|
The F3B World Championships 2005
The 2005 journey to the worlds was an interesting one,
first Anton couldnt come because of a passport issuing
problem, apparently they want him to stay in the country
(SA) or on the other hand maybe Finland wanted to keep the
male to female ratio at 1:10. Later we discovered that our
team manager, Derek couldnt make it due to a deep
veined thrombosis, luckily we had been set to go with two
managers Wolfgang for admin and Derek for on the field so
we shuffled the team around with Dion and I becoming acting
field managers, Wolfgang remaining our admin manager and
of course team mommy (sorting us all out in
a good Austrian manner). James Shaw replaced Anton in the
helper numbers while Craig Baker took over the role of winch
master. Our Cape Town import, Ian Lessem, joined on the
helper team but had not been able to make any practices
due to geographic location so he was what Anton would call
a dog (we trained him to fetch). As the trip
unfolded these roles changed and things became a little
more streamlined with Ian being stationed at base A and
looking after the winches.
The days in Finland were very long, from two perspectives,
firstly it only gets dark for about 2 to 3 hours of the
day and second, we seemed to fill every gap playing with
winches, line, models or babies. Our typical day was get
up at 5:30, breakfast, sort out Mathew (for Michelle), pack
gear, get to field, lay out winches and test models, fly,
help, help, fly, help
till 8:30pm then pack up,
food and try to get to bed by 23:30. A LOOONNNNGGG day and
we enjoyed almost every minute. Conditions were continually
changing, very difficult to read with both winch directions
active for the whole contest except Friday afternoon
The competition didnt go exactly as planned, we have
what I would call a good habit of having high expectations
when we go to the competition and sadly we were unable to
bring this through to fruition. There were however many
promising aspects and the areas we need to work on are clear.
Round 1
The start was late as there was an opening ceremony, all
part of the program.
Wind - Consistent breeze, starting in one direction and
swinging to the other by the end of the day. Lots of cross
wind launches. This incorporated flying low over the trees
by the hangars and flying around to 90º. When I say
cross wind I mean it was a marginal decision as to which
way you would rather launch, and preferred direction due
to wind was often the worst side as the swing of wind is
due to a thermal on the downwind side. I couldnt really
complain about my results but I should have gone faster.
Michelle was not happy with distance but this is something
we carried through from practice and results back home
we were hoping things would change but distance is the most
stressful and requires consistent practice and lots of teamwork.
Hopefully we can get some more practice in with all of you
back home in the future. Remember, people, there is an open
invitation to take part in distance and speed practice when
the team practices (we need more people to fly against and
helpers) and we just slot in available pilots when it suits
you. Dion was quite surprised by the stress level in F3B
compared with his previous F3J experience, he wanted to
go faster, longer and land better. I was also feeling the
pressure something that only happened before at my
first Worlds before the first speed flight I could
hardly breath, this subsided by round 3.
A lot comes down to launch height, as usual! We felt quite
confident that we had closed the launch gap but alas it
is still there. In Distance it costs us between 2 and 3
laps, depending on the air and speed is probably a loss
of 1 to 3 seconds.
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
47 |
Väisänen, Pasi |
SWE |
9.59 |
100 |
1000,00 |
18 |
1000,00 |
14,87 |
1000,00 |
3000 |
100 |
0 |
| 7 |
36 |
Goodrum, Craig |
RSA |
10:00 |
100 |
1000,00 |
22 |
1000,00 |
17,56 |
846,81 |
2846,81 |
94,89 |
0 |
| 42 |
38 |
Libenberg, Dion |
RSA |
10:04 |
90 |
981,40 |
17 |
944,44 |
24,85 |
598,39 |
2524,24 |
84,14 |
0 |
| 47 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
10:00 |
85 |
979,97 |
13 |
722,22 |
21,67 |
686,20 |
2388,40 |
79,61 |
0 |
Round 2
We had light and rainy conditions on Day 2
Most of round 2 took place on day 2, if I remember correctly.
