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The Oz Report

Volume 6, Number 91
9 AM, Sunday, April 28th, 2002
Wallaby Ranch, FL, USA
"Toto, I have a feeling we're not in Kansas anymore."
Named Newsletter of the Year in 2002 by the USHGA

Flytec Championship – 70 mile fish bowl

David Glover was very smart and every day as the meet went on he would drag up folks to thank them for their help at the Flytec Championship. During the week he thanked the tug pilots, the volunteers, the ground crew, the Quest Air crew, the people who put the dinners together, Frank and Steve Kroop, the registration crew, etc. Because it happened every day everyone got more applause and more attention than if he had put it off until the last night, when everyone gets crammed together.

David and Steve did something also very clever, they had GW create a video taking footage and shots during the week. On Saturday night, the last night of the Flytec Championship, the video was ready to go and we got to see the whole video with the sound track. It was amazing that it had been done so quickly, all the while GW just looked like he was hanging out taking pictures and having fun.

But, not only did we get to see the video, all the pilots and tug pilots got a copy of the video last night. It really showed off what we do at a Florida aerotow competition and we’ll be able to take it around and show it to our friends (if we have any outside of hang gliding).

Dave was a kick all week making announcements, telling jokes, getting pilots to come to the pilot meetings because they were so much fun. Belinda commented that we hadn’t seen Dave in his element in quite a while. While there were many many people who played keys roles in making the Flytec Championship such a great meet, I’ve got to feel that it was Dave Glover that really put it over the top and made it so much fun.

One of the key elements to its success (I feel), is that he was able to delegate responsibility to others, and in this case I’m referring to the task committee. I had written to him early on stating how giving the task committee the complete responsibility for calling the task was one of the keys to Tove’s great meets in Australia . David, like Tove, had the personality that allowed him to delegate responsibility and not get tied up into knots about it.

Chris Arai, Revo, and I had complete authority to choose the task each day, we took lots of pilot input and we did our best for the pilots to make the meet fair and fun. I can tell you that there was no barbeque task on the last day (although we did come back to Quest Air) as there has been in the past.

Having a task committee made up exclusively of pilots who without prodding from the meet director or organizer (well, we kept Dave away almost all of the time), is a key to having a meet (there are other ways to do it, but there are very very few individuals who can pull it off, and I can think of only one, Mad Dog, in Australia) that satisfies the pilots. This will continue to be a difficult issue and I hope that there will be a way to work this out at the upcoming worlds in Chelan.

Oh, yes, we did have a task on day seven. First, we heard from Gary Osoba:

Looks like a 7 day meet, thanks to the task planners, meet administrators, and reasonably good weather. Congratulations!

For a change, the entire soaring window today should provide for relatively consistent wind directions and strengths. Should make the planning a little bit easier. Here's how it stacks up:

11am Weak lift. Probably a bit early for clouds to be forming yet. When then do (likely closer to noon ), they should be around 2500'. Surface winds sse around 6. Winds aloft a little bit more southerly at 10-12.

2pm Good lift, strong in spots. Cb 5000' to 5300'. Surface winds sse 5-8, aloft sse 12-14.

5pm Moderate lift, good in spots. Cb could go to around 6000". Surface winds sse 8-10, aloft sse about 12.

"Only a fool would try to predict the weather"!

So we’ve got strong winds aloft out of the south, but good lift also. With the good lift we can come back against the strong winds, and that is exactly what we plan to do. We have really been counting on Gary ’s forecasts, and he has done a great job for us. We really pick the tasks based on his weather predictions.

We call a 70 mile task (no barbeque task this one) that will first take us downwind 17 miles to the west, northwest to Bushnell, back against the head wind to Quest, south into the head wind to the intersection of highways 33 and 474, then north, downwind past Quest to Gator field, then 7 miles upwind for the final glide to goal.

The task keeps us near Quest, while at the same time making it difficult to complete. We come back over Quest to get everyone on the ground excited and it keeps us out of the swamp.

There are plenty of clouds when we start taking off, and it looks like maybe there are too many, maybe it will over develop after all. The wind seems awfully strong also, but it’s too late now to come up with an other task.

