The biggest wave dumping I've ever had: caught on video

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  • Опубликовано: 15 июл 2024
  • Let's go back to a simpler time, November last year, when it wasn't raining for weeks like it is right now in the middle of winter. We were at the Springfield enterprise contest, and it was a wave day. And not just any wave day, one of the trickiest I've ever had...
    WeGlide Flight Trace:
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    Contest Day Result:
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    00:00 Springfield Airfield
    00:42 Starting Task... or are we?!
    04:36 Start Again!
    06:19 Down we go
    08:10 Heading South Finally
    09:36 Back in the wave, heading North
    13:48 Turning for home
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Комментарии • 203

  • @jackx4311
    @jackx4311 2 года назад +30

    I remember once, when I was in Malta (RAF), seeing one of the Canberra pilots from 38 Squadron walking towards me. We were both leaning sideways at a ridiculous angle to stop from being blown over (and a fully-loaded Hercules on the pad at Luqa was bouncing around like a pea on a drum!).
    "Not going up today, Bob?", I asked.
    With a crooked grin he replied:
    "Some days, Jack, even the BIRDS are walking!"
    :)) And I thought 'How true that is of life in general!'

  • @AndrewJonkers
    @AndrewJonkers 2 года назад +44

    I love the way that Nature ensures that a dash of humility is an essential part of mastering a skill. Always something new to learn.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +7

      Yeah and I'm new to flying in the area, I suspect the locals didn't have as much trouble!

    • @TheSoaringChannel
      @TheSoaringChannel 2 года назад +3

      As long as the dash of humility doesn't come as you get dashed into the rocks then it should be acceptable. 😬

    • @johnhudson1009
      @johnhudson1009 2 года назад +1

      @@PureGlide You're doing better than this local! Your commentary from 6:45 onwards pretty much describes my exact thoughts every time I try to go somewhere on a wave day out of SF.

    • @ronaldglider
      @ronaldglider 2 года назад +2

      One of the key reasons I love Gliding is I learn something new at each and every flight (and I am over 1000 flights)

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад

      @@PureGlide "Knots up" throws me a bit, old fashioned--have to recalibrate from 1000s of ft/min.
      Born n raised in Owens Valley, Cali...aware of repeated alt records above us there at the time. Often can see the "Sierra Waves" over the valley in right conditions.

  • @LKokos
    @LKokos 2 года назад +20

    Just finished my glider pilot license and I am very happy :^) your videos were a big inspiration for me to start

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      That's awesome, great to hear!

  • @sarelventer11
    @sarelventer11 2 года назад +3

    The highs and lows of flying a glider. You sounded a bit more frustrated than normal at times. I really enjoyed this video. The sky and views are incredible.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      I edited out all the calm relaxed bits! haha

  • @nadgeemark
    @nadgeemark 2 года назад +11

    Wow, well done Tim. I developed a stress related stomach ulcer just sitting on my couch watching this. Epic flight.👍🏼

  • @itchy108
    @itchy108 Год назад +3

    The drone footage over the airfield is fantastic, neat looking down on the cub landing

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Thanks! You can thank Alex for that one :) ruclips.net/user/AJHewson1videos

  • @TheMkoester
    @TheMkoester 2 года назад +6

    As usual a real joy and delight to watch your video with the right amount of glider-sink-curses teaching all of us the appropriate flight-modesty… you doing an excellent job and promoting our great sport - thanks so much🌼✌️☺️ and regards from Sweden

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      Many thanks! Yes I'm surprised I didn't swear a lot more :)

  • @robinthomsoncomposer
    @robinthomsoncomposer Год назад +3

    Watched a few of your videos now Very inspiring as the whole finding thermals problem as the only means to stay up in the sky really appeals to me

  • @Sara_PY
    @Sara_PY 2 года назад +19

    How the sky can fool you! It looked amazingly energetic. I'm guessing the balance of that energy was well above you. And, it still gives me the willies when I see you getting low over that terrain! Thanks for the video, Tim. Terrific, as always!

