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#111
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apx $8US, and repalced twice a year
BT "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... B A R R Y writes: It's not so bad, so keep it in mind. I can only wallpaper so many walls with old charts... Just out of curiosity, how much do new charts cost, and how many do you regularly replace as they expire? -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#112
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TLAR Navigation and pilotage..
I leave the plotter and the Whizwheel in the flight bag, that is for pre mission planning. After a career flying at 9nm/min and 500ft AGL, TALR Navigation works just fine. Yes, 9nm per minute is 540Knots. You don't need a plotter to measure distance or direction. Every VOR has a compass rose set to Magnetic north, estimate the direction using that. Finger lengths or knuckle lengths, learn what yours is. Oh.. and if you have been taught correctly about charts. Those lines on the chart used to measure latitude.. they have 1nm tick marks on them. Yes.. it is 60 nm from N35-00 to N36-00, regardless of the scale of the chart. BT "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... I see tons of restricted areas, MOAs, Class B, C, D, E airspace, and the like on charts, but no clear indication of how to locate the boundaries of these areas other than by pure guesstimate based on looking at the chart. On rare occasions I see a radial noted as the boundary of an area, or a radius, but in many cases there is nothing. How in the world are you supposed to know when you are inside or outside one of these areas, if you are not flying miles away from them? Yes, GPS units and some other devices may provide real-time display of one's position with these areas superimposed, but such devices have not always been available. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#113
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In article ,
Mxsmanic wrote: Ron Garret writes: That depends on whether you are a competent pilot or not. But why do you think it's necessary to "continually check them all"? So that you always know where you are. You don't think there are any ways to know where you are other than *continually* checking them *all*? rg |
#114
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In article ,
Mxsmanic wrote: Ron Garret writes: You are mightily confused, my friend. The Turtle MOA is (mostly) in California, not Arizona. The chart I'm looking at covers Arizona more than California, it seems. Do you see Cadiz lake? Sure, it's huge. I can see why some people around here are getting fed up with you. rg |
#115
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On Thu, 02 Nov 2006 21:12:54 -0800, Sylvain wrote:
Mxsmanic wrote: What is a Wizwheel? It sounds almost like a slide rule. it is. You have basically two main designs still in use, the E6B style and the ones like the CR5; the difference is mainly in the way you compute the wind triangles (I use both, because I enjoy slide rules in general, but frankly, the plain E6B is more intuitive IMHO; the CR models also allow more complex computations, but for practical purposes the plain ol' aluminum E6B works fine (and doesn't melt when left on the dashboard); Slide rules are obsolete now, No they are not; well, ok, you are half right he they are considered obsolte but it's a darn shame. You can spot miles away engineers who did learn with slide rules from those who didn't, but I digress. Does anyone still use them for aviation? I do; never runs out of batteries, always there, and easy to use; Seen this? http://www.antiquark.com/sliderule/s...l-n909-es.html Don |
#116
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Don Tuite wrote:
Seen this? http://www.antiquark.com/sliderule/s...l-n909-es.html this is wrong on so many levels :-)) thanks for the link! --Sylvain |
#117
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"BT" wrote in
: you look at the chart you look at the ground you navigate by pilotage "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... I see tons of restricted areas, MOAs, Class B, C, D, E airspace, and the like on charts, but no clear indication of how to locate the boundaries of these areas other than by pure guesstimate based on looking at the chart. On rare occasions I see a radial noted as the boundary of an area, or a radius, but in many cases there is nothing. How in the world are you supposed to know when you are inside or outside one of these areas, if you are not flying miles away from them? Yes, GPS units and some other devices may provide real-time display of one's position with these areas superimposed, but such devices have not always been available. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. It seems that GPS is leading to MORE intrusions of restricted airspace. There was a notice sent out by FAASafety.gov based on 19 incursions into to the Nellis Air Force Base restricted airspace so far this year. This notice was sent out October 19th and again on November 1st. They mentioned that most of the restricted airspace incursions were with aircraft on the Beatty/Tonopah VFR corridor. Two sentences from this notice: "It appears airmen are failing to use basic VFR navigation and map reading skills. Instead, in most circumstances, they are using GPS devices to navigate to and from Las Vegas, NV.". I've only flown the Beaty/Tonopah VFR corridor once. It took about 15 seconds with the charts to learn that all I needed to do to avoid this restricted airspace was to stay west of highway 95. There was no need to have a GPS, loran, VOR, or ADF to avoid penetrating the multiple restricted airspaces north of Nellis. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#118
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Mxsmanic wrote in
: Judah writes: In real life, you don't need to hit buttons to look out the windows. In a sim, you need to hit buttons to look out the windows. In YOUR sim you need to hit buttons to look out the windows. There are sims which do not have that drawback. -- Marty Shapiro Silicon Rallye Inc. (remove SPAMNOT to email me) |
#119
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Gary Drescher wrote:
"Kev" wrote in message oups.com... That's a good point. While you can pick out some landmarks on a sim screen, it's very difficult to constantly rotate your view around and get the spatial relationship that you can in real life. A joystick with a POV hat-switch makes it pretty easy to look around. It sure does, but I still don't get the spatial relationships I get in a real cockpit. To be fair, I have one 21" monitor, not a sim-optimized setup. |
#120
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Gig 601XL Builder wrote:
While MSFS has some great scenery especially around the larger urban areas it isn't accurate enough to navigate by especially in non-urban areas. MSFS has a large tree in the center of the final approach path to the busiest runway on my home field. G The main landmarks, a small lake, two large plazas, a main road, and a large trailer park are missing. |
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