We hang around until the middle start time at 1:15 although everyone is in the air in half an hour. We just stay at cloud base for an extra 15 minutes. GAP gives one very little reason to go out in front and leave the gaggle behind. Johann and I have already made up our minds that we will take the middle start time, and maybe everyone else felt that way also, or, when two pilots left, they all decided to go with us.

We can see all the darkness out to our northwest and it looks like we are jumping into a black hole. There are high cirrus clouds that dull the areas on the ground where the cu’s don’t block out the sun.

We spot the guys who took the 1 PM start time and that makes it easier to make our way to the turnpoint through all this very gloomy looking area. Still we’re down below 1,400’ before we connect with the big lift that gets us to the turnpoint and back out again.

Well, that was a downwind task, but we averaged only 27 mph getting there, so the south wind didn’t help that much. Coming back will prove to be much more difficult (and most if not all of the pilots who don’t make it will drop out here), as the average speed will go down to 15 mph.

I’ll charge across some blue areas to get under what seems to be a cloud street, find nothing then push up wind to get under some pilots turning at 8 miles out from Quest, only to find myself at 450’ and working lift that averages 140 fpm, starting out at a much lower value. It turns out that every one will have difficulty making it back to Quest and will get low on this leg.

Christian Ciech and Alex Ploner are doing much better in this meet than the rest of us, and they have zoomed out ahead. They were half a mile ahead at the turnpoint, and I lost them coming back as I went more easterly, but they will also get quite low. They are flying together.

I’m flying with Johann, but I’ve lost him also. Given how weak the conditions are we are all struggling and it looks like a long day if we can stay up. I’ve got quite a few other gliders here with me, so we hang on and the lift improves, as we drift north away from Quest, but with stronger lift it is no problem. Twenty minutes after coming in low, I’m up to 4,000’ and on my way to Quest with Curt, Paris, Ron Gleason, and some other ATOSes.

We are styling now, hitting good lift and staying high as we come into Quest. We can see a gaggle forming to our south that includes the Swifts, so they must have struggled also. I can see Alex and Christian in the gaggle also.

Johann will lose it here and head off to the west to get under better looking clouds, while I’ll continue to the south to join up with the gaggle. Johann, who is in second place, will almost land at Quest.

I catch up with the lead gaggle, which is putzing along. I guess they don’t see any need to probe out into the blue to the south. All the clouds that we had by Bushnell have not come down here in the late afternoon, and there are mere wisps to our south.

With a bunch of rigid wings, Curt Warren, and above us all the two Italian rigid wing pilots, we start punching our way south only to find good lift, light sink in between, and long patches of buoyant air. We stay high and work light lift to get to 5,000’.

We are still running into the wind, so it takes a while, but we have no problems getting down to the south to get the turnpoint with Alex and Christian leading the way. The Swifts start to get ahead of us now, with Manfred taking the third turnpoint and coming back to greet us when we are 2 miles out from it.

As soon as we get the turnpoint, we can drift back north along 33 in strong tail winds and buoyant air. With the lift averaging less than 200 fpm in the cores, we are just taking a little bit here and there. After the long up wind grind it is a joy to drift toward the Gator turnpoint.

Now there are only rigid wings in the lead as we come into the Gator turnpoint and turn to get back to Quest. It’s been a long glide into Gator before our upwind final glide. My IQ/Comp has been acting up and not reporting any final glide info, so I’m just hanging with the four other rigid pilots. Heiner goes on glide and we all just speed up as it becomes clear that no matter that fact that we are going into a strong head wind, we will make it back to Quest without a problem.

Mike Barber who bombed out on the previous day (after passing up lots of lift trying to go faster) goes all out and will win in Class 1 as the flex wings will come in about 20 minutes behind Alex Ploner who takes first in the rigid wings. Then again he'll start fifteen minutes behind us, so you can see how much Alex and Christian were holding back, just tracking the rigids below them. 