  • @cceipek
    @cceipek 2 года назад +4

    Another great video, Tim! That was fun. The wave gets very complex when you have so many ridges in close proximity. No wonder it can be hard to sort it out! Glad you made it safely around!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +4

      Yeah the other complexity is the upper wave is different to the lower wave, you could see that massive big wave arch cloud above, but lower it was quite different and not well marked. Cheers!

    • @cceipek
      @cceipek 2 года назад +1

      @@PureGlide yeah, I noticed, that makes sense.

  • @timparker9235
    @timparker9235 2 года назад +4

    you are a braver man than me, Tim. that would freak me out, but awesome watching you do it - keep the vids coming, love them

  • @KestrelYI
    @KestrelYI 2 года назад +2

    Excellent day to soar in some wave - looks like an amazing location. Thanks for sharing!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Thanks for watching!

  • @spadgm
    @spadgm 2 года назад +2

    Tricky stuff!, a great vid!
    Scenery was stunning as always!

  • @BrilliantDesignOnline
    @BrilliantDesignOnline 2 года назад +2

    Cheers from USA. Well edited. Super beautiful country, and hearing your strategy as you execute it, and during pucker times, so much fun while having my morning coffee; Waking up watching you wave soaring is way better than stepping barefoot in cat barf (my morning 🙂) And the distance you covered and altitude excursions are simply incredibly, especially considering YOU are the engine, or at least figuring out where the lift (and sink) are.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Glad you enjoyed it! Thanks for watching and sorry to hear about your cat barf lol

    • @BruceHoult
      @BruceHoult Год назад +2

      Tim of course has an engine in the back if he wants to give up on the competition task. But on days like that with 1000+ FPM of sink around, having an engine that gives 200 FPM of climb is functionally the same as not having an engine! (The same goes for Cessnas with a 600 FPM engine)

  • @ericalbert6954
    @ericalbert6954 8 месяцев назад +1

    Merci beaucoup l'Ami

  • @SamuelVella1995
    @SamuelVella1995 Год назад +2

    Hey! I really enjoyed watching you glide, and hunt for those updrafts. I'm getting my CPL at the moment in Tasmania, and I've recently learned about mountain waves and get to see them every week here in the south east when there's a strong westerly. I'd really like to learn to glide, it looks incredibly satisfying.

  • @lukewaidmann3678
    @lukewaidmann3678 Год назад +3

    What amazing life you experience through this sport. Thanks for sharing with us.

  • @colinkellynz
    @colinkellynz 2 года назад +1

    Big ups and big downs over tiger country, you’re a cool customer Tim. Thanks for another awesome video.

  • @Zwiesel66
    @Zwiesel66 9 месяцев назад +1

    Gliding is a great sport, thank you for the amazing impressions.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  9 месяцев назад

      Glad you enjoyed it!

  • @kawasexi_ninja
    @kawasexi_ninja 2 года назад +4

    Looks like ALOT of fun!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      40 knots of wind fun! haha

  • @georgebuchholz2755
    @georgebuchholz2755 2 года назад +1

    Awesome flight!!! 👍😎

  • @georgemosca5530
    @georgemosca5530 Год назад +1

    CONGRATULATIONS! VERY WELL DONE! Thank you very much for your excellent video. Regards, George Mosca

  • @Pricklyhedgehog72
    @Pricklyhedgehog72 Год назад +1

    Just catching up on some of your vids...congrats on the channel growth!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Awesome! Thank you very much :)

  • @derekwagstaff8348
    @derekwagstaff8348 2 года назад +3

    Nice one Tim…had me sitting light in my seat there too!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Excellent! Mission accomplished :)

  • @Fukenbumen
    @Fukenbumen 2 года назад +3

    And then you have people like Keith Essex, Klaus Ohlman and Jim Payne who make it all look so easy. In my experience it's extremely difficult to get anywhere at all on a wave day. I kind of admire how you kept your cool Tim.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Yip, nothing like experience! They've done a lot more mountain wave flying than I have :)

  • @sailaab
    @sailaab Год назад +1

    Every bit engaging and edutational (educating entertaining) 16 minutes 👌🏽👍🏼

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Glad you enjoyed it! Cheers

  • @alterabbott
    @alterabbott Год назад +1

    Fascinating, thank you!

