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#71
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Bingo, you've discovered our dirty little secret! Oh shucks. Oh well, no
pilots here, just a bunch of wannabees who can't give straight answers to inane questions, sorry you had to discover this. Hopefully you will stop asking all these questions of people who are obviously not worth to answer you. Do let the door hit your ass on the way out. "Mxsmanic" wrote in message news ![]() Maxwell writes: Do you really think there are certified pilots around here trying to figure out how to tell when they are over something. Sometimes I wonder if there are any pilots here at all. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#72
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The more typical way is to look at section lines (i.e roads and feild
bounderies). When 2 intersecting roads are pointed directlty at you then you are over the intersection of the two roads. Basic line geomeotry. It is not hard to tell when a road is pointed directly at you. Brian |
#73
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In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic is a Troll wrote:
How do you know when you are exactly overflying a specific spot on the ground? Nordon made a device for just this reason... No, they didn't. Nordon made a device to predict when to drop an object based on altitude, speed, wind conditions, and the aerodynamic properties of the object dropped, such that when you drop the object it lands on a specific point. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#74
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Brian writes:
The more typical way is to look at section lines (i.e roads and feild bounderies). When 2 intersecting roads are pointed directlty at you then you are over the intersection of the two roads. Basic line geomeotry. It is not hard to tell when a road is pointed directly at you. It should work perfectly--provided that two convenient roads or other lines happen to intersect at exactly the position you are overflying. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#75
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Russ and/or Martha Oppenheim wrote:
Fly an ultralight with no floor, and look straight down. Referred to colloquially as a "hang glider". :P TheSmokingGnu |
#76
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Mxsmanic wrote:
How do you know when you are exactly overflying a specific spot on the ground? It's it just a matter of knowing your particular aircraft, or are there tricks that can help to determine this? I know you can look off the tip of your wing to see if you're abeam something (such as a runway), but how can you tell when you're right over something? I presume there's no way to look straight down from most aircraft, and it seems like the view over the nose is often several miles away. Go inverted and look straight up. |
#77
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In rec.aviation.piloting Mxsmanic wrote:
Brian writes: The more typical way is to look at section lines (i.e roads and feild bounderies). When 2 intersecting roads are pointed directlty at you then you are over the intersection of the two roads. Basic line geomeotry. It is not hard to tell when a road is pointed directly at you. It should work perfectly--provided that two convenient roads or other lines happen to intersect at exactly the position you are overflying. Or you are in control of the airplane and make it go exactly over the road intersection. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#78
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On Apr 19, 4:19 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote innews ![]() Maxwell writes: Do you really think there are certified pilots around here trying to figure out how to tell when they are over something. Sometimes I wonder if there are any pilots here at all. Bwawhahwhahwh! Like you'd know the difference. Has he considered how most of the posters here have no problems with each others posts? And yet Mxsmanics posts cause great merriment amongst most here. The mark of some-one out of their depth |
#79
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Mark wrote:
Go inverted and look straight up. There's that damn echo again. |
#80
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george wrote in
oups.com: On Apr 19, 4:19 pm, Bertie the Bunyip wrote: Mxsmanic wrote innews ![]() Maxwell writes: Do you really think there are certified pilots around here trying to figure out how to tell when they are over something. Sometimes I wonder if there are any pilots here at all. Bwawhahwhahwh! Like you'd know the difference. Has he considered how most of the posters here have no problems with each others posts? And yet Mxsmanics posts cause great merriment amongst most here. The mark of some-one out of their depth I think he's in just the right depth, myself. Over his head. Bertie |
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