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I'm with Gardner on this one.
compass turns are a complete waste of time and money. Use a clock. Forget lead, lag, accelerate north, decelerate south, and all the rest of the anal aviation gobbledygook.. On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 16:28:32 GMT, "OtisWinslow" wrote: Ask the CFI to tell you when you hit the compass heading you want to start your rollout on. Talk thru your logic for selecting this heading. (compensating for lead/lag of the compass) "Ray" wrote in message ... I'm just starting out my instrument training in a Cessna 152 that has a compass mounted at the top of the windshield. Here's a sample picture for those who have never seen it, http://www.airliners.net/open.file/643201/M Can anyone tell me if it's still possible to do compass turns under the hood with this kind of setup? I've seen a lot of planes with high mounted compasses, so I imagine this isn't a new question. - Ray |
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I couldn't agree more with you and Bob. I can turn a lot more accurately
with a stop watch than a mag compass. But his question wasn't about the merits of each .. it was about using the compass when it's outside the viewing area of the hood. That would also be a factor when setting the DG prior to starting an approach. To which I still say .. have the CFI/safety pilot read it for you. wrote in message ... I'm with Gardner on this one. compass turns are a complete waste of time and money. Use a clock. Forget lead, lag, accelerate north, decelerate south, and all the rest of the anal aviation gobbledygook.. On Fri, 01 Apr 2005 16:28:32 GMT, "OtisWinslow" wrote: Ask the CFI to tell you when you hit the compass heading you want to start your rollout on. Talk thru your logic for selecting this heading. (compensating for lead/lag of the compass) "Ray" wrote in message ... I'm just starting out my instrument training in a Cessna 152 that has a compass mounted at the top of the windshield. Here's a sample picture for those who have never seen it, http://www.airliners.net/open.file/643201/M Can anyone tell me if it's still possible to do compass turns under the hood with this kind of setup? I've seen a lot of planes with high mounted compasses, so I imagine this isn't a new question. - Ray |
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