First off, I filled with envy because it summer time in right now in NZ and it's cold and snowy where I'm am at 43 degrees north Lat. And you are gliding. Much appreciate the ongoing commentary on your decision to find lift, and avoid clouds that were overdeveloping or overdeveloped. The 6 knots, (607 feet per/min lift) over the ocean was a special event of warm air rising over colder ocean air. A few miles out past the shoreline there many pure sink? Your day and altitude remind me of a typical day at York Soaring, NW of Toronto, Canada but without the hilly terrain when I flew there many years ago. May/early June at that latitude north in early spring can see the occasional 600 ft/min lift and our altitude is the same range as yours 1200 to 4500 feet AGL. The most lift I've experienced is 1400 per min in a Grob103 at Minden, NV years ago - and it was sustained - bank the glider in tight in the thermal, or you get spat out by the thermal. I was with an instructor, and we stopped climbing at 12,500ft ASL, / 8,000 ft AGL. Wonderful day. Keep up the instruction. Much admire your airmanship from afar.
Another great video! I appreciate your running commentary while making decisions. I find that very helpful as I look at what is ahead of you, and make choices similar to the decisions you make. It’s great preparation for my first cross country flight this spring. Thanks!
yeah good flight and great scenery and those birds so cool, I remember a convergence over Ardmore when I was learning, the sky for miles was full of seagulls! and speaking of low finishes, I remember Lindsay Stephens brushing the grass with his wing tip doing those comp finishes, spectacular stuff in the "good old days"
What a terrific flight and video! I very much enjoyed it. I love your commentary, Tim. You reminded me of a flight I took recently in our club DG1000 with a very experienced long time pilot and club member - "Just give me zero sink", he kept saying! He told me a story of staying up for over two hours in zero sink. Of course, he stayed close to the airport, but still. Pretty cool! Thanks again!
Very interesting video! Reminds me of the day where I was stuck at the coast and scratched the airspace 😅 Do you really say overdevelopments to these spread out clouds with a significant inversion on top? My understanding was that overdevelopments are vertically powerful clouds but I´m absolutely not a meteorologist. Congrats on winning!
no idea re clouds, I'm just a guy on youtube! you're probably right, overdevelopment should be big build ups that get too big and spread out. This was probably not quite that. Who knows :) Yeah it was similar to your ocean going adventures day, I remember that day well but not as much as you do haha
@@PureGlide You're a great deal more than "just a guy on TH-cam". I find your videos fascinating. So much so that I am going to try and organize a few flights as a passenger ( possibly a student pilot later on. Is there an age limit to be allowed to be a solo pilot? )
So nice to see a good soaring video coming out. In Colorado, we're looking at a foot of snow with more to come tomorrow night. Sigh. Would love to visit Kiwi country again someday. Our airstrips don't have sheep on them, but occasionally horses and deer.
Great flying and great video as usual, Tim! I see that your vario reads the speed you're actually climbing up while thermaling, that being by Knots, whereas we hang gliders as well as paragliders in Italy/Europe use vario readings by meter per second climb&descent-rate. I hear in the US both hang gliders and paragliders go by feet per minute. Since engineless flying is all about altitude gain or loss,, out of curiosity I'd like to know what you think about this vario-rate reading versus yours. Certainly the system a pilot is accustomed to is the one that fits better, however getting meter/feet per second climb-rate do you think might give you an instant value of the type of thermal you're in or the type of downdraft you're encountering in relation to the altitude you're gaining or losing? Cheers! 🙂
Hi yeah we get very used to it, and use knots for both vertical speed and air speed. m/s is almost exactly half knots, so it’s easy to work out if you need it. Eg 3 knots is about 1.5m/s
Geee, I'm all in for aviation but Gliding is something I have huge respect for. I wouldn't dare even to try it. I live in Austria we have many gliders since it seems to be very popular. It isn't rare to see several glider around Innsbruck as example.
That Libelle launching at 1:24 had wing tips. Does anybody know if they help with the problem of a wing dropping at the start of an aerotow ? Our Club Libelle does this sometimes, and no amount of opposite stick can recover it, so we release. Just wondering if the tips help.
