The construction point ( German : Konstruktionspunkt ), also known as the K-point or K-spot and formerly critical point , is a line across a ski jumping hill . It is used to calculate the number of points granted for a given jump. It is also called calculation point or calculation line .
5-495: (Redirected from K120 ) K-120 may refer to: K-120 (Kansas highway) , a highway in Kansas K-120, a rating for hills indicating a construction point of 120 K. 120 , a Mozart movement Topics referred to by the same term [REDACTED] This disambiguation page lists articles associated with the title K-120 . If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change
10-805: Is held in one of the world's five ski flying hills: Vikersundbakken in Norway, Letalnica Bratov Gorišek in Slovenia, Čerťák in the Czech Republic, Heini Klopfer Ski Jump in Germany and Kulm in Austria. In the FIS Ski Jumping Continental Cup , and FIS Women's Ski Jumping Continental Cup , both normal and large hills are used. In the Winter Olympics , there is one competition on the normal hill, one on
15-482: The large hill, and a team competition on the large hill. Ski jumping competitions are based on a point system which combines points for length and style. The distance points plus the judges' marks result in the total score. For hills up to large, the scoring system grants 60 points to jumps that reach the K-point. For ski flying hills, 120 points are granted for the K-point length. Distance points are calculated based on
20-413: The link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=K-120&oldid=1036950650 " Category : Disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Construction point The distance between the construction point and
25-535: The take-off table, measured in meters, was formerly used to classify the size of a ski jumping hill. Since mid-2004, the hills have been categorized by the hill size . Nearly all competitions in the FIS Ski Jumping World Cup use large hills with a construction point between 120 and 130. The largest is Mühlenkopfschanze in Germany . In addition, there is a bi-annual FIS Ski-Flying World Championship , which
#388611