Day 2 was the worst thing I could have hoped for. I will
explain. I chose my model based on our previous experience
in Finland with F3J. There had been a breeze on all days
and you could work the model on the launch. The Trinity
launches well but not as well as other models like the Estrella
in flat calm conditions, and day 2 was flat, calm, yuck
stuff. If there was a breeze it was very light and cross
(90º), just enough to make you have to pick the wrong
launching direction. Craig Baker took ill on the second
day and we were a bit worried about him, thoughts are sleep
depravation and stress but we were not sure, so concern
was high. We had to get him off the field as his behaviour
became disjointed and I felt that there could be a winch
accident. Ian was given Winch manager duty and took over
lights in distance, he really did this well and even started
to call to us what speed the other pilots were doing and
if he thought we should speed up. The scoreboard is great
and gives pilots remaining time on course, so it is possible
to compare your current position with theirs, if the person
looking at the board is wide awake.
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
23 |
Herrig, Andreas |
GER |
10:00 |
95 |
994,28 |
20 |
1000,00 |
17,10 |
995,32 |
2989,60 |
100 |
0 |
| 38 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
9:59 |
100 |
998,57 |
16 |
800,00 |
19,39 |
877,77 |
2676,34 |
89,52 |
0 |
| 42 |
38 |
Libenberg, Dion |
RSA |
10:01 |
90 |
984,29 |
16 |
842,11 |
20,65 |
824,21 |
2650,60 |
88,66 |
0 |
| 52 |
36 |
Goodrum, Craig |
RSA |
9:19 |
0 |
798,57 |
18 |
900,00 |
20,75 |
820,24 |
2518,81 |
84,25 |
0 |
Round 3
Still day 2 and ARRRRHHH! I hate this soggy, still
air.
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
1 |
Böhlen, Andreas |
SUI |
9.57 |
100 |
995,71 |
22 |
1000,00 |
17,19 |
1000,00 |
2995,71 |
100 |
0 |
| 43 |
38 |
Liebenberg, Dion |
RSA |
9:05 |
65 |
871,43 |
18 |
900,00 |
21,03 |
817,40 |
2588,83 |
86,42 |
0 |
| 44 |
36 |
Goodrum Craig |
RSA |
8:20 |
85 |
838,11 |
17 |
894,74 |
20,55 |
836,50 |
2569,34 |
85,77 |
0 |
| 53 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
8:42 |
100 |
897,55 |
13 |
684,21 |
23,89 |
725,83 |
2307,58 |
77,03 |
0 |

The bosses in serious discussion What can we do
with them?
Round 4
Round 4 and things went a bit better. Michelle was still
having a hard time in distance but it wasnt because
of her flying it was just damn bad luck. We spotted good
air and went for it and were far away when the late launchers
(sheep) hit huge stuff right on the field. So she lost out
in having to fly back onto the field with diagonal, long
legs (sounds sexy) and not being able to get too low over
the trees. Damn! It was such a good decision! It really
is tough sometimes. Dion had to change models due to a loose
elevator linkage and the new model didnt launch correctly
so the launching problem actually got worse, therefore
his speed times became worse. Wolfgang took Craig B to the
doctor who gave him some sleeping pills with the feeling
that some sleep would get him back in gear. The day was
like watching distance slaughter, you were either beaten
6 love or you celebrated. Again launch height was vital
and air even more important.
On one of Dions flights we were going for a relaunch
and I was catching the model, only Dion pulled flaps and
the model bounced up and over my head. I was concerned about
what safety areas it might hit so I jumped to try and catch
it but missed, knocked the wing and made the plane spin
flat. It hit the taxi way on the nose then wig tip then
tail. Hmmm. Sorry Dion. He was having a really bad time.
Lappeenranta is great but the Finnish weather sucks. One
minute it is blowing really nicely and then it slows and
swings to the other direction, this cycle can take just
15 minutes, not easy to develop a river of air map in these
conditions. They had to make two groups in round 3 speed
due to a rain shower that hit for about 30 minutes. I had
brain fade in duration and tried to scratch 10 more seconds
at the cost of missing my landing. This turned a small loss
into a really big one.
