- The event will be
conducted over 2 days in Phoenix
February 17th and 18th from Thursday to Friday.
- A pilot’s meeting will
occur at 7:30am at the flying site. First flight 8:00. The pilots meeting
will be brief used only for clarification questions and points the CD Phil
Renaud desires to make. The goal is to ask any clarification questions to
the organizers ( jimmonaco@earthlink.com) via
email prior to the event.
- Flight line and lanes
will be setup the previous day. Lanes for Thursday will be the same as
your team number. New lanes for Friday will be assigned at the
pilots meeting on Thursday.
- Teams should be set up on their assigned lanes
prior to 8:00AM. We WILL start the prep time at 8:00AM.
- There will be no
downsizing. This means no fly-off. All pilots will compete both
days.
- There will be one throw out round
applied after six complete rounds have been flown.
- 10 minute rounds will be flown on day one,
with no rounds starting after 5:15pm. The goal is 6 rounds on day one.
- Two 15min rounds will be flown on
day two starting at 8:00AM. A third 10 minute round will be flown
after the 15 minute flight to stay within our time constraints.
- The scores from both days will be added
together, consistent with the throw-out rules noted above.
- All other F3J rules shall be in effect.
- The official timer for a team is one of the
pilot’s designated callers (Pilot may have two callers). As with most
contests the honor system will apply.
- Timer error is NOT grounds for a reflight. It is recommended that a backup
watch be started by the pilot’s other caller or other helper on the team.
If a failure of the primary watch occurs, the backup watch time should be
used as the official flight time. A timing error without a backup
is considered a zero!
- The current FAI rules regarding line crosses
and cuts during launch will be followed. Crossed lines on the ground prior
to a launch WILL be considered as a hindrance and cause for reflight, but only if the
lines are crossed when the pilot is hooked up and ready to launch, and the
CD or his designated line judge is notified immediately. Cut lines during
a launch will be considered a cause for a reflight
provided the cut was witnessed and / or brought to the immediate attention
of a contest official and the contestant did not waive his right to a reflight by continuing with his launch and/or flight.
Airplane collision with another competitor's line is cause for reflight. Pilot airplane collision with another
competitor’s line is cause for reflight if
observed by a contest official. Crossing of lines without a cut is NOT
cause for reflight.
- If a pilot lands out of the landing zone and
chooses to refly, they must mark the spot of the
resting place of the nose of the plane before retrieving it for the next
flight. If the spot is NOT marked and the pilot chooses not to make
the reflight, then the round is ZEROED!
This prevents pilots/helpers from retrieving planes that may have
landed outside the 75m landing requirement from obscuring the actual
landing spot and then not relaunching and
expecting to get their time from the initial flight. The pilot may
leave the plane at its resting spot and use an alternate for the next
flight, or place a marker. The CD will determine if a measurement is
needed at the end of the round.
- An early launch is considered an attempt.
The pilot must immediately land and relaunch
within the working time. The pilot does NOT get another launch in
the working time as both attempts have been used.
- Flyers granted a reflight
for any reason will be positioned in a flight
group using the following priorities:
a. in an incomplete group, or in a complete group on additional
launching/landing spots; (note that the groups will be full so this will
be unlikely.)
b. if this is not achievable, then in a new group of several (minimum 4) reflyers; Reflights from different rounds may be grouped
together at a convenient time.
There will be no get out of jail free cards. Pilots chosen to
participate in the reflights are participating as spoilers only. They
will not get the better of their 2 scores. Pilots may choose not
to participate in the flyoff if chosen and another pilot will be selected.
- We will be using a new
electronic scoring system this year. Each team requires at least
one phone that is capable of browser internet access at the field.
All pilots will be sent an email with the web address of the scoring
application and instructions for use prior to the event. Each
team is responsible for entering their pilot's scores into the application
on the phone by the end of the round. This will transmit
the scores electronically to the scorekeeper who will verify that all
the scores are entered, that all overflights are recorded correctly
and any safety penalties have been assessed correctly. Once verified,
the scorekeeper will close the round and the standings will be computed.
These standings are then immediately available in the application
on your phone. You will be able to see ahe summarized standings and
the details for all completed flights.
- Sound
a) We will have 1 speaker for every 2 flight
stations placed along the flight line - there should be no appreciable
delay in the sound to any team.
NOTE: THE BEGINNING OF ALL HORNS INDICATE THE
TIME! If you are landing, and not on the ground at the beginning of the
horn - then you are late! If you are launching and the plane leaves your
hand prior to the start of the horn - then you are early and must land and
relaunch.
- All flight announcement timing will be backed
up by a manual watch. In the event of a timing system announcement
failure after the launch signal, the signals will be generated manually
using the backup watch and the PA system. In this case you will only
get the 2 minute warning and the horn at the end of the slot. If the
PA system fails such that the launch, 2 minute warning or end horn cannot
be heard, we will refly the group.
- Unsportsmanlike conduct will not be tolerated.
You need to follow both the letter and intent of the rules.
Intentional unsportsmanlike conduct will result in either the
disqualification of a flight or from the contest based on the gravity of
the conduct.
- Safety Zones - The safety zones will consist
of the launch corridor, the Officials Tent, the pit/spectator areas and
the parking area. We will adopt the F3B style safety penalty
rule. Simply put, if your aircraft hits any object in the safety
zone you are penalized 300 points. If you hit a person anywhere, then
you receive a 1000 point penalty. The one exception is that a helper
that intends to catch the aircraft for a relaunch
is not considered a safety infraction (whether he catches it or
not). If he fails to catch it and hits someone or something else,
then it is a safety infraction. The catch must be attempted outside the
safety area. Penalties are permanent and cannot be removed
by a throwout.
- The number of helpers
rule is modified as follows: The pilot may have 2 callers assisting
with the flight. Other team members are allowed to help with field
logistics (other than calling) as needed (fetching chutes, fixing lines,
getting lunch - whatever...
- Prep Time - we will be
trying to speed the contest up by reducing the prep time. Since the
winches are all set up and will not be moved during the event and because
we have large teams with plenty of help we will run a shortened prep
time. There will be a one minute silent period at the end of each
round to allow you to clear the landing area. After the one minute
silence the 2 minute prep time will begin automatically. This
cycle will run continuously and will not be stopped unless the CD determines
that a major issue that affects all contestants is discovered. Not
being ready to launch is NOT a reason to stop the clock. BE READY
TO LAUNCH WHEN IT IS YOUR TURN! Each team has a flight matrix
showing who flys when - there is no excuse for not being ready. With 2 minute prep times, we will
get one complete extra round in on Thursday.
- Lines may be checked, the CD may choose more
checks at his discretion. 2-Man tow mono lines will be checked
in-place using a 150 meter steel cable and a fishing scale marked with the
appropriate pull. If a line measures long, the previous flight in
that lane will be scored 0. If any lines seem abnormally long, the CD may
ask that the line be measured.
- F3B winches using monofilament should have the
turnarounds staked at designated marks on the field. Standard braided line winches
should have the turnaround staked at 25 paces beyond the F3B marks. There will be a
line on
the field as marker for the appropriate F3B distance.
- All stakes/spikes/nails
or similar things that are punched into the ground MUST have orange
flagging on them to ensure removal. These things do bad things to
the mowers and cutters, and we don’t want to leave the field in poor
condition with metal stakes for the SWC organizers to deal with!
- Field orientation will
be launching to the east or south, most likely to the east. Teams should
set up winches or launch position on the number. You must launch
within the launch corridor. Launch corridor is also a safety zone.
- Downwind launches are likely.
If you choose to hand tow you are accepting any disadvantage this
may incur!