SLOPE SOARING
'Slope soaring', is a technique to maintain altitude in a full size glider or with a radio-controlled glider by flying it in the updraft produced by wind blowing up the face of a steep slope. Model glider pilots commonly refer to this as "slope gliding" or "sloping". Pilots of full-sized gliders also call the lift "ridge lift" and its use "ridge flying". They use it to fly hundreds of kilometers where there is suitable terrain, such as in the Ridge-and-valley Appalachians. Birds, such as many seabirds and raptors, also use slopes in this way.
| Contents |
| Basic requirements |
| See also |
| External links |
Basic requirements
Slope soaring requires a hill, ridge or escarpment, and a wind that is blowing against the slope, causing orographic lift. The wind creates a region of rising air directly above the slope which may extend some distance upwards and outwards from its face as the airflow follows the contour of the hill. However at near vertical cliffs, there is usually an area of turbulence with descending air near the base of the cliff. Downwind of the hill, lee waves can form that are also used by glider pilots to gain height but this should not be confused with slope lift.
The rising air from the slope is used to keep gliders airborne. Although a glider is always descending through the air, it will climb if the surrounding air is rising faster than the glider's sink rate.
See also
★ Gliding
★ Orographic lift
★ Ridge lift
★ Dynamic soaring
★ Walkalong glider
External links
★ Ridge flying the Mifflin task area
★ A New Pilot’s Primer To Flying At ‘‘The Ridge'’
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