HOW
TO THERMAL BETTER
So you've found your climb now what's the best
way to use it?
by Jay Rebbeck, Published: 27-Aug-01 X-C Magazine
Centering thermals efficiently,
and climbing quickly, are probably the most fundamental skills you need
to soar successfully. Even a small improvement in your technique could
easily mean an extra few hundred feet in every thermal or thousands
of feet in a typical XC flight of, say, 10 thermals. Come the end of the
day, this might even make the difference between getting home and landing
out. In a competition, what you gain in improved climb rate could well
equate to the points separating the winner and mid-table obscurity.
THINK IT
Before you even reach a thermal, you can start building a mental picture
that will help you center and climb quickly when you get there. Typically,
you will be approaching a cumulus hoping to climb. You can improve your
chances of finding a thermal by assimilating all the experience gained
on that day to guess where the thermal might be in relation to the cloud.
While on some days, thermals appear to form randomly, there are others
when you can find them quite reliably. For example, if a strong wind and
bright sunshine were feeding a cloud from one direction, you would expect
to find the thermal on that same side.
FEEL IT
As you approach the area where you expect the thermal to be, hold your
brakes very lightly. Other than maintaining a good lookout, you should
be totally focused on feeling which side the thermal is. If the thermal
feels strong enough, turn towards the wing thats lifted.
After you have rolled and turned into the
thermal, one of two things might happen: If the lift steadily improves,
great. But what should you do if the lift drops into sink?
The answer depends on how good the surge felt and how desperate you are
to climb. If you werent confident of the lift when you started to
turn and the clouds ahead look good, then simply roll out and get going
if youve got the height. However, if the surge felt smooth
and solid, but you turn into sink, then youve probably turned the
wrong way. At this point FORGET any distractions about what techniques
to use, and resort to a mental picture. Logically, the quickest way back
into the center is to do a tight 270° turn, and then re-center. This
maneuver brings you back to where you would have been if youd turned
the right way in the first place! Youre now in a position to maximize
your climb.
Despite the enormous importance of climbing
quickly in thermals, this is one of most controversial topics in free
flying. Most people want to be taught a prescriptive technique for thermalling,
and this is where the confusion begins. There are two widely-taught techniques,
but they appear to be completely contradictory. The tighten on the surge
theory says that when the vario indicates the greatest climb rate, you
should increase the angle of bank. In apparent contrast, the second theory
says you should widen out when encountering the strongest lift. So how
do we resolve this contradiction? The answer is that both theories are
right, but they are appropriate in different situations.
TIGHTEN ON THE SURGE
So, having positioned your glider in the thermal, how do you establish
yourself in the center and optimize your climb rate? The answer is to
use the tighten on the surge technique: when you feel the thermal pushing
solidly, or the vario indicates the strongest lift, you should tighten
the turn and dig the wing into the thermal. Most pilots dont turn
tightly enough, but of course, if you only tighten up in lift youll
end up in a spiral dive! To prevent this, when the vario indicates weaker
lift or sink, you should widen the turn out to anticipate banking and
pulling into the next surge.
The importance of tightening on good surges
was brought home to me during the 1997 World Air Games in Turkey, where
I was competing in the gliding section. Climbing in hot, blue thermals
with massive gaggles in identical-performance gliders, often the only
way to achieve an advantage on anyone else was simply to get stuck right
in to the core of the thermal. The pair of flying French pilots who went
on to win always managed to center on the strongest cores.
WIDEN OUT IN THE STRONGEST
LIFT
Tightening on the surge is the technique for staying centered in one core
of a thermal. So what is the role of the opposing technique of widening
out in the lift? Quite simply, this should be used when you think there
is a developing core nearby. But how can you recognize this emerging fresh
bubble?
Having centered on one core, there are
a few tell-tale signs: first, the average rate of climb drops off and,
second, the thermal seems much stronger on one side than the other. Another
core has formed, is bumping up the side of the one you are in, and the
outflow from that bubble is interfering with yours. Sometimes this is
marked by birds or other gliders circling, or tendrils being sucked into
cloudbase nearby. In any case, the solution is simple: widen out in the
strongest lift, wait a few moments, and then tighten up in the emerging
bubble. Then continue to stay centered in the new pulse of lift using
the tighten on the surge technique.
The ability to re-center quickly can sometimes be the key to competition
success. On a critical day in the Junior Gliding World Championships in
Holland, I was able to gain enough height on the gaggle in just one thermal
to make it home as the sole finisher. What made the difference that day
was simply that I re-centered efficiently and caught a short-lived bubble
which the rest of the gaggle missed. That turned out to be the last thermal
of the day, giving me enough height to glide home over the unlandable
forest, while everyone else hit the deck the wrong side of it.
There is a strong correlation between the width of a cumulus and the number
of bubbles feeding that cloud. For example, when arriving under a vast
cloud street you should expect loads of bubbles and will probably need
to widen out into wind frequently when you feel a fresh surge. On the
other hand, climbing under the last isolated cloud of the day, you are
likely to have to rely on simply tightening on the surge to get you home.
Whichever style you adopt, if you want to climb fast, you have to keep
working it all the way to the top! Youll also need to be planning
where youll go when you leave the lift.
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