Manufacturers sent their top pilots to squeeze every bit of distance from their gliders. Some pilots complained that the distances were not a true measure of a glider's glide angle (ratio). Of course they were right, but they missed the point. The real draw was the pilot skill. Putting the maximum amount of energy into the launch. Managing the most efficient turn around the pylon at mid-course. Dropping into ground effect at the right time. And of course, safely landing at the absolute last moment.
I learned much from watching and competing in those meets. For example, I'm still surprised when I talk with pilots that freak-out when they discover they can't unzip before landing. It's really not a big deal in many cases. Land on your belly or land standing up in your harness. I watched people regularly do that trying to get a better score. Eventually I tried the techniques myself and still use them to this day.
I created two videos. The first contains the raw material. It includes flights from many pilots that inspired me during my early years such as Ken Brown, Curly Dunn, Rob Kells, Dennis Pagen, Tim Donovan, Paul Voight, and others. The second video contains just the landings. It highlights different variations and provides a range of typical landings. The first video is too long to post on YouTube, so for now here is the shorter video containing just the landings.
4 comments:
We should definitely bring this back. It looks like Morningside would make some extra $$ on down tubes during the competition as well.
wow those were fun events..i believe it was more like early/mid 90's as we have been here in PR since 97..
Thanks for narrowing down the year a bit Keishya. I'll have to find a place to post the entire video; I caught many familiar faces.
I would love to see the complete videos. This looks like it was a fun comp, why did it ever end? Thanks for posting.
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