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词条 Ingo Renner
释义

  1. Occupation as a gliding instructor

  2. Dynamic soaring

  3. Records and FAI Badges

  4. Achievements in competitions

  5. Other awards and honours

  6. Family

  7. References

{{Use dmy dates|date=August 2011}}{{Use Australian English|date=August 2011}}Ingo Renner OAM (born 1 July 1940 in Hude, Germany) is an Australian glider pilot who has won the World Gliding Championships four times.[1][2]

He started gliding in 1954[1] at the LSV Hude (gliding club of Hude) of which he is now an honorary member. In 1967 he moved to Australia and was granted Australian citizenship in 1971. He has flown over 37,000 hours.

Occupation as a gliding instructor

Renner joined Bill Riley's[3] Sportavia Soaring Centre, a commercial gliding operation in Tocumwal (NSW), as flight instructor shortly after moving to Australia.[4] From 1974, he worked during the European summers as a flight instructor at the Oerlinghausen training centre and at its branches in southern Europe, such as at Sondrio.[5] Each year he returned to the Australia for the southern summer. At the age of 65, he retired after working thirty seasons at Oerlinghausen.[1] In 2006, Sportavia Soaring Centre closed but the Murray Border Flying Club extended its operations to include gliding.[6] in 2009 the Southern Riverina Gliding club was formed, and Ingo Renner is its chief flying instructor for gliding.

Dynamic soaring

Renner is reported to have utilized the dynamic soaring technique with a Glasflügel H-301 Libelle at Tocumwal in 1974 and later flights in an Eiri-Avion PIK-20.[7]

Records and FAI Badges

In addition to several Australian records,[8] Renner established two world records. In 1975, he and Hilmer Geissler flew a two-seat glider (Caproni Vizzola Calif A-21) a straight distance of 970.4 km from Bendigo in Victoria to Langley, a location approximately 120 kilometres west of Bundaberg in Queensland. In 1982, he flew a Schempp-Hirth Nimbus-3 around a 100 km triangular course from Tocumwal airfield, New South Wales at an average speed of 195.30 km/hr.[9] In addition to his FAI Gliding Gold badge with three diamonds, he earned the 27th FAI 1000 kilometre badge by a 1,015.50 km flight in a Schempp-Hirth Nimbus-2 from Tocumwal airfield, New South Wales in 1980.[10]

Achievements in competitions

In 1976 Renner won the World Gliding Championships in the Standard Class. In 1983, 1985 and 1987 he was World Champion in the Open Class.[11] He also received the Dr. Mervyn Hall Trophy by the GFA as the Australian (Open Class) Champion in 1971/72, 1972/73, 1979/80, 1981/82, 1982/83, 1983/84 and 1991/92,[12] and the GFA Shield (Team Trophy) in the seasons 1971/72, 1984/85, 1985/86, 1988/89, 1989/90, 1990/91 and 1998/99.[13] To date he has been Australian National Champion nineteen times.[1]

He is still taking part in the decentralized soaring competition OLC.[14]

Other awards and honours

Renner was inducted into the Sport Australia Hall of Fame in 1987.[4] In 1988, he was awarded the FAI Lilienthal Gliding Medal[15] and the Medal of the Order of Australia. In 2000 he was awarded the Australian Sports Medal.[16]

Family

Renner’s wife Judy is also a talented glider pilot.[17] She has four daughters and eight grandchildren.[18]

References

1. ^Flugplatz Oerlinghausen / Neue Westfälische (in German) - accessed 2008-01-11
2. ^[https://www.telegraph.co.uk/travel/main.jhtml?xml=/travel/1998/06/27/etglid127.xml&page=2 " Gliding basics"], The Telegraph, 27 June 1998. Accessed 24 January 2008. "Resident coach Ingo Renner is four times World Champion."
3. ^Soaring: 29 November 2006 - accessed 2008-01-21
4. ^SAHOF: Ingo Renner -accessed 2008-01-21
5. ^Fluglager Sondrio 2004 (in German) - accessed 2008-01-11
6. ^{{cite web | url=http://soaring.eu/?p=12 | publisher=Soaring | title=Black day!! | date=25 July 2006 | accessdate=14 August 2011 }}
7. ^Helmut Reichmann (1978): Cross-Country Soaring, Soaring Society of America, {{ISBN|1-883813-01-8}}
8. ^Australian soaring: Australian records {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080509123131/http://aus-soaring.on.net/recoz.htm |date=9 May 2008 }} - accessed 2008-01-21
9. ^FAI: world records of Ingo Renner {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20051124073025/http://records.fai.org/pilot.asp?id=71&from=gliding |date=24 November 2005 }} - accessed 2008-01-11
10. ^FAI badges of Ingo Renner {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20050819155725/http://www.fai.org/gliding/badges/pilot_details.asp?pilot=71 |date=19 August 2005 }} - accessed 2008-01-11
11. ^SSA: World Soaring Champions {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080115024303/http://www.ssa.org/UsTeam/ust_champs.htm |date=15 January 2008 }} - accessed 2008-01-11
12. ^Dr. Mervyn Hall Trophy by the GFA - accessed 2008-01-11
13. ^GFA Shield Trophy - accessed 2008-01-11
14. ^OLC: Flights of Ingo Renner 2008 - accessed 2008-01-11
15. ^FAI Lilienthal Gliding Medal {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20071015182822/http://www.fai.org/awards/recipient.asp?id=223 |date=15 October 2007 }} - accessed 2008-01-11
16. ^Australian Honours received by Ingo Renner - accessed 2008-01-22
17. ^The Sidney Morning Herald: Greens candidate Judy Renner - accessed 2008-01-21
18. ^Greens candidate of the 2007 New South Wales for Murray-Darling {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080724233416/http://nsw.greens.org.au/state-election-2007/candidates/electorates/murray-darling/ |date=24 July 2008 }} - accessed 2008-01-23
{{Recipients of Lilienthal Gliding Medal}}{{DEFAULTSORT:Renner, Ingo}}

12 : 1940 births|Glider pilots|Flight instructors|Recipients of the Medal of the Order of Australia|Australian aviators|Recipients of the Australian Sports Medal|Sport Australia Hall of Fame inductees|Living people|Sportspeople from New South Wales|People from the Riverina|Australian people of German descent|Lilienthal Gliding Medal recipients

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