Try flying in the UK! Slithers of airspace the absolute norm in most of the country and 4,500’ base the absolute norm on a good day! Keep up the good work and Happy New Year to you.
Great flight for the overdevelopment and altitudes you were achieving. There is one thing that I do that I think I noticed a couple times during that recording. When I’m getting low and stressed, and I hit some lift or indications of lift, I start to turn too early and It quits in the first 180° of the turn. That means I turned the wrong way or too early. Hopefully it means that the thermal is in front of you when you get around the 360° turn, but most of the time it doesn’t seem to be that way. Did you have any water ballast on that flight?
Thanks
No problem
First off, I filled with envy because it summer time in right now in NZ and it's cold and snowy where I'm am at 43 degrees north Lat. And you are gliding.
Much appreciate the ongoing commentary on your decision to find lift, and avoid clouds that were overdeveloping or overdeveloped. The 6 knots, (607 feet per/min lift) over the ocean was a special event of warm air rising over colder ocean air. A few miles out past the shoreline there many pure sink?
Your day and altitude remind me of a typical day at York Soaring, NW of Toronto, Canada but without the hilly terrain when I flew there many years ago. May/early June at that latitude north in early spring can see the occasional 600 ft/min lift and our altitude is the same range as yours 1200 to 4500 feet AGL.
The most lift I've experienced is 1400 per min in a Grob103 at Minden, NV years ago - and it was sustained - bank the glider in tight in the thermal, or you get spat out by the thermal. I was with an instructor, and we stopped climbing at 12,500ft ASL, / 8,000 ft AGL. Wonderful day.
Keep up the instruction. Much admire your airmanship from afar.
Another great video! I appreciate your running commentary while making decisions. I find that very helpful as I look at what is ahead of you, and make choices similar to the decisions you make. It’s great preparation for my first cross country flight this spring. Thanks!
Awesome, thank you!
yeah good flight and great scenery and those birds so cool, I remember a convergence over Ardmore when I was learning, the sky for miles was full of seagulls! and speaking of low finishes, I remember Lindsay Stephens brushing the grass with his wing tip doing those comp finishes, spectacular stuff in the "good old days"
What a terrific flight and video! I very much enjoyed it. I love your commentary, Tim. You reminded me of a flight I took recently in our club DG1000 with a very experienced long time pilot and club member - "Just give me zero sink", he kept saying! He told me a story of staying up for over two hours in zero sink. Of course, he stayed close to the airport, but still. Pretty cool! Thanks again!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Mate I'm amazed at how long you keep flying for, your vids have been a revelation to me I can't stop watching.
Great to hear it!
Wonderful !!! 🍺🍺🍺👍
Thank you! Cheers!
What an excellent day !
Yes indeed!
A very nice day in the glider. And the video is a great way for less experienced xc pilots to assess clouds. Very valuable.
Glad you enjoyed it, thanks!
Such a stunning country.
Thanks Tim for taking us with You on not only a enjoyable but also a very educational flight 👍🏻👍🏾, the view over the Ocean is wonderful 🙏🏻🙏🏾
Glad you enjoyed it
@@PureGlide when You have time, check your LinkedIn profile plz, I try to connect, no must only if You want to
Regards
Frank
Very interesting video! Reminds me of the day where I was stuck at the coast and scratched the airspace 😅 Do you really say overdevelopments to these spread out clouds with a significant inversion on top? My understanding was that overdevelopments are vertically powerful clouds but I´m absolutely not a meteorologist. Congrats on winning!
no idea re clouds, I'm just a guy on youtube! you're probably right, overdevelopment should be big build ups that get too big and spread out. This was probably not quite that. Who knows :) Yeah it was similar to your ocean going adventures day, I remember that day well but not as much as you do haha
@@PureGlide You're a great deal more than "just a guy on TH-cam". I find your videos fascinating. So much so that I am going to try and organize a few flights as a passenger ( possibly a student pilot later on. Is there an age limit to be allowed to be a solo pilot? )
@@bloggsie45 14 in the us
Another nice video to watch, and flying over 2 oceans in NZ doesn't happen often. Well deserved winner of the day and contest.
