ParaShoot 0 #1 July 23, 2006 Due to to much wind on Friday the competition started at Saturday morning and was completed in one day. First lift at 08.45 and last to land at 21.15. Competition consisted of 3 rounds of the 3 disciplines speed, distance and accuracy. All disciplines were preceded by a training round so in total we did 12 jumps that day. Speed and distance had a head wind of about 4 - 5 m/s. Later in the afternoon the wind dropped and accuracy was done with zero to 1 m/s downwind. 1 Jay Moledzki Canada US$ 5.000 2 Shannon Pilcher USA $ 3.000 3 Ian Bobo USA $ 2.000 4 Jeff Provenzano USA $ 1.600 5 Nikolay Sukharnikov Russia $ 1.000 6 Jonathan Tagle USA $ 800 7 Alexander Kvochur Russia $ 600 8 Vladimir Polyakov Russia $ 500 9 Michael Vaughan Australia $ 300 10 Alexander Golovkin Russia $ 200 In total a cash purse of US$ 15.000. A great and efficient event! For more inside information about the results and other competitors see attached scoring list. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
dragon2 2 #2 July 23, 2006 ? A score of more than 10 secs for speed gives you a better score than the max 10 secs? ciel bleu, Saskia Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
ParaShoot 0 #3 July 23, 2006 Yes! The present IPC rules don't give a maximum time for speed but the system is still set to max 10 sec, which is automatically zero points in percentages. An actual time other or more than 10 sec will give points in percentages related to the best score. ** Know what you say but don't say all you know. ** Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites
raymod2 1 #4 July 25, 2006 ...which makes sense. A 10.68 second run *should* score better than a vertical extension. Quote Share this post Link to post Share on other sites