On Fri, 2010-08-27 at 14:32 +1000, Luke O'Donnell wrote:

Many thanks for posting those links.
>
> Have a look at
> http://www.paraglidingforum.com/viewtopic.php?p=8030#8030
> 
The girl on the hill with a sensitive thermometer is *not* a spoof. 

Competitive free flight model fliers have used ground rigs to find
thermals for decades. I built my first such system around 1971 and have
used them when flying small power models ever since - 1/2A and F1J for
those who understand FF. If you want to know more about these devices,
look here: 

http://www.gregorie.org/freeflight/thermal_detector/thermal_detector.html


These days you can buy suitable thermometers over the counter. Digital
thermometers with external sensors work just fine provided the sensor is
small and has no thermal inertia work well. The temperature change as a
thermal goes through can vary from 0.2C on a cool, overcast early
morning to 2.0C just after midday on a calm, hot, thermally summer day.

If you know what you're looking for you can feel thermals using only
bare skin. As a thermal approaches the wind speed drops and the air
feels warmer. A sudden temperature drop and increase in wind speed shows
the core has just passed. This is the moment you launch the model to put
it in the thermal. Almost all the wind speed and direction changes you
notice on the glider field are thermal related: next time you're out on
a strong day and waiting to fly try it for yourself. The combination of
wind speed and temperature changes aren't hard to feel. There's usually
a strong periodicity to them: if you have a stopwatch, use it to time
the gap between thermals. The gap varies from day to day but is fairly
constant on any particular day unless conditions change.

I also flew F1A towline gliders but never with a thermal detector.
Simply towing the model, watching it and feeling what its doing through
the towline works much better.
  
> As for LIDAR, see this for actual LIDAR videos:
> 
> http://lidar.ssec.wisc.edu/movies/index.htm
> 
Fascinating. Thats' the first time I've seen what Lidar images of
thermals look like.


Martin




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