  • @soggybottom3463
    @soggybottom3463 2 года назад +1

    Wonderful, thank you! 👍👍👍

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Thanks for watching :)

  • @aurtisanminer2827
    @aurtisanminer2827 Год назад +2

    Since watching this channel I’ve been looking at clouds a little different. I never knew about reading them to look for air currents before.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +2

      Mission accomplished :)

  • @nelsonbrandt7847
    @nelsonbrandt7847 Год назад +1

    Fantastic flight! Way to go despite getting dumped.

  • @RudixSA
    @RudixSA 2 года назад +2

    Interesting that you measure climb/decent in knots! Nice place to fly, thanks for sharing!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Yeah for some reason aviation in most of the world is in knots, feet (altitude) and miles. But everything else in NZ is metric because we are sane :) so during contests we measure distance in km and task speed in km/h, but fly in knots and have to use miles on the radio. And I've only ever measured altitude in feet in my life, so that's completely normal to me. It's almost quite metric 'feeling' too, because anywhere over 10,000 feet we need oxygen. And we normally fly below 10,000 feet except for wave flying. So we have a nice 10 divisions of height between that and zero. 3,000 meters isn't as nice!

    • @petergarrone8242
      @petergarrone8242 Год назад

      @@PureGlide And the miles are nautical as well!

  • @sandrainthesky1011
    @sandrainthesky1011 2 года назад +4

    I'm a paraglider pilot and all this is way too fast for me! Was watching the mountains rise up at that rate, a bit scary. Waves are so interesting, nice to see you made your task regardless of conditions!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Don't worry some of it was time-lapse ;)

  • @wearemany73
    @wearemany73 Год назад +1

    Great video Tim, we’ll done. 😊🇬🇧

  • @mesvideostube
    @mesvideostube 11 месяцев назад +1

    Lord of the sky, great ! 🤩

  • @henriksoderstrom6815
    @henriksoderstrom6815 Год назад +2

    Great video. As the armchair glider pilot I am these days I just cringed a little at the loads of excess speed you had on roundout and touchdown. Better that than the other way around of course, especially in those very windy conditions, and you did get it stopped all right.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      Yeah it was deliberate, partly because it was windy wave conditions, and also because I wanted to end up near the hangars for derigging, and the ground was soft. Cheers!

  • @5330MALLARD
    @5330MALLARD 2 года назад +1

    Thanks for the ride💨

  • @AJHewson1
    @AJHewson1 2 года назад +1

    What excellent drone shots 😁

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Just amazing! World class one might say

  • @shaunlongden7891
    @shaunlongden7891 Год назад +1

    Great video, I miss gliding so much

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Thanks for watching Shaun :)

  • @Lozzie74
    @Lozzie74 Год назад +1

    It would seem that Mother Nature gave her all to make New Zealand

  • @susannewilliams
    @susannewilliams Год назад +1

    Yeah!

  • @mikeburch2998
    @mikeburch2998 Год назад +1

    The expression Woo Hoo must be a NZ tradition. I worked with a guy in Michigan who used that expression a lot.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Ha yeah I use it way too much while flying…

  • @thisnightcreeps
    @thisnightcreeps 2 года назад +2

    Nice, that was adventurous!

  • @davenc8527
    @davenc8527 Год назад +2

    What an awesome way to spend your day.

  • @Vindolin
    @Vindolin Год назад +1

    When the video shows the text "Watch the altimeter wind down!" and you're a paraglider pilot 😭

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      Haha sorry :) Now I know what it feels like!

