Depends on the climb rates of the day and cycle rate. Short cycle and weak 
climbs go for it, the whisps maybe woking well. Boomer day with big climbs 
under big clouds dont bother.

Jim

-----Original Message-----

From: Adam Woolley
Sent: 15 Mar 2013 07:42:10 GMT
To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
Subject: [Aus-soaring] Intermediate/short term goals

Everyone knows something that another doesn't know in soaring. Trying to figure 
out the below, any thoughts from the floor?



The scenario: You've just left a CU, with the cloud direct on track being your 
target cloud between 3-5km away with an average climb expected, direct is blue 
and normal sink. 30* to your left/right is a whisp, not one that you'd use to 
climb in - but one that you could deviate too in order to get reduced sink or a 
hundred feet of altitude.

Do you, go direct through the sinking air, or cover extra track miles to the 
whisp that you know you're not going to climb in, but get remarkably reduced 
sink (or even a small gain in height)?

For me, I either always just lose out (more often than not) when getting to the 
next CU, or gain a massive advantage with a 1000' height gain on a competitor 
in that short cruise.

Have you got any rough 'rules of thumb' that you use in order to decide if the 
short term deviation is worth it or not?

ie, how can I get to the next CU by beating the other competitors by second a 
mile (as G.Moffat would say) if it's possible overall.


Cheers,
Woolley
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