Class 5 on the last day:

1

PLONER, Alex, 65

AIR Atos C

ITA

13:15:00

16:20:00

03:05:00

953

2

CIECH, Christian, 47

Icaro Stratos

ITA

13:15:00

16:20:11

03:05:11

935

3

BIESEL, Heiner, 101

AIR Atos

USA

13:15:00

16:28:30

03:13:30

848

4

GLEASON, Ron, 300

AIR Atos

USA

13:15:00

16:28:35

03:13:35

839

5

ENDTER, Vincent, 43

AIR Atos

USA

13:15:00

16:28:36

03:13:36

832

6

STRAUB, Davis, 50

AIR Atos C

USA

13:15:00

16:28:55

03:13:55

825

7

ZEISET, Jim, 66

AIR Atos

USA

13:15:00

16:38:43

03:23:43

762

8

BARMAKIAN, Bruce, 17

AIR Atos

USA

13:00:00

16:34:50

03:34:50

741

9

BRANDT, Dave, 60

AIR Atos

USA

13:15:00

16:48:51

03:33:51

713

10

POSCH, Johann, 112

AIR Atos

AUT

13:15:00

16:54:20

03:39:20

689

11

CAMPANELLA, Mario, 186

Flight Designs GhostBuster

BRA

13:15:00

16:54:52

03:39:52

685

12

ALMOND, Neville, 116

Flight Designs GhostBuster

GBR

13:00:00

17:45:14

04:45:14

469

Class 5 finals:

1

CIECH, Christian, 47

Icaro Stratos

ITA

5804

2

POSCH, Johann, 112

AIR Atos

AUT

5354

3

PLONER, Alex, 65

AIR Atos C

ITA

5272

4

STRAUB, Davis, 50

AIR Atos C

USA

4994

5

GLEASON, Ron, 300

AIR Atos

USA

4983

Class 1 last day:

1

BARBER, Mike, 2

Moyes Litespeed

USA

13:30:00

16:41:15

03:11:15

915

2

WIRDNAM, Gary , 39

Aeros Combat 2

GBR

13:30:00

16:41:37

03:11:37

902

3

BESSA, Carlos, 155

Moyes Litespeed

BRA

13:30:00

16:42:09

03:12:09

891

4

WARREN, Curt, 73

Moyes Litespeed

USA

13:15:00

16:40:29

03:25:29

843

5

ZWECKMAYR, Josef, 18

Icaro Laminar

AUT

13:00:00

16:33:16

03:33:16

841

6

BONDARCHUK, Oleg, 107

Aeros Combat 2 13

UKR

13:30:00

16:55:38

03:25:38

800

6

AGULHON, Dorival, 94

Icaro MRX

BRA

13:15:00

16:45:15

03:30:15

800

8

HARRI, Martin, 31

Moyes Litespeed

CHE

13:30:00

16:55:41

03:25:41

797

9

WILLIAMS, Paris , 1

Icaro MR700WRE

USA

13:30:00

16:56:04

03:26:04

793

10

BERTOK, Attila, 64

Moyes Litespeed

HUN

13:30:00

16:56:08

03:26:08

790

Finals Class 1:

1

BONDARCHUK, Oleg, 107

Aeros Combat 2 13

UKR

5841

2

WILLIAMS, Paris , 1

Icaro MR700WRE

USA

5644

3

VOLK, Glen, 5

Moyes Litespeed

USA

5584

4

HAMILTON, Robin, 30

Icaro MR700WRE

GBR

5515

5

WARREN, Curt, 73

Moyes Litespeed

USA

5440

6

HAZLETT, Brett, 90

Moyes Litespeed

CAN

5437

7

WIRDNAM, Gary , 39

Aeros Combat 2

GBR

5434

8

WOLF, Andre, 117

Moyes Litespeed

BRA

5389

9

OLSSON, Andreas, 27

Moyes Litespeed

SWE

5369

10

ROTOR, Nene, 77

Wills Wing Talon

BRA

5348

Preliminary results are up on the http://www.flytec.com/ web site.


To view the Oz Report on the web go to http://www.davisstraub.com/OZ/.

To view this issue of the Oz Report on the web go to http://www.davisstraub.com/OZ/Ozv6n91.htm/.

Davis Straub
co-author of Windows Me Secrets
"I gotta tell you; you took a total moron and turned me into a guru! I couldn't have done it without your books!"
davis@davisstraub.com
http://www.davisstraub.com/secrets