Thanks for all the comments guys. The talk has been the result of many years flying, analysing, and presenting to groups over the last 3 decades and is one of the most enjoyable talks I give. The feedback has always been great. I look forward to meeting some of you at a future SRS or Naviter Open event for more such talks between the racing and fun. Brett
Couldn't agree more! Gland you find this content valuable, please consider joining this Chanelle's membership, if you would like to support creating more valuable content.
Third factor is the warm air is warming the air next to it. More 3d than you’ve explained. Progressively heating and cooling in convection and lapse. All happening at the same time. Rising, sinking and influencing each other all the time. Great video and great explanation. Just wanted to add to the theory. Thank you for posting.
Thanks for sharing! Great lesson. Can someone pkease write the 2 options he mentioned for 3D display the flights? (Sorry Eng is not my first language, I try to Google but didn't find them, gor sure I can't spell them 😂) Thanks
Some software made by navier. And the 2nd one he mentioned was sportstracklive I believe. If you find the exact part of the video and tag the timestamp I'll go back and listen for you if you'd like
Saw your video @FlyingKarlis and want to run this by you. This could be another way of understanding a thermal. Think of thermal as a lava lamp. Those bubbles that are going up in the lamp….think these are bubbles of warm air rising up. The only diff could be that the warm air bubbles are larger and probably closer together giving the effect of one large bubble. Temp in these bubbles could vary based on the terrain. And these warm bubbles (relative to surrounding) keep getting generated and go up. As they go up they are increasing in size due to lower pressure as the bubble rise up. Does this make sense Brett? Thank you for your video @Brett. This is Shake from USA. @TemplePilotsIndia.
High tension power lines always seem to make the nastiest thermals down low (usually as you're desperately trying to scrape over those exact power lines) 😮
Thanks for all the comments guys. The talk has been the result of many years flying, analysing, and presenting to groups over the last 3 decades and is one of the most enjoyable talks I give. The feedback has always been great.
I look forward to meeting some of you at a future SRS or Naviter Open event for more such talks between the racing and fun.
Brett
great content... patten recognition is a key factor tu succeed in cross country and this was clearly shown here... thanks for this masterclass
Couldn't agree more! Gland you find this content valuable, please consider joining this Chanelle's membership, if you would like to support creating more valuable content.
one of the clearest and most practical explanations of thermals I've seen so far, great content thanks a lot to France Brett and Karlis
Glad it was helpful!
This is great. Thanks for posting.
Glad you enjoyed it!
fantastic video! thank you!
You're very welcome!
great presentation. thank you.
Happy that you find it useful, Brett really makes it sound so simple!
Excellent presentation! I think we have all learned quite a bit!
Glad you enjoyed it!
Third factor is the warm air is warming the air next to it. More 3d than you’ve explained. Progressively heating and cooling in convection and lapse. All happening at the same time. Rising, sinking and influencing each other all the time. Great video and great explanation. Just wanted to add to the theory. Thank you for posting.
Great talk, tnx for sharing it!
My pleasure!
Free educational content ... Yes please.
Incredible content, thanks much for sharing
Glad you enjoyed it! Please consider joining this Chanell's membership, every bit helps to keep producing these videos.
Great video man !
A huge Thanks, it helped me alot.
Fantastic info! 🙏
Thanks for watching!
Great info..........thanks!
Glad you found it usefull.
Thanks for sharing! Great lesson.
Can someone pkease write the 2 options he mentioned for 3D display the flights? (Sorry Eng is not my first language, I try to Google but didn't find them, gor sure I can't spell them 😂)
Thanks
Some software made by navier. And the 2nd one he mentioned was sportstracklive I believe. If you find the exact part of the video and tag the timestamp I'll go back and listen for you if you'd like
thanks for great infomations
You bet!
Insightful video 🙏
Glad it was helpful!
Lovely rare video. Probably only one such video on RUclips
Brett has spent decades thinking about thermals, it was increadibly nice of him to share this with wider paragliding community.
Saw your video @FlyingKarlis and want to run this by you. This could be another way of understanding a thermal. Think of thermal as a lava lamp. Those bubbles that are going up in the lamp….think these are bubbles of warm air rising up. The only diff could be that the warm air bubbles are larger and probably closer together giving the effect of one large bubble. Temp in these bubbles could vary based on the terrain. And these warm bubbles (relative to surrounding) keep getting generated and go up. As they go up they are increasing in size due to lower pressure as the bubble rise up. Does this make sense Brett? Thank you for your video @Brett. This is Shake from USA. @TemplePilotsIndia.
Bedankt
Thank you for the tip!
High tension power lines always seem to make the nastiest thermals down low (usually as you're desperately trying to scrape over those exact power lines) 😮
Thermals tend to be more nasty down low in general.
@@FlyingKarlis Hahaha, yeah - sometimes 😜 (ground proximity always a multiplier!)
The presentation is clear, but not the whiteboard.
Noted