Below are the items the UK CIMA delegate proposes to put forward for inclusion in the agenda of the 1999 meeting 19 - 20 Nov.
Any amendments / additions / deletions will be gratefully received by your delegate Richard
Meredith-Hardy and included here. This is Draft 3, 27 Aug 1999 which will almost certainly change so check it out regularly.
The deadline for alterations is 19 September 1999
Should this be in?:
Other references:
UK proposed items to be included in the Agenda of the 1999 CIMA meeting.
Changes from WMC '99 are
summarised at the top of the first page.
This is a slight variation
on that distributed to CIMA in 1998 and 1997. It divides these
pro-forma local regulations into 3 parts (leaving the option
for a 4th, PHG). Part 1 includes everything common
to all classes. Part 2 includes all regulations applicable to
classes 1, 2 & 3 and Part 4 includes all regulations applicable
to Class 4 (PPG). Although there has been a lot of shuffling,
I believe that NOTHING from the current S10 annex 3 has been
actually removed. Quite a lot has been added ref. PPG's. All
the added PPG stuff has been used in practice at least twice
(98 & 99) and most of it 3 times (97, 98 & 99) so it
is well proven.
The team championship in
World and Continental championships seems to be causing an unnecessary
amount of trouble between teams and generally does not "reinforce
friendship between Nations". It should be abolished.
The team championship World and Continental championships seems to be causing an unnecessary amount of trouble between teams and generally does not "reinforce friendship between Nations". It should be abolished.
DELETE: Any replacement parts should conform exactly to the original specifications
REPLACE WITH: Any parts may be replaced only with those of an identical make and model or by those of similar or lower performance.
When is a part of an aircraft
not a part, but the whole? What are "original specifications"
(as compared to "the same as the pilot started the championship
with")? In the PPG event of WMC '99 Several pilots had engine
problems. One was able (after legal advice) to change his entire
fan-pack for another with a different engine. This is generally
considered not to be appropriate but does appear to be allowed
within the current rules.
DELETE: A competitor will be allowed only one take-off for each task and the task may be flown once only. However in the event of a mechanical failure occurring within 5 minutes of take-off, a further start may be made without penalty. Re-fuelling is not permitted and the original take-off time will be used for scoring.
REPLACE WITH: A competitor will be allowed only one take-off for each task and the task may be flown once only. In the event of a mechanical failure occurring, a further start may be made if there is no particular advantage in so doing and if it is done expeditiously. If the landing for repair is made within 5 minutes of take-off, the restart may be made without penalty, thereafter an appropriate penalty will be applied. Re-fuelling is not permitted.
A situation arose in PPG
task 7 of WMC '99 where the Director was unequivocally asked
by the pilot whether he could land and make repairs. If the Director
in that situation had said "no, you cannot land and take
off again if you are over the 5 minutes", then the pilot
would not have landed (he probably knew he was over time, the
Director, at that moment did not).
It is not for the Director to say whether to continue in this
situation would have been dangerous or not as safety must be
paramount above any doubt. Instead, therefore, it must be just
that a pilot is allowed to land and restart a task if he has
been in the air so long as a restart is made expeditiously, there
is no advantage to be gained (other than pure safety) and (depending
on circumstances) some sort of suitable penalty is applied. In
that case it was a pure economy task and time already in the
air was not counted towards the Pilot score which was an appropriate
penalty.
The PPG Director really wanted to try one of the new "test" noise tasks but the weather and marshal transportation situation prevented it. (Has to be done in a quiet place). None the less, this must be pursued in future championships.
This requires very urgent attention. A specific limit or definition
needs to be agreed.
WMC '99 demonstrated that representative juries do not work. There is a significant language barrier and most members were simply ignorant of the rules. It is essential however that there is not an exact return to the old system where some Jury members (and there are only three) were widely seen as incompetent. CIMA should agree on some sort of training course / qualification.
All other records are available to class 5 - there is no reason why these should not be also.
DELETE: A foot launchable powered paraglider (PPG) consists of a wing without any rigid structure, coupled to a power unit carried on the pilot's back during flight
REPLACE WITH: A powered paraglider (PPG) is a foot launched one or two seat aeroplane with flying surfaces which have no rigid structure.
The existing definition is simply not correct. The statement "foot launchable" implies that it may not be foot launched, if it is not foot launched then it is not a PPG, it is something else, maybe a Powered Paraglider Trike (PPT). The power unit is usually carried on the pilots back on the ground, but No PPG has the power unit carried on the pilots back in flight, it is supported by the harness and canopy and there is no weight on the pilots back. Two seater PPGs are becoming more common. There should be records for them and maybe in a few years it may be possible to introduce a two seat class in championships. This definition should allow for this.
DELETE: Records in sub-classes R1, R2 and R3 shall
be further divided into two groups:
Group 1: flexwing trike with
pilot weightshift as primary method of control.
Group 2: fixed wing aeroplane
with moveable aerodynamic controls
REPLACE WITH: Records in sub-classes R1, R2 and
R3 shall be further divided into three groups:
Group 1: flexwing trike with
pilot weightshift as primary method of control.
Group 2: fixed wing aeroplane
with moveable aerodynamic controls
Group 3: Powered paraglider
trikes