Thanks Sarel :)
nice flight !
Thanks! 👍
Very NICE!!!☆
Thank you! Cheers!
So nice to see a good soaring video coming out. In Colorado, we're looking at a foot of snow with more to come tomorrow night. Sigh. Would love to visit Kiwi country again someday. Our airstrips don't have sheep on them, but occasionally horses and deer.
Thanks for watching
Excellent flight and amazing flight conditions... congratulations!
Thanks a lot!
great video!😍😍😍😍
Thank you! 🤗
Loved it thanks Tim!
My pleasure!
Well done. Very enjoyable.
Thank you! Cheers!
Great flying and great video as usual, Tim!
I see that your vario reads the speed you're actually climbing up while thermaling, that being by Knots, whereas we hang gliders as well as paragliders in Italy/Europe use vario readings by meter per second climb&descent-rate. I hear in the US both hang gliders and paragliders go by feet per minute. Since engineless flying is all about altitude gain or loss,, out of curiosity I'd like to know what you think about this vario-rate reading versus yours.
Certainly the system a pilot is accustomed to is the one that fits better, however getting meter/feet per second climb-rate do you think might give you an instant value of the type of thermal you're in or the type of downdraft you're encountering in relation to the altitude you're gaining or losing?
Cheers! 🙂
Hi yeah we get very used to it, and use knots for both vertical speed and air speed. m/s is almost exactly half knots, so it’s easy to work out if you need it. Eg 3 knots is about 1.5m/s
@@PureGlide In this way it makes sense, very easy to get the picture 👍
Cheers 🌤️
I love that scoring system! I'll share it with my fellow paragliding pilots :)
It's been much nicer down south btw.
Geee, I'm all in for aviation but Gliding is something I have huge respect for. I wouldn't dare even to try it. I live in Austria we have many gliders since it seems to be very popular. It isn't rare to see several glider around Innsbruck as example.
That Libelle launching at 1:24 had wing tips. Does anybody know if they help with the problem of a wing dropping at the start of an aerotow ? Our Club Libelle does this sometimes, and no amount of opposite stick can recover it, so we release. Just wondering if the tips help.
Not sure sorry, I’ve never flown one, my head is way too big!
Try flying in the UK! Slithers of airspace the absolute norm in most of the country and 4,500’ base the absolute norm on a good day!
Keep up the good work and Happy New Year to you.
Nice
Thanks!
Great flight, recognised many features 😀 Well done on the prize ✅
Thanks 👍
300 km with 4500 feet cloud base would be a good day in western Europe .
Great video Tim! Nice to hear even experienced pilots saying "oh god why did I leave that thermal this was a mistake". It's not just me 😂
:)
Great flight Tim, well done! 👍
What an unexpected pleasure when you find lift over the ocean?! 😃
P.S. Happy new year to U2.
Thanks 👍
Great video Tim! quick question, why the double yaw strings?
I’m so pleased you asked!
th-cam.com/video/OR9zJwcGxoQ/w-d-xo.html
Great flight for the overdevelopment and altitudes you were achieving. There is one thing that I do that I think I noticed a couple times during that recording. When I’m getting low and stressed, and I hit some lift or indications of lift, I start to turn too early and It quits in the first 180° of the turn. That means I turned the wrong way or too early. Hopefully it means that the thermal is in front of you when you get around the 360° turn, but most of the time it doesn’t seem to be that way.
Did you have any water ballast on that flight?
Thanks! No ballast but my glider is heavy anyway with the engine
I couldn't spot the airstrip with sheep on it 🐑 but I did see the pigeons! 🕊
my nose is bleeding watching that finish
haha yeah it was extreme
Just got nice weather in Australia, I decided to fly in the US instead and fly there instead :)
Nice!
Happy new year? Are you Austrasian?
New Zealandish - don't quite understand, isn't that a normal thing to say?!
Only in China (:,
@@PureGlide When you first meet people in a new year, you wish them a happy new year, but maybe you don't do that in Murica .
Ahh
That's what I said