Jogularity

A British form of regularity: instead of speed tables, the navigator gets a table of landmarks with their distance and the due arrival time at each.

Jogularity is a British variant of the regularity test, developed by John Brown for the first LE JOG (Land's End to John o'Groats). Instead of working with speed tables, the navigator is given a printed table of landmarks along the route – junctions, road signs, cattle grids, bridges – with the distance to each and the due arrival time to the second at the set average speed. Time controls always lie at one of these landmarks. This makes regularity feasible without an expensive, highly accurate tripmeter and is especially beginner-friendly.

Glossary from A to Z

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Related terms

  • Average-speed table

    Table giving, for a prescribed average speed, the target time for each distance – an aid in regularity stages.

  • TSD rally

    Time-Speed-Distance rally: a regularity format in which prescribed averages, derived from time, speed and distance, must be kept exactly.

  • Early arrival

    Reaching a time control before the prescribed due time. When 'early arrival allowed' is stated, arriving early is not penalised – only lateness counts.

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