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Can You Make It to That Cloud?

MyCloudBase is a simple rangefinder for glider pilots. Point your iPhone at a cloud base and instantly see how far it is and how much altitude you'll lose getting there.

Perfect for pilots learning cross-country soaring

Why New XC Pilots Love It

When you're starting out in cross-country soaring, estimating distances is hard. Clouds that look close might be 10 miles away. MyCloudBase takes the guesswork out by giving you real numbers.

"That cloud is 4.2 miles away. I'll lose 1,850 feet getting there. At my glide ratio, I can make it."

Over time, you'll start calibrating your own eyes and building the intuition that experienced pilots have. MyCloudBase is your training wheels for distance judgment.

Two Powerful Features

๐Ÿ“

Cloud Distance & Altitude Lost

Point your camera at any cloud base and instantly see:

  • Horizontal distance to the cloud in your preferred units (statute miles, nautical miles, or kilometers)
  • Altitude you'll lose getting there based on your glide ratio
  • Real-time updates as you move your phone

Make informed decisions about which clouds to chase and whether you can reach them safely.

๐ŸŽฏ

Reachable Terrain Display

A green overlay shows everything within gliding range:

  • Visual glide cone based on your set L/D ratio
  • Top edge represents your glide path
  • Everything inside the box is theoretically reachable

Instantly see if a cloud base falls within your gliding range without doing any math.

How It Works

1

Set Your Parameters

Enter the cloudbase altitude (ask a towpilot or check the forecast) and your realistic glide ratio (be conservativeโ€”25:1 to 30:1 for beginners).

2

Point at a Cloud

Aim your iPhone camera at the base of a cumulus cloud. The calibrated horizon line helps you see exactly where level is.

3

Read the Numbers

See the distance and altitude loss displayed next to the crosshair. Check if the cloud is inside the green reachable terrain box.

4

Make Your Decision

Go for it, or find something closer? With real data, you can make confident cross-country decisions.

Getting Started

Initial Setup

  1. Allow Camera Access: MyCloudBase needs your camera to show the sky and measure angles.
  2. Allow Location Access: Used to determine your current altitude via GPS.
  3. Set Your Glide Ratio: Tap the "Glide Ratio" button and use the picker wheel. Start conservative! If your glider's best L/D is 38:1, try 28:1-30:1 for real-world conditions.
  4. Set Cloudbase Altitude: Tap the "Cloudbase" button (or "CB:" at top right) and set the estimated cloud base height in feet or meters.

Using the App in Flight

  1. Point at the cloud base: Hold your phone so the crosshair aims at where the cloud meets clear air (the base).
  2. Read the display: Distance and altitude lost appear next to the crosshair when you're pointing above the horizon.
  3. Check the green box: If the cloud base is inside the green "Reachable Terrain" area, you can theoretically glide there.
  4. Tap Capture: Save the current reading for reference.
  5. Adjust as needed: Update cloudbase altitude as conditions change throughout the day.

Understanding the Display

  • Black Horizon Line: Shows true level using your phone's motion sensors. Stays horizontal as you tilt the phone.
  • Crosshair (+): Your aiming point. When pointing below horizon, it shows an up arrow (โ†‘) as a reminder to tilt up.
  • Green Box: The "Reachable Terrain" area. Top edge is your glide path at the set L/D ratio.
  • Distance Reading: Horizontal distance to the cloud (not slant distance).
  • Altitude Lost: How much height you'll lose flying to that cloud at your set glide ratio.

Settings

Tap the gear icon (โš™๏ธ) to access:

  • Distance Units: Statute miles, nautical miles, or kilometers
  • Altitude Units: Feet or meters (also changes cloudbase picker)
  • Altitude Source: GPS altitude or pressure altitude with manual offset
  • Horizon Calibration: Advanced setting for fine-tuning if needed (most users won't need this)

Tips for New XC Pilots

๐ŸŽฏ Be Conservative

Your glider's published L/D is for perfect conditions. In real soaring with headwinds, sink, and maneuvering, use 60-75% of best L/D.

๐Ÿ“ฑ Practice on the Ground

Before flying, practice pointing at clouds from the airfield. Get comfortable with the interface when you're not also flying a glider.

