, then). To either side (flying cross-wind), the hand glide-angle indicator is fairly accurate. Claimed glide ratios are generally lies and nonsense, and you still want to add a margin of safety, to allow for sinking air. You need to fine-tune your glide-angle indicator by trial and error, the same way polars should be fine-tuned. Your polar changes whenever you add gear, or change your angle of dangle. Even a GPS really should not be totally trusted. Have a safety margin for yourself.
Quote:
I got my neck and back tired too, i need more work out.

Yeah, same thing for too much sex, only in different places. Mr. Green You won't get too much sympathy from this crowd, on that one.
Quote:
It was a sweet day for me. And flying gets more interesting and full of new things and "first time's" every time. HG rocks!

The ancient Romans said, "you can never step into the same river twice." Flying is like that. Welcome to the sky, bird-man! Smile

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Nibs
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 1:01 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #9   
Good job Axo!

As for glide path, as others have mentioned, you will just get the hang of it. Most people tend to UNDERestimate their glide so this keeps them from having to land out. Don't worry about the GPS for now, instead focus on your landing approaches and spot landings. This way if you ever have to land out (and if you plan on going XC you obviously will), you will be able to put it down in a lot of places without having to worry. I prefer landing out because I can usually pick a field BETTER than my own (though Wallaby is about as good of an LZ as I could hope for).
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John C
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 1:05 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #10   
Good for you, axo. Excellent write up. thumbsup I am hoping to get me sum on Tues. Mr. Green I hope it will be as good.
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knumbknuts
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 2:16 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #11   
mosh mosh mosh
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skypimp
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 6:12 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #12   
You flew 15 times longer than I did today and I feel like I could walk on water !
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skypimp
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PostPosted: Sun Oct 19, 2008 6:41 pm    Post subject: Reply with quote #13   
Let me change that last part to - I''m feeling vary good with my flight today.
SP
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CHassan
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 1:23 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #14   
I'll go with what the others have said too!
Nice flight!

Don't worry about the GPS. Let your eyes be the gauge for how far you can go. You may get it wrong once or twice. (always try to error in a way you get back higher than you thought! Don't need to hear about a HG pilot being eaten by alligators, because you came up short and landed in a swamp!)

I just recently turned on the feature in my GPS that shows my glide, and the required glide to my goal. These are not good features to rely on. The glide to goal stays fairly constant, but the current glide jumps from ---:1 to 249:1 way to fast!

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John C
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 4:07 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #15   
Quote:
One gal that used to fly here could cut loose from her cocoon; she said guys have it easy, they get a six inch head start.

Hey, six inches might be a stretch. Embarassed Uh, it gets kinda cold up there ya know; yeah, yeah, cold. That's it. Confused
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Pete B
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 5:04 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #16   
skypimp wrote:
Let me change that last part to - I''m feeling vary good with my flight today.
SP


How was your launch and landing?
Pete
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TomGalvin
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 5:37 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #17   
Pete B wrote:
How was your launch and landing?


Mr. Green

Nothing like a sweet landing.

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axo
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 6:27 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #18   
Hey guys thanks a lot for the input. Smile
I will start experimenting the techniques you posted here. Now that you mentioned it, i think i read something about that on the Pagen's books. Rusty memory mine. Time to grab those books again and re read the stuff i need now.

So yeah.. the idea is never make a mistake and land somewhere that i will be juicy meat and bones (actually more bones than meat) for the green buddies with big teeth. Laughing

Nah.. i think it is safe around here. But having to call to get rescued must suck.

Hey Bill! Wuzzup. i never see ya there. I'll let you know next time and pick you up if you want. Saludos a tu señora!

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skypimp
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 10:21 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #19   
The first landing was so so but I just keep on nailing them after that.
SP

Video of my last flight on the thread "Ed Levin 2 firsts for 2 pilots for 2 days"
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skypimp
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PostPosted: Mon Oct 20, 2008 10:24 am    Post subject: Reply with quote #20   
Oh---I forgot take offs, Rich has honed our takeoff skills to Rock Solid thumbsup
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