T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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763.1 | Crow Island petition for CRRC | MR4DEC::ANKER | Anker Berg-Sonne | Wed Apr 03 1991 16:38 | 10 |
| The CRRC has had intense discussion over the past couple of months
about the wisdom of sharing a flying field a flying field with full size
undisciplined barnstormers at Crow Island in Stow. Chris Schuch has written
a petition which I have hardcopies of which he would like to have supported
by the CRRC membership. I forgot to mention that he, and I, are of the
opinion that it is crazy and potentially disastrous for the club, and maybe
to the hobby in this area, if an accident happens. Any DEC CRRC members that
would like to support this petition please contact me for a hard copy.
Anker
|
763.2 | glider, power, and combo coexistence problems | BRAT::RYDER | perpetually the bewildered beginner | Fri May 24 1991 07:44 | 19 |
| Over the last several months our club has had a dramatic increase in
glider guiders, all of whom also fly power and often on the same trip
to the field. A very few also fly choppers. About a quarter of the
members fly powered gliders.
We all fly at the same field(s), so we are now beginning to see in
earnest the problems of coexistence --- problems in safety and in
convenience and courtesy. Jeff (the safety officer) and I (the
newsletter editor) have decided to propose a set of field rules to deal
with the situation *before* we have a serious problem. We don't yet
have an example of something that has worked (or not) at other clubs.
If your club has dealt with this situation without setting up a glider
only field, please tell us how. We already recognize that a glider
field would help (especially in field acquisition), but it would almost
certainly split the club. Besides, the powered gliders present some
glider-type problems that would remain at the power field.
Alton who knows most questions and few answers
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763.3 | Tough row to hoe..hope you pull it off. | ELMAGO::TTOMBAUGH | A Fistful of Epoxy | Fri May 24 1991 11:13 | 23 |
| Alton,
I've never heard of any cases of mixed use fields actually working
on a long term basis, at least not in an organized club setting,
as opposed to a bunch of guys just showing up at a vacant lot.
If you do come up with something workable, I and a lot of people
will be interested in knowing how you did it.
Your point about splitting the club is right on the mark.
This is not necessarily the end of the world, we have a few cross-over
fliers in our club, and our glider club has amicable, cooperative
relationships with the several larger power clubs. Better
relationships, in fact, than the power clubs have among themselves
where personality clashes and power struggles (pun ?) have caused
them to form splinter groups.
However, the bottom line is that we would never consider using each
others fields.
Good luck.
Terry
|
763.4 | Gliders and power don't mix too well | HPSPWR::WALTER | | Fri May 24 1991 12:10 | 22 |
| Al,
As long as there are high starts, there will be conflicts with the power guys.
The power flyers can pretty much stand in one spot and fly their planes out in
front of them without endangering anyone. The glider guiders, on the other hand,
are all over the place, stretching out high starts, fixing broken lines, flying
wherever the latest thermal takes them, and just in general using up a lot of
real estate. I don't mind having the gliders buzzing all around me because I
consider them relatively safe, and easy to avoid (as compared to a 6 lb plane
rocketing along at 60 mph with a prop turning 15,000 rpm on the nose).
Gliders and power had coexisted somewhat peacefully at the CRRC field, but
recently one of the power flyers expressed concern about the high starts
drifting into the pits, which they occasionally do. Even at that field, which is
pretty big, there is no easy way to fly gliders there without somehow getting in
the way of the power guys, or stretching the high start across a walking path.
I have come to the conclusion that if I want to fly gliders, it's a lot less
hassle to go down to Wayland, or to the St. Marks school. It doesn't upset
me that I have to do that, it's just the way things are. Anyway, I get more
flying in at a nice quiet glider-only field.
Dave
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763.5 | soar in am/power in the pm | BBOVAX::DONAGHY | | Fri May 24 1991 12:11 | 10 |
| I have a friend that belongs to a club that had the same problem
you are talking about. They decided to use a gliders/nopowered
aircraft in the AM. till 1 PM. then the power guys could take the
field for the rest of the day. You could vary the amount of hours
in ratio to the number of participants who soar or power, this would
fair . As to the chopper guys/gals, sorry no comment here.
Regards ,
Bob D.
|
763.6 | How I handle the chopper vs power plane question | STOHUB::JETRGR::EATON | Dan Eaton St.Louis,MO,USA, 445-6522 | Fri May 24 1991 12:52 | 12 |
| Since I'm currently the only active chopper flyer in my club this
may not be worth much but here's how I handle it. The vast majority of the power
flyers in our club get out in the morning and tear up the sky. Since I don't
drag out of bed till 10 am on the weekends, they never see me. By late afternoon,
the crowd is down to at most three other flyers. We just take turns flying. They
like to watch the chopper fly and I can use a long break after flying.
I don't fly the same time a fixed wing ship is up. I have to keep the chopper in
much closer than the normal fixed wing ship flys and don't want to get in the
way of our power flyers. However, thinking about it tells me that flying the
chopper is not that much different than Eric, Dan, and Charlie flying the x-IM's
in close. How do the other power pilots deal with that?
|
763.7 | And then there's the high speed passes over the glider guys | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Fri May 24 1991 14:05 | 9 |
| Ware is developing this problem also. We have a big enough field to
stretch out the highstarts away from the power portion of the field.