  • @LSVFlachkurbler
    @LSVFlachkurbler Год назад +2

    if you are arriving at a ridge in 40 knots wind and you expect to go up with 5m/s and instead go down with 10m/s because of negative wave interference things can turn ugly within seconds. Had this experience and dont need that again. Intrinsic risc when flying in high wind speed conditions cannot be underestimated. We cannot understand everything thats happening in such wave conditions, at least I can't.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Yeah agreed, it can turn to custard very quickly! This wasn't TOO bad really. When in doubt, turn downwind :)

  • @FlyingFun.
    @FlyingFun. 10 месяцев назад +1

    Kept your cool, not sure but i think i would be a bit more panicky.😂

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  10 месяцев назад

      As long as there is somewhere safe to land I’m relaxed!!

  • @_Amilio_
    @_Amilio_ Год назад +2

    Too stressful for me mate 😂

  • @Iam_Yu627
    @Iam_Yu627 Год назад +1

    Butter. Nice!

  • @ronaldglider
    @ronaldglider 2 года назад +1

    Great flight & video. This is the video where you most often use the words *crap* and *dump* . Understatement: _a forty knot tailwind helps a bit_ Greatings from CH!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Exactly right! Haha

  • @DanFrederiksen
    @DanFrederiksen Год назад +1

    It's amazing that it's possible but it's just that with 50:1 glide, it doesn't take much of an engine to go the direction you want instead of endless desperation going nowhere :)

  • @nigelwilliams7920
    @nigelwilliams7920 Год назад +1

    Lovely vid thx.. It would be great if you could mention the odd landmark - Waimak Rakaia, Torlesse Colridge Mt Rolleston over there etc... to orient those of us who have walked and/or flown the area. Thanks.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      Great idea! Unfortunately I didn’t know the names of anything 😂

  • @tombrennan3973
    @tombrennan3973 2 года назад +1

    incredible....seems like the purest form of flying...

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Thanks Tom, it is! Until I get my engine out that is :)

    • @tombrennan3973
      @tombrennan3973 2 года назад

      @@PureGlide I have no problem with that :-) Self launch and some solar panels are the dream...lol well and floats...

  • @jameshcox
    @jameshcox 2 года назад +2

    I find myself glued to your altimeter..

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      Yeah crazy eh, it was winding up and down like the maniac driving the glider :)

  • @kirkglundal4289
    @kirkglundal4289 9 месяцев назад

    You mean you don't want to land out in those mountains?! 😝 Yikes!

  • @christophjuvan900
    @christophjuvan900 2 года назад +1

    can't do that without a motor in the back in that terrain... well done!!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +3

      The motor goes up at 1.6knots. The wave goes down at 10 knots. So it's not a great use to be frank!
      At all times I made sure I had landing options, all our waypoints down that way are generally air strips.
      That point I got dumped big time and 'low', one reason I turned downwind was that I was ensuring I stay in range of an air strip.
      Cheers!

  • @TheSoaringChannel
    @TheSoaringChannel 2 года назад +9

    Great video, Tim! I suspect you got very frustrated at some points in this flight. How do you handle soaring when it becomes a frustrating flight and you're nowhere near home? How do you regather your thoughts and push through to keep functioning and bring it back? I know how to do that in an airliner. I am predicting that flight is yet to come for me in a glider and I'm not sure how I'll handle that (I know I will find a way, just looking for your take). Cheers Tim. Hopefully we can fly together soon.
    P.S. touchdown like a freaking CHAMP 🤣

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +3

      Thanks! Well, I sometimes think: what is the worst case? I land out at an airstrip and have an adventure to get back home. More likely is I can start my motor over the airstrip (if there's not too much sink on a wave day!)

  • @chrisj800
    @chrisj800 2 года назад +1

    I didn't realize you could do a mulligan in sailplane tasks!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      Oh yes, you can always restart - usually it doesn't pay off as they make the tasks big enough to fill the day, so you end up running out of time. But in this case the task was only 3 hours as it was the last day, so figured there was time!

  • @fly1327
    @fly1327 Год назад

    Low 300' save after launch moving north across the eastern CA/OR border working lift, eventually at 10,000+ AGL with goal so easy. Instantly I and everyone went to the ground faster than I have ever been part of. Massive non-wave sink (we never figured it out). It was epic. Only the cold beers in the field where we were forced to put down helped!

