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Reading the whiskey compass
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February 25th 04, 09:38 PM
Michael
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(Ben Jackson) wrote
When you're flying partial panel, to what precision do you read the
mag compass? To the nearest 5 degrees? Estimate to the nearest
degree? How long do you go between readings and rely only on timed
turns?
For that matter, do you ever try to apply values from the correction
card? In IMC or even VMC?
With a whiskey compass, it is my opinion that in smooth air +/-3
degrees is about the best you can hope for. Further, even a tiny
deviation from wings level is going to make the reading worthless.
Therefore, I ONLY read the compass when I've been maintaining level
flight for at least 3 seconds. I do not attempt compass turns - I
rely on timed turns at all times, even for small corrections.
In light chop, +/-5 degrees is about the best attainable. Anything
worse, and your guess is as good as mine. Off-field NDB approaches
with a whiskey compass in moderate turbulence are basically exercises
in dead reckoning - if you break out within a mile of the field, you
did pretty good.
With a vertical card compass with good damping, you can consistently
do a whole lot better. I find that I can effectively read heading
+/-2 degrees, at which point using the correction card becomes
somewhat worthwhile. This is not significantly degraded by light chop
because of the damping. In moderate turbulence, the solution
I'm not really sure why anyone who has a modern (flat) DG messes with
a whiskey compass anyway. With a barrel DG, it made some sense - you
wanted both instruments to read the same way to reduce confusion.
These days few pilots have even seen a barrel DG, never mind flown
instruments with one, so I really have no clue why anyone would
tolerate a whiskey compass in an IFR airplane.
Michael
Michael