They let us go home early on day 3 which gave me time to
send some info and pictures home but what we thought would
be a good nights sleep became a real problem. We all went
to bed early, 10pm but the day suddenly became longer than
usual. Michelle and I were woken up by James at around 11h30
because Craig B was not behaving. Wolfy had taken him to
the doctor earlier and they prescribed some sleep and gave
him sleeping tablets. Wolfy gave him one which he said he
had taken and went to sleep. He didnt however take
the pill and although he did sleep he woke up at around
10pm just after we went to sleep and continued with the
strange behaviour. We had to call the hospital and they
sent around an ambulance and an escort. Wolfgang and James
went with and eventually returned to the hotel at about
3am. Needless to say we were (so were the other teams) concerned
about Craig. The doctors said that he should be fine and
sedated him. We just had to wait for the whole thing to
work itself out.
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
1 |
Böhlen, Andreas |
SUI |
10:00 |
100 |
1000,00 |
21 |
1000,00 |
16,65 |
955,56 |
2955,56 |
100 |
0 |
| 11 |
36 |
Goodrum Craig |
RSA |
9:58 |
90 |
982,86 |
16 |
1000,00 |
19,32 |
823,50 |
2806,36 |
94,95 |
0 |
| 33 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
10:01 |
100 |
998,57 |
23 |
793,10 |
20,56 |
773,83 |
2565,51 |
86,80 |
0 |
| 42 |
38 |
Liebenberg, Dion |
RSA |
10:00 |
100 |
1000,00 |
19 |
826,09 |
23,04 |
690,54 |
2516,63 |
85,15 |
0 |
Round 5

James with his little friends
Cross wind of course and the day started with little wind,
picked up to a medium breeze and then subsided to still
air by 8:30pm. Difficult as always. James had to get some
sleep on the field as he was exhausted after the evenings
excitement. He was also working harder on the field to make
up for Craig being in the hospital and studying for his
matric exams.
In terms of flying, I lost out 2 minutes in duration due
to launching before the thermals woke up. Two rounds later
there was lift and Mich and Dion scored well except that
Dion came in hot, bounced and hit himself and Michelle came
in hot and slid. Distance was awesome for me as I made a
huge kill in flying the only air that was good while the
others did the fly on the field thing, there was some excellent
calling here by Michelle and Dion, a real team effort. Shortly
after that flight the trend became fly out there over the
trees, where the South Africans were. Dion only lost out
due to launch height and we didnt get Michelle into
the right air fast enough so the thermal was really far
away and over the trees and her legs became very diagonal
to get back on the field she lost 3 laps at second place
in her slot you get punished hard. The team spirit
of the contest came out if grand style during Michelles
speed flight. On her first launch she lost sight of the
model in the sun and once she recovered we called a relaunch
due to poor launch height. On the way down she complained
that the model wasnt working properly and then it
became apparent why, the model had been caught in the line
during the zoom and the right stabiliser had been removed,
only w couldnt see it due to looking at the left side
of the model and a little sun blindness. So I went to collect
the model, thinking that all was lost and we wouldnt
be able to get a second try when I hear people shouting
my name across the field, Along runs one of the Spanish
team with Michelles stab in their hand and we shove
it on, launch and make a run. What great spirit!

The Spanish team, Michelles saviours and recipients
of a bottle of Amarula
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
1 |
Böhlen, Andreas |
SUI |
9.59 |
100 |
1000,00 |
20 |
1000,00 |
14,90 |
1000,00 |
3000,00 |
100 |
0 |
| 13 |
36 |
Goodrum, Craig |
RSA |
7:52 |
95 |
818,18 |
20 |
1000,00 |
17,11 |
870,84 |
2689,02 |
89,63 |
0 |
| 32 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
10:03 |
75 |
961,37 |
15 |
833,33 |
21,81 |
683,17 |
2477,88 |
82,60 |
0 |
| 36 |
38 |
Liebenberg, Dion |
RSA |
10:03 |
0 |
852,86 |
15 |
937,50 |
23,15 |
643,63 |
2433,99 |
81,13 |
0 |
Round 6
The trees were a killer for many teams as the day wore on.