  • @robfinch1522
    @robfinch1522 Год назад +1

    Great video. Only thing I couldn`t find in the links was a music/vocals credit?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      Sorry about that, not sure what it was, it’s all from Epidemic Sound

  • @huepix
    @huepix 2 года назад +2

    Perseverance pays

  • @robinfautley8698
    @robinfautley8698 2 года назад +2

    Interesting that in the area south and west of Coleridge there was unexpected sink. Must have a look around here for the Dragonfly from 1962 Was the worst around Ashburton Lakes and Mt Hutt?Cheers

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      No idea! In the description is a link to my flight trace which has a map, you can see exactly where I went. Cheers

    • @robinfautley8698
      @robinfautley8698 2 года назад +1

      @@PureGlide Thanks for that and I can now understand why I was able to recognise all those peaks from my 1962 film. We did divert slightly to the north of Tekapo to get through the Divide. The exact area you were flying has many horrible little downdrafts and sinks. Your third place against the locals was great, well done. Pity Gavin Wills did not make it and I hope he is ok. He put Griff Rhys Jones through the mangle but very gently recently for uk tv
      I am borrowing down the hotspots! Cheers

  • @SuperReasonable
    @SuperReasonable 2 года назад +3

    Good video, well done.
    When I flew in NZ lots of ridges seemed to have convergence lines on them indicated by the lower cloud forming at the back of the ridge that you see here. It was always a good indicator of lift, but that wasn’t the case for you. I assume the down part of the wave was killing it off, particularly at lower level.
    It’s hard to do, but I guess the answer is to get high enough and then always use the upper wave bars to understand where the wave is rather than rely on the ridges. One question I have is why the double yaw string? I’ve seen it once or twice before and don’t understand the logic. Can you help please?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      Hi yeah I think the upper wave was dumping onto lots of areas I was trying to fly on :)
      Re the yaw strings, I answered that here: ruclips.net/video/OR9zJwcGxoQ/видео.html
      It also helps the video, so you can see if my strings are straight even though the camera is on an angle. Cheers!

  • @Will-ui7dv
    @Will-ui7dv 2 года назад +4

    What's the screeching noise we hear occasionally like at 15:00? Is that wind noise or something else?
    Thanks for keeping the approach and landing in. As a new glider pilot it's useful to see more examples of how people set up and land!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +5

      Yeah that's a noise my glider makes when I'm in the wrong flap setting at a certain speed! i.e. if I'm in negative flaps but going too slowly. I don't know why it makes that noise, but it is actually useful :)

  • @roadboat9216
    @roadboat9216 Год назад +1

    Nice flight. Thanks! Wow, beautiful country side. Where is this.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Hi launched from Springfield, near Christchurch, New Zealand. Find a Map on WeGlide, link is in the description

    • @roadboat9216
      @roadboat9216 Год назад +1

      @@PureGlide no wonder it’s so beautiful. What nice country! And great soaring to boot!

  • @MFPrice2222
    @MFPrice2222 Год назад +1

    Great flight Tim! Is Skysight highly accurate in wave there like it is out of Minden/Sierras or because of the complexity of your mountains versus our basically singular contiguous range does SS get confused? Any issues with Hawk at higher elevations or it seems to work just as well? Thank you for posting this! - Michael Price (MP)

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Haven’t tried it in the wave yet, only done a few flights in our flatlands up in the North Island :)

  • @bagoistvan3182
    @bagoistvan3182 Год назад

    👍 AWESOME !!! 🍺🍺🍺🍺🍺 😁😁😁

  • @soaringsisters9169
    @soaringsisters9169 2 года назад +2

    Great video! That's a bright phone, what is it and what app is running on it?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Hi that's my iPhone 12 Pro Max - unfortunately it does overheat when in the sun, so not ideal. But on a cloudy day it's fine. The app is our New Zealand glider tracking website gliding.net.nz/tracking Cheers!

