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#141
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On 4/5/2007 10:08 AM Maxwell fell asleep at the keyboard, and awoke to
find this: "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... [...] People who are stupid are likely to be hostile. Odd..you are clearly the poster child for stupidity, but you don't see hostile. Something you should know: Anthony claims to be a proponent and practitioner of the so-called "Golden Rule," so he treats others as he feels they should treat him. So, when he attempts to label people as stupid (even if only by implication), or treat others as if they're idiots, remember, he's actually proposing that he be treated as if he's stupid too. At least it's consistent. -- dgs |
#142
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On 4/4/2007 10:47 AM Mxsmanic fell asleep at the keyboard, and awoke to
find this: I assumed that others would understand this, but I often get into trouble when I assume others will understand things. Is this another example of how you practice the Golden Rule? -- dgs |
#143
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In rec.aviation.piloting TheSmokingGnu wrote:
wrote: An INS does not contain a gyrocompass. I thought I read somewhere that certain INS do have a gyrocompass, for setting the initial positional reference. The compass (compii??? :P ) in question was erected much faster than a ship-borne model by being held at magnetic north by a mag compass while it spun up (so the calibration time was only that to correct for local variation, and not to find the entire harmonic of the Earth). In any case, it was useless when actually flying, and the system only used the accelerometers thereafter. Well, if you forced it to magnetic north on turn on, it would be statistically faster than some random position, but still takes a long time to settle; the Earth doesn't rotate that fast. What a gyrocompass actually seeks is alignment of it's axis with the axis of the Earth's rotation, so you would also have to throw in a latitude initializer to do much good. That's not saying no one ever tried to build such a thing, but the laws of physics that make it work make it impractical for airplanes. Plus, the initialization for INS has to set the position AND which way is north. -- Jim Pennino Remove .spam.sux to reply. |
#144
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dgs writes:
Is this another example of how you practice the Golden Rule? Yes. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#145
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#146
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#147
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#148
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#149
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So what do you periodically use to align the DG to? Hint: it's not the true
magnetic north as see out of the window.... "Mxsmanic" wrote in message ... writes: Sorry, I have to mildly disagree as far as flying goes, that you'd automatically be in "deep trouble". Many pilots use just the compass / DG for cross-country flying. A compass / DG is not just a compass. You can't do much with just a compass alone. You need a clock, some charts, other things ... not _just_ a compass. Therefore a simple compass was "good enough" for winged flight across the Atlantic starting in 1919. which is not "four hundred years" ago. They had more than a simple compass. In particular, they had accurate clocks, and charts. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#150
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