This is not a bug. At MC=0, you cannot climb, so the value reported (-500 feet) indicates you magically need to gain 500 feet in order to glide at MC=0.
At MC=0.5, you are telling the computer you can climb, and with that headwind and a slow climb rate (0.5), you need to climb a lot more. In this case, the 500 feet isnt obtained magically, and so the height required takes the downwind drift from circling into account. On Tue, Nov 22, 2011 at 1:34 AM, Ramy Yanetz <ryan...@yahoo.com> wrote: > Arrival altitude was at MC =0 was something like -500 feet (500 feet below > glide) which was correct. However, With MC=0.5 it was -6000 feet!!! This is > obviously a bug since the slight increase in MC will never result in 5000 > feet loss. ------------------------------------------------------------------------------ All the data continuously generated in your IT infrastructure contains a definitive record of customers, application performance, security threats, fraudulent activity, and more. Splunk takes this data and makes sense of it. IT sense. And common sense. http://p.sf.net/sfu/splunk-novd2d _______________________________________________ Xcsoar-user mailing list Xcsoar-user@lists.sourceforge.net https://lists.sourceforge.net/lists/listinfo/xcsoar-user