Brett,
I did not intend to draw the attention of the elite fliers such as yourself. I hope to just settle back now and continue to enjoy flying.
I probably shouldn't have written into this post. I just thought there is a better way. I still do. we don't all hear the same drum beat. So I am differrent. An example of the difference is that I think there should be no appearance points. This because the scores are so tight that the difference in the appearance points can decide the winner. Its OK leave it that way but I just don't think it should be. Please do not write me about this it is only my opinion. Your all my friends even if I do not know you personally. LOL Sometimes you speak out and regret it.
There's no need to regret anything, and I certainly have no issue with you having an opinion about it. But I think it's wrong for pretty clear reasons. And I repeat - no one is *elite* in this business. Anybody who goes around acting superior because they fly model airplanes slightly better than someone else is not dealing with reality!
There is a sensitivity to NATs procedures comments, so forgive me for that. There are those (not you, of course) who have made it their life's work to send nasty messages and make snide comments about the "rigged" NATs and how crooked everyone involved in it is. This is so wrong - both factually incorrect, and morally reprehensible - that we are all pre-loaded to think the worst.
There's nothing the top fliers want more than a fair contest for everyone. If I thought I was getting an undue benefit (beyond the "rub of the green") I would be the first guy to try to change it. And you could call it self-interest, because if random luck favored me this year, it might shaft me the next time! I would much prefer an even playing field, because I figure that helps me. And I know the other top guys feel the same way.
The people running the contest (ED Paul Walker, World and 10-time Nats champ) have no particular reason or interest to do anything other than what is the most fair and even. And the NATS format and processes have developed over the years to address the inequities. The seeding is one of MANY ways that has been developed over decades to address the legitimate complaints and observations from the pilots. First, no one was seeded, and there were "hard" and "easy" circles (in the eye of the beholder, of course) and people complained bitterly. Then, they manually seeded people between circles to try to even it out. A lot fewer people complained because it took out some of the randomness of the circle selection. Eventually, even the critics admitted that the goal was a good one. Now, Paul and Howard have come up with a completely *automatic* way of doing it, taking out any possible accusation of bias. Same with the judge selection. So I think if you were in it a few times, and saw how it works, I think you would get the advantages.
I also disagree pretty strenuously about the appearance points, too. The event has *always* and in my opinion *should be* about the competing with airplanes you build yourself. It has never been simply about flying, and I don't think it should be. That limits the event too much. You observation about the effect of appearance points is accurate. I would guess that most of the time, on Top 20 day and the Open flyoff, appearance points are about on a par with flying points - that is, the differences in the flight scores and the differences of the appearance scores are of the same order of magnitude. I think that's a feature, not a flaw
I have been on the short end of it several times - I would have made the flyoff in 2001 and 2002 with 3 more appearance points. I could complain, but I knew what the rules were going in, and there was an easy solution to correct it - make a better airplane! The guys who made it did what they needed to in the workshop AND the circle, and I just didn't. That's my fault, not the rules. And I just got done spending two weeks doing some refinishing on my 18-point airplane from last year, because I thought there were some flaws that were going to burn me on Thursday and Friday.
There's an arguable point to be made either way but I am firmly in the "keep the BOM" camp. I don't think there are any new arguments, so anything I could say about it is already said
Brett