SPEED TO FLY WITH MANAGEMENT OF THE RISK OF LANDING OUT

Authors

  • Yoshiki Fukada Presented at the XXVI OSTIV Congress, Bayreuth, Germany

Keywords:

Meteorology, Training and Safety, Coaching

Abstract

This paper describes a theory of glider cross-country soaring. The greatest contribution on this subject is the MacCready theory. But in modern soaring techinuqe, many glider pilois choose to set a slower speed than derived from MacCieady theory. That is to use a low Ring Setting. Flying at lower speed and higher L/D allows searching over a wider range to select better thermals, and to  improve mean speed. Experience has shown that the selection of thermais to use or ignore is as important as the selection of inter-thermal speed. In this paper, best speed to glide, weakest thermals to use and oplimum cloud chasing rules are computed based on the meteorolory of a given soaring day and a pilot selected level of risk of landing-out. The mathematics underlying the stochastic decisions are shown. A stratery to get the best score at competitions is presented.

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Published

2013-10-09

Issue

Section

Articles