  • @gerhardwesp3995
    @gerhardwesp3995 2 года назад +3

    6:30 looks like you're flying under the descending part of the rotor, clouds seem to be dissipating above you. Did you have the option of just pushing on NW with high speed instead of that long left turn?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +5

      Good question, maybe it would have worked! The cloud was a bit of a problem, I can't fly in it, because there are hard bits hidden in there. Maybe I just needed to go a bit further under them. I'm really not sure. And I'm not sure those were rotor clouds either, it was more a sheet of cloud. Cheers!

  • @petesmith9472
    @petesmith9472 Год назад +1

    My fear of gliding is I’m told you rely on turbulence for lift…and it’s easy to become air sick. Otherwise I think I’d give it a go.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      Sort of, yes some glider pilots to have to take nausea reducing drugs to help them fly. You also get used to it. Cheers!

  • @markdeschane4467
    @markdeschane4467 Год назад

    What is kinda the average tops of the mountains in N.Z.?

  • @tomf4547
    @tomf4547 Год назад +1

    I know nothing about flying but I'd say there's far more skill involved in gliding.
    Wondering how often a pilot will have to land where there's no hope of retrieving the glider later?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      There's a few places in the South Island that are helicopter retrieve only. We avoid landing on them!

  • @catmar1944
    @catmar1944 Год назад +1

    Long distance gliding seems very technical, so i guess you learn all this at your local gliding club if you opt for it above the every day gliding pilots, or am i completely off base?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Hi yeah you start of small and flying locally around your gliding club, over the years many start flying further and start flying from other sites. Eventually you're comfortable going anywhere! Mountains are a whole other ball game though, it took me a few years to get used to flying around them, and you can see in this video I still have no idea what I'm doing sometimes :)

  • @tomf4547
    @tomf4547 Год назад +2

    Just a thought!! Are there any gliders that have a little engine to get you out of trouble when you're going down?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Sure is, check out my video on the topic: ruclips.net/video/T-KYoFGJp5o/видео.html

  • @chrisdurham8778
    @chrisdurham8778 Год назад +1

    Great video. Can you please name the artist in the soundtrack throughout? Thanks.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +2

      Hi that's this song here, Venetian Blinds by Mattias Tell ruclips.net/video/YYTcIKzUZYc/видео.html

  • @MusikCassette
    @MusikCassette 2 года назад +1

    Here is an other wacky idea from me for this kind of Situation. Have some smoke rockets on board. To help you find out, wherr the wind is blowing, where you are not.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      Haha that is brilliant :)

  • @geeselouise
    @geeselouise Год назад +1

    That beeping variometer is annoying as hell.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      That’s gliding for you! We love it :) although normally I turn the volume down a bit while recording…

  • @robertbecker5362
    @robertbecker5362 2 года назад +1

    Looks like fun but I don't know how you can stand all that beeping?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Well, it's critical to know if you're going up or down while gliding, so I want to hear it! It's always nice to know when you're plunging to the ground...

  • @12vibaba
    @12vibaba 2 года назад +1

    Man i would be nervous flying there getting low. how can you land there and get retrieved.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Yeah when I got low I wasn't to far away from an airstrip I knew about. So could have got a tow plane to come and collect me. Or get the trailer in. Cheers!

  • @JonathanStCloud-yo5oq
    @JonathanStCloud-yo5oq Год назад +1

    What program is on your phone?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Hi that’s our New Zealand glider tracking system. You never know, an international version might be coming soon nudge nudge wink wink

  • @Mrbfgray
    @Mrbfgray Год назад +1

    Nice vid. (weak but I had to say sumptin :D)

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад +1

      5 min to spare. Well done. In my imagination--landing is scariest, no go arounds or power on adjustments....retracting spoilers I suppose in 'emergency'?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      Thanks! Yeah it's not too bad, gliders can glide a LONG way. Here's a video I made about going around in a glider and aborted landings ruclips.net/video/mZeFV-vTdKI/видео.html

    • @Mrbfgray
      @Mrbfgray Год назад

      @@PureGlide COOL beans, thank you. This should be good! :D
      My only personal experience was in Napa Valley, Cali, stunt glider as paying tourist. Did few multi loops with sustained 4Gs, gave me respect, can barely imagine 8 or 9Gs even momentarily.
      Great sport. Weird tangent but--our first family doctor crashed dead at some 9k alt, but he was 80 something and some thought it sort of a suicide. He'd been bragging about buzzing the mountain ridges for yrs and wasn't dealing well with aging. Also angry that his powered GA license taken after a heart attack decades prior. He had good couple decades in glider post decades of powered flying.
      My take away was the just higher connection with the sport and aviation in general, nothing negative. Anything can be done dangerously.