Eish! Too many Finnish Forest elephants out there.
My slot had the last of the decent air and I maxed easily
with only a few landing early but Michelle and Dion werent
so lucky. Michelle went with a small and bumpy thermal downwind
and next time we looked she was miles away and not high.
Her models penetration into the wind (which had picked
up a bit) was poor and she didnt get back to the field.
You know the air is bad when Joe Wurts also doesn't make
the field (Michelle's flight). The model was lost in the
trees. Dion was flying in the very next slot so we took
bearings and sent Rodney and Wolfgang on their way. We didnt
see them again until 9pm. Then Dion went up and the air
was rough. The thermals were small and when you flew slightly
outside of them your model was dumped hard. Bad score, damn!
Speed started and still no sign of Michelles model.
She went out in the other van to look for it too. They buzzed
badly for me on my first attempt and I was given a reflight,
but conditions were getting progressively lighter and I
need a breeze so by the end of the day I had an OK launch
and an OK run but that means a bad score. Michelle had no
model and missed her flight and Dion didnt get a good
launch (I felt we were over-ballasted for the launch ).
As the speed task ended the Finnish organisers arrived with
Michelles undamaged model in their hands. WOW! Even
though we had a bad day there were lots of smiles, and when
you get to spend so much time with your fellow F3B friends
life is actually really great. Distance took place on the
Friday after a rain delayed start and you could see a definite
improvement in Michelles flying, while Dion was getting
hit from all sides.
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
23 |
Herrig, Andreas |
GER |
9.57 |
100 |
1000,00 |
28 |
1000,00 |
15,83 |
1000,00 |
3000,00 |
100 |
0 |
| 18 |
36 |
Goodrum, Craig |
RSA |
9:58 |
100 |
998,57 |
20 |
869,57 |
19,52 |
810,96 |
2679,10 |
89,30 |
0 |
| 52 |
38 |
Liebenberg, Dion |
RSA |
4:13 |
100 |
508,65 |
19 |
791,67 |
22,04 |
718,24 |
2018,55 |
67,29 |
0 |
| 56 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
6:16 |
0 |
648,28 |
17 |
944,44 |
0,00 |
0,00 |
1592,72 |
53,09 |
0 |
Round 7
In round 7 Michelle scored what she says is her first 1000
in a worlds distance. This was a good omen for the
future. I hope she has many more. The good air was two flights
before me in speed and after the third launch I had no choice
but to enter the course or run out of time, damn!
again - I really wanted to go fast once. At the end of the
day though I believe a Swiss, Swede or German pilot would
have score a 17.5s in the same air, so there is a lot of
work to be done. I am able to get fast times in good air
but performance is lacking in the bad air conditions.
Our biggest concern was that Craig Baker was still not
well, he had to be re admitted to the hospital as he reacted
badly to the medication they gave him and the dosage had
to be lower. I managed to visit him a few times with Shirley,
Wolfgang, Michelle and James and each time I saw him there
was an improvement so things looked hopeful there but the
decision had been made that Adrian Baker would fly out to
fetch him on the Tuesday. We left Lappeenranta on Monday,
it is not fun leaving your team mate behind, you kind of
get to understand the US Marine credo of never leaving a
man behind.
|
Pos.
|
No.
|
Name
|
Country
|
Duration
|
Distance
|
Speed
|
Points
|
Perc.
