Gee Matthew, there is no ‘like’ tab.

From: Matthew Scutter 
Sent: Friday, October 31, 2014 4:22 PM
To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia. 
Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Bizarre Comp Rules - in the shit

Official report from who exactly?

On Fri, Oct 31, 2014 at 12:27 AM, Gary Stevenson <[email protected]> wrote:

  Hi Paul,

  As I somewhat earlier said, we should wait for the official report, and  full 
knowledge of the facts,  before trying to draw ANY definitive conclusions. 
Given this, I  therefore was  NOT  making any judgement as such,  at all. 

  Other than that,  you are in general  perfectly correct, and your further 
comments/conclusions are astute and bear thinking about. 

  From what Jim choose to tell us, there is a difference between his final 
glide and that of the other two pilots who also outlanded close to home. Jim 
ended up in a situation where he had nowhere to go. In contrast, the other 2 
pilots safely landed, without incident, in a suitable paddock, and I think that 
is the lesson here. They did indeed show greater wisdom.

  Hope that helps to clarify things for you.

  Kindest regards,

  Gary

  BTW  let me correct one part my earlier email. The Specialist is an American 
– not Australian  - work written many years ago by Charles Sale. However the 
parallels to the Australian experience are unmistakable.



  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Paul Mander
  Sent: Thursday, 30 October 2014 1:54 PM


  To: 'Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.'
  Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Bizarre Comp Rules - in the shit


  I think you’ve been a bit quick to judge.

  You state that whilst “Jim chose to fly on”, two other pilots made quite 
routine outlandings 7km back on the track, implying a greater wisdom on their 
part.

  Those outlandings were not routine, if you study the traces. They were 
straight in landings just as was Jim’s. One of them makes a desperate last 
circle close to the ground then straightens up and lands.

  There is a striking similarity in all three traces, which paint a cautionary 
picture. All three picked up climbs just before their last turn, and then 
appear to consider themselves on final glide. Then they turn into a 20kt 
headwind from the SW, lose their final glide and start to search for lift. All 
three try to thermal again without success.

  All three glide on and the ground rises up to smite them; the other two are 
simply 7km further out when it does. 

  There are undoubtedly lessons to be learnt from their experience, not the 
least being how quickly thermals die in Queensland and how quickly the trap can 
snap. 

  But it’s not instructive, or fair, to make out that one was foolish where 
others were wise.



  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Gary Stevenson
  Sent: Tuesday, 28 October 2014 10:45 PM
  To: 'Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.'
  Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Bizarre Comp Rules - in the shit



  Michael Texler in his post of the evening of 28 Oct, finally “Got It”. 



  Tim has now amplified matters, so that to mis-quote one famous author, “even 
a schoolboy can understand”. Just a preamble: the point I really want to make 
is that on that last day when Jim choose to fly on,  2 pilots in Sports Class 
elected to make quite routine outlandings (into the same paddock apparently), 
just 7 km from home. As usual their traces are available on Soaring Spot. Names 
do not need to be mentioned – just look at Sports Class, and then check the 
outlandings and distances covered to pinpoint the two relevant traces.



  Tim , you are being a little bit shy in your  use of the Oz vernacular. The 
“Municipal Dunny Man” filled a very valuable and quite unique place in 
servicing one the essential needs of communities prior to the development of 
reticulated sewerage systems. So to get the language straight, let me put “shed 
loads” back  into its true blue and dinky di  context: “shit-cart full loads”. 



  Further ;

  For Australian Musical Researchers try Googling “Municipal Dunny Can”. ..... 
And of course do not overlook that  Australian work of great literary worth 
titled  “The Specialist”. For visual art buffs this work was no  doubt part 
inspiration for the 2006 Oz movie “Kenny”.



  Cheers,

  Gary





  From: [email protected] 
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Tim Shirley
  Sent: Tuesday, 28 October 2014 8:39 PM
  To: Discussion of issues relating to Soaring in Australia.
  Subject: Re: [Aus-soaring] Bizarre Comp Rules...



  Hi all,

  Once again a disclaimer:  I hold no relevant official position with the GFA.  
I do have considerable experience as a rulemaker, as a Contest Director, as a 
Scorer, and as a competition pilot.  I speak only for myself.

  What follows is general clarification about competitions and rules, and is 
not intended as a comment on any specific incident.

  Back when I was involved in competition rulemaking, I remember we introduced 
some principles as a preamble to the rules and on checking I found that most of 
them are still there:

  At all times it remains the responsibility of pilots to operate in accordance 
with the GFA Manual of Standard

  Procedures and all applicable laws and regulations.

  Pilots are expected to conduct themselves at all times in the spirit of these 
rules and in accordance with the practice of good sportsmanship.

   Safety is at all times the primary consideration. If at any time a pilot 
feels that the requirements of these rules compromises the safety of their 
flight then they should take whatever actions are required to ensure the safety 
of themselves and of other air users. This may include withdrawing from the 
task or from the competition.

  Pilots are required to conduct themselves in a manner that will not bring 
disrepute on the Organisers, the hosting club or the GFA.


  There is nothing in the competition rules that suspends any laws.  There are 
no exemptions.  Pilots flying in a competition are just pilots, and must obey 
every requirement of the law.  They remain fully responsible as Pilots in 
Command for the conduct of the flight.  If they choose to disobey the law or 
good practice then that is entirely their responsibility.  The competition is a 
game.  Flying is not.

  No one wants to break their glider or themselves, and the rules of the game 
clearly discourage that by the simple fact that most of the time there is 
another race tomorrow.  You won't get any points from a hospital bed or if your 
glider is in bits.  On the last day, well if there was a million dollars at 
stake I could imagine that the risk of rolling yourself into a ball might be 
worth taking for some - but in our game why would anyone break a $100K glider 
for a bottle of cheap wine and a round of applause?  Or even for the 
opportunity to spend shed loads of their own money representing Australia? 

  If you want to know who is responsible for the safety of a flight where you 
are the Pilot in Command, take a good look in a mirror.  And be very sure of 
what you see.

  Cheers

  Tim Shirley

  tra dire é fare c' é mezzo il mare

  On 28/10/2014 2:06 PM, Texler, Michael wrote:

The caveat should be in place that the crash was a result of your own poor 
decision making. Now what constitutes poor decision making is a matter of 
opinion. Surely competition rules should be in place to discourage 
crashing:i.e. you crash, you are out of the comp. You pack up and go home.  
I'll leave it to others more experienced in these matters to give reasons why.  
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