๐Ÿ”„ Update Cloudbase Often

Cloud bases typically rise during the day. Check with other pilots or observe where thermals are topping out and update your setting.

โœ… Cross-Check

MyCloudBase is a planning aid. Always cross-check with your variometer, GPS, and good old-fashioned airmanship.

๐Ÿ“ Think Geometry

The app works best when you can clearly see the cloud base. If clouds are directly overhead, they're harder to measure accurately.

๐ŸŒค๏ธ Best Conditions

Works great on classic cumulus days with well-defined cloud bases. Less useful on blue days or with high overcast.

Frequently Asked Questions

How accurate is it?

MyCloudBase is surprisingly accurate when properly calibrated. The main variables are: (1) your cloudbase altitude estimate, (2) your actual glide ratio in current conditions, and (3) how precisely you aim at the cloud base. The app has been calibrated using laser levels for multiple iPhone models.

What glide ratio should I use?

Be realistic and conservative. If your glider's best L/D is 40:1, that's in still air at optimal speed. In real soaring with headwinds, sink between thermals, and maneuvering, 25:1 to 32:1 is more realistic. Better to arrive with altitude to spare!

How do I know the cloudbase altitude?

Several ways: (1) Ask your towpilot or other pilots who've been up, (2) Check aviation weather forecasts which often include expected cloud bases, (3) Use the rule of thumb: spread (temperature minus dewpoint in ยฐC) ร— 400 = cloud base in feet AGL, (4) Note your altitude when you top out in thermals.

Does it work without cell service?

Yes! MyCloudBase works completely offline. It uses your phone's camera, motion sensors, and GPSโ€”no internet required. Perfect for soaring in remote areas.

Why does the crosshair show an up arrow?

The up arrow (โ†‘) appears when you're pointing below the horizon. Since you can only measure distance to clouds above you, tilt the phone upward until the crosshair returns to normal (+).

What's the green box for?

The green "Reachable Terrain" box shows everything within gliding range at your set L/D ratio. The top edge of the box represents your glide path. If a cloud base appears inside this box, you can theoretically glide to it.

Do I need to calibrate the app?

Probably not. MyCloudBase comes pre-calibrated for many iPhone models. If the horizon line doesn't track correctly with a known level reference (like the ocean horizon or a laser level), you can enable calibration controls in Settings.

Can I use it for final glide calculations?

MyCloudBase is designed for cloud-to-cloud decisions, not final glide. For final glide, use a proper flight computer that accounts for wind, terrain, and required arrival altitude. However, the reachable terrain display can give you a general sense of what's within gliding range.

Does it work on iPad?

The current version is optimized for iPhone only in portrait orientation. iPad support may be added in a future update.

Why $2.99?

MyCloudBase is a one-time purchase with no subscriptions, no ads, and no in-app purchases. Your $2.99 supports ongoing development and new features. That's less than a single tow!

Troubleshooting

Horizon line doesn't stay level

Solution: The app may need calibration for your specific iPhone. Go to Settings โ†’ Advanced Settings โ†’ Enable "Show Horizon Calibration Controls". Use a laser level or known horizon to adjust the Scale and Offset sliders until the line tracks correctly. Tap Save when done.

No distance/altitude reading appears

Solution: Make sure you're pointing above the horizon (crosshair shows + not โ†‘), cloudbase is set higher than your current altitude, and the camera has a clear view. The reading only appears when these conditions are met.

Altitude reading seems wrong

Solution: GPS altitude can vary. Go to Settings and check the Current Readings section to see what altitude the app is using. You can switch to Pressure altitude and add a manual offset to match your altimeter.

Camera view is black

Solution: Check that you've granted camera permission. Go to iPhone Settings โ†’ MyCloudBase โ†’ Camera and make sure it's enabled.

App shows wrong units

Solution: Tap the gear icon to access Settings. You can change distance units (sm/nm/km) and altitude units (ft/m) there. The cloudbase picker will automatically use your selected altitude unit.

Readings jump around erratically

Solution: The phone's motion sensors can be affected by vibration or rapid movement. Try holding the phone more steadily. If the problem persists, try restarting the app.

Ready to Improve Your XC Decision-Making?

Download MyCloudBase and start building your distance judgment skills today.

Download on App Store - $2.99

One-time purchase. No subscriptions. No ads.