The problem we see is frequency control. Keeping both ends aware of
people waiting for pins is a problem. (getting people to wander back to
the board after getting it is the real problem) We have a power
restriction on the field in the early morning. The glider guys aren't
restricted (noise is the issue). There isn't a lot of thermal air
before 10am. We may look for a glider only sight in the future if
glider interest increases (just a few of us in a power club)
|
763.8 | weekly fly day for beginners | DNEAST::MALCOLM_BRUC | | Tue Jun 25 1991 15:23 | 10 |
|
I'm new at the flying field and have seen some accidents ( new people
at the field learning to fly mid air colitions,etc.) Would it be
wise to suggest a beginners day where all the beginners and instructors
meet at the field weekly to learn to fly?? I find it difficult to
take mine up with a crowd of people watching. I'd like to go alone
when no one is around.
Bruce
|
763.9 | WHICH flying field?? | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Tue Jun 25 1991 15:52 | 6 |
| CMRCM has a novice night on thursday's when instructor's are generally
available. The club in Ware that I belong to use to use saturday and
sunday mornings. We generally stay down out of the air when a brand new
person is flying so as not to distract them but eventually they need to
learn to fly in the clubs normally busy skies. Are you asking about a
specific club or just looking for feedback on how other clubs do it?
|
763.10 | novice night-out!! | DNEAST::MALCOLM_BRUC | | Wed Jun 26 1991 11:10 | 15 |
|
I'm intersted in how other clubs do it. I did ask the president last
night and he said they used too but no one showed up. Usually Sat. Sun.
and Weds. nights draws the most atendance and thats when all the
instuctors are there. Last night there were as many as on a Wed.
I did fly last night for the first time flying time about 5-10 min.
Instructor said I did pritty good for the first time, I only handed
him the Tx once. He said I was a little nervice. That was an
understatment. There was a Sig kadet senior in the air at the same time
. The field I fly at is KVMA Kenebec Vally Modelers Asso. Its about one
hour north of Biddiford Maine.
lokking for more feedback
Thanks
Bruce
|
763.11 | How and more importantly, why. | ZENDIA::REITH | Jim Reith DTN 226-6102 - LTN2-1/F02 | Wed Jun 26 1991 11:30 | 12 |
| Well, it really depends on your membership mix. In Ware we had almost
50% of our members as novices a year or so ago. People were constantly
calling up to find out when people would be at the field. We set a
specific day/time aside to cut down on the calls. Most of these people
are now solo so we haven't reintroduced it this year. Publishing the
instructors names and phone numbers in the newsletter helps. The down
side of having novice night is that they all show up at the field at
once and each get a flight or two over a 3 hour period. If you can fit
it into the schedule more dynamically, there is more attention paid to
the individual student. A few flights in a row can help set things into
someone's mind. This is hard if there are several students waiting for
that instructor.
|
763.12 | Go to the field when everyone else does. | SNAX::SMITH | I FEEL THE NEED | Wed Jun 26 1991 11:33 | 6 |
| Being an instructor, I've found that the best thing for a student to
do is to just go to the field. Get to know 2 or 3 instructors rather
than trying to latch on to just one. If you know 2 or 3, there's bound
to be one of them there when you are.
Steve
|
763.13 | One instructor, or many? | HPSRAD::AJAI | | Wed Jun 26 1991 12:22 | 15 |
| Well, I would say it is beneficial to latch on to one person until you
know what you are doing. The advantages are that he knows how far your
skills have progressed, he knows your planes condition, and you can
proceed at an steady pace...
On the downside, you don't get to fly if this one instructor is
busy/can't fly etc..
Then again, I learnt at a snail's pace :-). However, you do reach a
point when it doesn't matter who is with you, so long as he can save
your plane in an emergency. Next step, you need a "body" to be next to
you for moral support, then near you, but not necessarily next to you,
and finally, you are on your own!!!
ajai
|
763.14 | to do or not to do is that a question?? | DNEAST::MALCOLM_BRUC | | Wed Jun 26 1991 14:56 | 5 |
| I kinda agree on one instructor till you get some confidence. the
reason I say that is talking to two instructors last night one doesn't
use rudder when landing and the other uses only rudder for the
exception of elevator so if you have one tell you to and the other
tells you not to it can get VERY confusing...
|
763.15 | Standardized instruction | SNAX::SMITH | I FEEL THE NEED | Wed Jun 26 1991 17:14 | 7 |
| The problem your having Bruce is that the club does not have a
standardized method of instructing. CMRCM pretty much does. All
instructors have to pass a "test" before being considered to be
a qualified instructor. The bottom line is, handle it whatever way
is best for you.
Steve
|
763.16 | Thursday night BECOMES beginners night!!! | DNEAST::MALCOLM_BRUC | | Fri Jul 12 1991 12:43 | 16 |
| Well it finally happened!!!! Last night was our first begginers night.
We had a club meeting meeting and 1/3rd of the guys were beginers.
The majority of the club was in agreement to try it one more time and
it worked out very well. The club rules are ussually three Tx /planes
up and one in the pits getting ready. Thursday beginners night only
two up and two in the pits getting ready. The two in the air flys one
north and the other south. We have about 400 acres of pure field no
trees just a crop of corn in the north. Believe it or not last night
was the best turnout we have had in months. There were 12 planes
three of those were not students they were the ones that voted agains
Thursday being beginners night, and four instructors. And there wasn't
any planes that were rekited. Even saw some faces I havent seen since
last season.
Bruce
|