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#29
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I use duats ( www.duats.com )
its free and will do your winds, fuel, ground speed, everything, for you. all you is put in where your at and where your going. You will see after a few short X-C's by yourself if you really need to do a nav log. the thing is to do what your comfortable with, do it safely and use common sense. Wednesday morning, I am flying from las vegas to the los angeles basin, I have 6 hours of fuel on board so I dont care about fuel usage, I know it takes me about an hour to get there, so all I am concerned about is what altitude will I get the best ground speed and smoothest ride. Paul Folbrecht wrote: Being newly licenced (yesterday), I've started thinking about the type of VFR flight-planning I'll do in the real, post-student world, and what tools I'll use. As a student, of course, I did everything by hand, and meticulously, and eschewed GPS navigation as well. Some of my observations from my brief XC experience thus far: 1) Winds aloft forecasts are never right- usually not close. 2) There's no need to produce a nav log, etc. with checkpoints when the route is familiar. So, for a route that is now familiar to me- say, Timmmerman (MWC) to Appleton (ATW) (about 75nm), of course I get a briefing, and check the winds aloft, but I'm not going to produce a nav log. I'm going to fly by pilotage with my GPS to back me up and with a VOR receiver to back that up. And, of course, if I encounter particularly unexpected weather, I'm going to turn back. For new routes, I am going to produce a nav log, knowing full well that my heading will not likely match the precomputed values due to differing winds aloft. No matter. But, of course, for such flights, I'm not going to be doing things the old-fashioned way anymore. I want some good software to make it easy. So, I think I have two questions: 1) Does this make sense? and 2) What's the best flight-planning software out there? I've used AOPA's tool and I like it, but I don't really know what's out there (and yeah I can do a google search but then you don't know if you're hearing about the latest & greatest). I do have a Palm 5 device so PC software that has a Palm component too would be a plus. ~Paul P.S. Hope this isn't too much of a "newbie" post for this forum. Thought it was more appropriate here than over at .student. |
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