|
Pen.P
|
| 1 |
4 |
Hanke, Christian |
SUI |
10:01 |
95 |
991,43 |
20 |
1000,00 |
15,63 |
1000,00 |
2991,43 |
100 |
0 |
| 15 |
36 |
Goodrum, Craig |
RSA |
10:01 |
100 |
1000,00 |
22 |
1000,00 |
19,59 |
797,86 |
2797,86 |
93,53 |
0 |
| 30 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
10:02 |
95 |
990,00 |
18 |
1000,00 |
22,24 |
702,79 |
2692,79 |
90,02 |
0 |
| 49 |
38 |
Liebenberg, Dion |
RSA |
8:13 |
95 |
840,00 |
16 |
800,00 |
21,70 |
720,28 |
2360,28 |
78,90 |
0 |
Our helpers were awesome. Craig put in huge effort before
getting sick, while Ian and James picked up all the slack
in his absence. Wolfgang has been a gem in administrating
the team and the team works well on the line. There were
very few problems on the winches and lines and the ones
we have had were caused by other teams winding down etc.

The helpers - helping the tree stay upright
Some notable quotes from our team:
Michelle; The lift is over the trees. (there
are about 20 000 000 in Lappeenranta)
Dion; This is an emotional nightmare, one minute up,
then down, its never ending
James; How do you know which side of the tree is the
front? you will have to ask him to tell you
the rest!
Ian; Im coming out.
Rodney; Why doesnt he relaunch?
Wolf; Rodneys the pessimist, Im the optimist
Shirley; Hello Mathew!
Craig B; Someone moved the tree
Mathew; BBBBBBBB
For those that didnt follow on the net Andreas successfully
defended his title and really flew well. Daryl could have
competition here. The German team won with 2nd ,3rd ,and
4th places. Amazing!
The results from the South African camp were:
Craig 26
Michelle 44
Dion 48
RSA 14
We could definitely have improved on this (with our existing
level of flying). I think that if you look at the team results
Michelle and I have been coming to these things for a longer
time and the pressure on Dion was higher than for us. Experience
in a long drawn out format is very different to how we fly
F3B in SA. I think that the distance scores were a good
indication of our level, except for Michelle who could have
done better in 3 of her flights. We could definitely have
done better in duration and speed. I would estimate that
each of us could have gained 300 points in these (at least)
if we flew to our normal standard. That being said, the
conditions were difficult and the scores show a huge scattering,
even the top ten guys had rounds that look really bad and
of those top ten I saw quite a few get lucky, if they had
been on the other side of the luck curve on just one flight
they would have dropped 10 places easily.
Equipment
Winches. The "boubble decker" is interesting as
the continual wind changes require that you have a huge
variety of lines available, when you stack the winches you
can fit 6 lines on one side. There is definite interest
in a higher torque lower speed motor like the Lucas M2 (I
think).

Double Decker
Sighting devices are essential and the various types can
be seen. The one type used a ridgid I frame with vertical
strings to create the plane of reference. Look at the two
examples on the Murdoogs web site (www.murdoog.co.za).
The other photo is of a simple V formation using carbon
rod, this gives good vertical reference and packs up nice
and tight, hey .
Some model info:
Everyone wants to know what the best model is. Simple, none
of them! This is because F3B is a compromise and what is
good for one type of condition or task is not good under
another condition. An example of this is our very own SA
Sangoma, in high altitude conditions this is still a very
competitive model so for a highveld flyer it is not a bad
choice at all.
In terms of what we saw, the Estrella has become the model
of common use. Andreas Bohlen flew the Crossfire (which
I liked and Michelle doesnt and Joe Wurts couldnt
get launch height out of, but Andreas had no problem here).

There were a number of Europhia 2s (Peter Eagle bought
one so we can see what it looks like locally, the fuselage
is really a race machine fuselage and the wings are some
MH32 derivative, good launch capability and it carries more
ballast than the Estrella.
Andreas Herrig flew his own design Schocker which looks
really good.
Others were the cruciform Elitas, Carachos, Race Machines,
Furios and others in small quantities. The ones that stand
out are the Europhia 2, Crossfire and Estrella.
Performance
Is it all down to the launches?
A lot is down to launch height as this gives you the possibility
of going fast even when the air is bad.