  • @lifetimedreamvideos985
    @lifetimedreamvideos985 Год назад +1

    It will take all the challenge out of it, but probably someday there will be computer software and sensors that will show, on a head up display, in color, where the lift and sink resides out there. Or perhaps on a screen in the cockpit. They managed to come up with windshear prediction equipment in airliners by measuring the relative motion of bugs and dust in the air. Does anyone know more about this?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Maybe one day, I suspect that is still a long way away. And besides, we actually have good indicators at present, the clouds! just a shame that doesn't show all the air... but definitely for thermal flying, the clouds tell us what is happening (if there are any).

    • @lifetimedreamvideos985
      @lifetimedreamvideos985 Год назад

      @@PureGlide I see that it helps you a lot that you have your previous track recorded. When you find a spot with reliable lift, you can more easily return.

    • @niconico3907
      @niconico3907 8 месяцев назад

      There are Lidar that can measure windspeed remotely.

  • @Paul-vh6ul
    @Paul-vh6ul Год назад +1

    What was your Hawk wind indicator saying when the ridge was not working?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Hi I didn't have hawk set up then! So not sure the wind indicator was very accurate. There was definitely a bit of wind.

    • @Paul-vh6ul
      @Paul-vh6ul Год назад +1

      @@PureGlide I've been using an Anemoi Wind Indicator the last few months. A few times it helped me find an isolated sweet spot of ridge lift in 10 kt wind. Air mass movements interact with terrain and with each other in very complicated ways. I would like to see another Hawk video if you have anything to share.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Yes I'm flying with Hawk full time now, so any future flights are using it. I maybe put older flights up in future videos, like this video, so they won't have it. I'll do a recap video of what it's like after more use at some stage.

  • @ed1pk
    @ed1pk Год назад +1

    Could someone s please explain what a wave is?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Conveniently I have made a video about it! How Mountain Wave Systems Work, with Lenticular and Rotor Clouds
      ruclips.net/video/VhDpoM5k2Qg/видео.html

  • @IQ-of-a-Goldfish
    @IQ-of-a-Goldfish Год назад +1

    I don't understand the whole glider thing. Wouldn't you want a engine so you don't have to be at the whims of air currents?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      It's like the difference between a small motorboat (Dinghy) and a sailing yacht. Sure the dinghy will get you across the harbour reliably every time, no matter the currents. But sailing a yacht you do for the sport of it, to get out and use nature to achieve great things, go places, purely under the power of nature. Oh and I do have an engine in the glider too, incase it doesn't work out as planned :)

  • @cemx86
    @cemx86 2 года назад +1

    I was listening to the altitudes you were reporting and it just didn't seem right - way too low for those big mountains. I am now thinking you were flying AGL on the altimeter and not MSL. Feet not meters. Is that common in NZ? Over here (USA) we all soar MSL only. A topic for the next video? Signed, N227BB (OHM)

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад

      Hi, no MSL only, in feet. The WeGlide flight trace is available if you want to see exactly the heights. Cheers!

    • @cemx86
      @cemx86 2 года назад +2

      @@PureGlide Thanks, I'll look at the file. I think what is confusing me was your altimeter (in feet I assume) was showing what, from my point of view, seemed very low indeed as you crossed some very impressive mountain ranges. Also, when you were in the landing pattern at 2700 ft I was thinking "What is the field elevation? Must be 1000's of feet, right? Heck, its right next to the mountains!". Nope, looks like about 1200ft. I am comparing that to here in the US near the Rocky Mountains where the airfields are often 4000-5000 and higher (see Nephi, Utah at 5022ft). Anyway, thanks for the videos!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Yeah field elevation was about 1400 feet from memory! not the high plains like in the US.

