Hill size

Overview of a ski jumping hill
Letalnica Bratov Gorišek in Planica, Slovenia. The construction point is marked with a horizontal line at the top of the red vertical line, while the line at the bottom is the hill size point.
Hill size at 106 m

The hill size (HS) is the most important measurement for the size of a ski jumping hill. It is defined as the distance between the takeoff table and the end of the landing area, which is called hill size point. It is not measured as a straight line but on the surface of the hill.[1] Since 2017, a typical slope inclination at hill size distance is 32° for normal hills, 31° for large hills, and 28° for ski flying hills.[2]

The hill size was first defined in 2004 as a direct replacement for the previously used Jury distance. While the Jury distance for each hill was established annually prior to the season,[3] the hill size of a hill is fixed.[4] Since its inception, the hill size replaced the construction point (K-point, formerly known as the critical point) in the role of the primary measurement for the size of hills, which however remains the basis for issuing distance points.[5]

The world's largest hills are Vikersundbakken in Vikersund, Norway and Letalnica Bratov Gorišek in Planica, Slovenia with hill size of 240 meters. The hills normally mark the hill size physically with a horizontal line across the hill.

  1. ^ Hans-Heini Gasser (FIS): Jumping Hills: Construction Norm 2018 (PDF), p. 4 (abbreviations), p. 5 (figure). Hill size is the distance between T (takeoff) and L (end of the landing area), measured at the surface of the hill.
  2. ^ Planica i Vikersund z HS240. FIS ujednolica przepisy o rozmiarach obiektów – Skijumping.pl
  3. ^ "THE INTERNATIONAL SKI COMPETITION RULES (ICR). BOOK III – JOINT REGULATIONS: SKI-JUMPING, SKI-FLYING" (PDF). International Ski Federation. 2000. p. 18. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2004-05-03. Retrieved 2025-02-16.
  4. ^ "THE INTERNATIONAL SKI COMPETITION RULES (ICR). BOOK III – SKI JUMPING" (PDF). International Ski Federation. July 2015. p. 33. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2016-04-13. Retrieved 2025-02-16.
  5. ^ "Hoppbakkene bort fra K-punkt til HS-punkt" (in Norwegian). Norwegian News Agency. 29 June 2004.

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