We still need to clean up our act. The 15 second mark is
easier to get up here than at the coast for me as I get
used to the thin air. Launching conditions were tough but
this did not effect the height of the good guys at all.
Are they using special bearings with minimal resistance
carefully rebuilding their winches?
Possibly, even a 1% improvement in performance on a winch
is worth pursuing.
What line do they use?
Fischer, Speed line and Japanese Nagai line.
Winch spool diameter?
Depends on the winch motor, smaller for Bosch and bigger
for Lucas.
Have they changed to improved winch motors preferably without
resistors?
No.
Are your winches as good as the Swede's winches?
Our winches were good but I think there is room for
improvement here.
Total Results (7 Rounds, 1 discard Round)
|
|
Dur Disc.
|
Dist. Disc
|
Speed Disc.
|
|
|
|
Pos
|
No
|
Name
|
Country
|
Rd.1
|
Rd.2
|
Rd.3
|
Rd.4
|
Rd.5
|
Rd.6
|
Rd.7
|
Sum Rds
|
Rd
|
Score
|
Rd
|
Score
|
Rd
|
Score
|
Pen P
|
Total
|
Perc |
| 1 |
1 |
Böhlen, Andreas |
SUI |
2856,13 |
2871,87 |
2995,71 |
2955,56 |
3000,00 |
2675.87 |
2962,08 |
20317,22 |
6 |
698,71 |
2 |
947,37 |
1 |
874,71 |
0 |
17796,44 |
100,00 |
| 26 |
36 |
Goodrum, Craig |
RSA |
2846,81 |
2518,81 |
2569,34 |
2806,36 |
2689,02 |
2679,10 |
2797,86 |
18907,29 |
2 |
798,57 |
6 |
869,57 |
7 |
797,86 |
0 |
16441,30 |
92,39 |
| 44 |
37 |
Goodrum, Michelle |
RSA |
2388,40 |
2676,34 |
2307,58 |
2565,51 |
2477,88 |
1592,72 |
2692,79 |
16701,22 |
6 |
648,28 |
3 |
684,21 |
6 |
0,00 |
0 |
15368,73 |
86,36 |
| 48 |
38 |
Liebenberg, Dion |
RSA |
2524,24 |
2650,60 |
2588,83 |
2516,63 |
2433,99 |
2018,55 |
2360,28 |
17093,11 |
6 |
508,65 |
6 |
791.67 |
1 |
598,39 |
0 |
15194,41 |
85,38 |
The European standard of flying has definitely increased
over the past 5 years. They have world class competition
on a regular basis and knowing where they stand simply requires
that they look in their back yard. Isolation is bad, the
States struggled to hang in there to take a 3rd spot and
only really achieved it due to the Swiss flying a B team,
even though their team was really strong.
What needs to be done back in South Africa if we want a
competitive team? Simple practice more, while getting
more definite information on items like launch height and
get input from people who should know better like John Monk
and also input from people who have some ideas on improvement.
The latter is one I really like as it is the throwing around
of ideas and strategies that leads to improvement and often
my own understanding of just how little I know. I cant
really speak for the other 2 but I know I wasnt fast
enough (I was flying 16 seconds at home, but at high altitude)
and more sea level practice could have helped here, launch
height would have helped even more. I had a great time in
distance with 4 1000s but the loss of 3 distance slots
hurts too much, practice in distance flying and more machine
like accuracy would have given me two more 1000s,
the other loss was unavoidable. Duration was probably our
biggest disappointment again I have to say that practice
in still air to get the required 10 minutes every time is
essential, we will have to organise some early mornings.
In closing I would like to thank all those who supported
us and our sponsors, with an especially big thanks to Derek
Wiggil without whose help Michelle and I would not have
been able to attend. I hope that we can all get together
and discuss the future of F3B in SA. Hopefully there are
many people who are as keen as me.
I continue to be a Proudly South African F3B pilot, if
all goes well and I can make the next team I am going to
have one more try at this, I hope you have enjoyed the report,
it is dedicated to my wonderful son and truly unique wife.

My inspiration
Craig
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