  • @Omar-iy3il
    @Omar-iy3il 2 года назад +2

    Would it be possible to fly a glider in my home country Pakistan which some parts are situated in k2 and Gilgit (mountains) below k2 there are moderate sized mountains which are up to 8000 to 15000 feet my dream one day would be to buy a glider and fly in Pakistan sadly Pakistan is a poor country thus no gliders or even general aviation aircraft fly near the Himalayan range

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +2

      Hi Omar, yes it would be physically possible, but usually the getting permission to do it is the problem! I know people have flown around the Himalayan mountains, for example: www.adventurealternative.com/destinations/nepal/himalayan-glider-flight/
      It is extra tricky if the country doesn't have general aviation already.

  • @abudabidibibudi
    @abudabidibibudi 2 года назад +2

    hello :) one questin plasse!!! its the world flat???? or not

    • @nasapublicaffairs1359
      @nasapublicaffairs1359 2 года назад +5

      Don't answer him Tim, you know what you signed!

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +3

      The real answer to this has been suppressed, but every once in a while the truth sneaks out: The earth is concave. We are living on a bowl earth. Only visible when you get high enough. Proof:
      mymodernmet.com/wp/wp-content/uploads/2022/04/earth-weather-balloon-photo-1.png

    • @Johan-ex5yj
      @Johan-ex5yj 2 года назад +3

      @@PureGlide Nice picture. 👍
      It makes perfect sense, if not a bowl then all that water would spill out! 😄

  • @mallik10892
    @mallik10892 Год назад +2

    what do you do if you need to take a piss?😁

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад +1

      You're in luck, I made a video about that ruclips.net/video/n4NsWAc3DiU/видео.html

  • @Johan-ex5yj
    @Johan-ex5yj 2 года назад +1

    Wow, that was tricky! All that sink just did not make sense to me.
    How about you, does it make any more sense 8 months later?

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  2 года назад +1

      Not really! I'm hoping some locals can explain it to me after seeing this video :)

    • @Johan-ex5yj
      @Johan-ex5yj 2 года назад +1

      @@PureGlide Yes, that’s probably your best bet. 👍
      That is one of those places where local knowledge (experience) is invaluable!

    • @robinfautley8698
      @robinfautley8698 2 года назад +2

      @@PureGlide That is it exactly. Even the locals back 60;years ago I know got caught out as my pilot did in ZK-BCP. But that was not a glider but an underpowered DH89 with a full load.

  • @arthurrobey7177
    @arthurrobey7177 2 года назад

    It makes you sink, doesn't it?

  • @Maxim.Teleguz
    @Maxim.Teleguz Год назад +1

    You keep leaving the sunny areas. Then wonder why you keep dumping. Maybe the same pattern is called insanity?

  • @PowerScissor
    @PowerScissor Год назад +1

    He mentions there was a contest, but not whst the contest is.
    To get the highest, farthest, most time?
    Sorry, it's probably obvious to everyone but me.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Hi great question. A gliding contest is a race, whoever can get around the set course fastest wins. Each day the task is based on the weather. Cheers!

  • @Hobgoblin1975
    @Hobgoblin1975 Год назад +1

    The beeping ruins an otherwise peaceful flight. cant belueve youd use something so irritating.

    • @PureGlide
      @PureGlide  Год назад

      Oh I love it, it's critical to know if we're going up or down :)

  • @micfail2
    @micfail2 4 месяца назад

    The terrible music makes this unwatchable

  • @tjmcguire9417
    @tjmcguire9417 Год назад

    You literally couldn't see it coming? DUH. All you had to do was look up. Or.. You know. Barometer. Attention hound you. I understand aeronautics. If you stick by this...you do not.

  • @tjmcguire9417
    @tjmcguire9417 Год назад

    Love you boy. But you need to develop your situational awareness. My advice to you is. Take a sailing course. What just grabbed you is obvious to any sailor.