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first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 11:48 am
by krazyj
hey guys

I know its kind of ridiculas but hey I'm damn proud :)
I got tired of crashing all the time so I decided to go through the lessons.. and yes

I Just landed my Private Pilot certific

w00t

:)

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 12:55 pm
by congo
Congratulations!  ;)

You can fly my Cessna anytime!

Set the flight up with some weather now, and try it.

It's a different ball game.

I was really proud when I cracked the instrument rating, especially after flying for years without even really noticing the lessons, I actually had to print out the charts to crack it. It's hard work!

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 1:49 pm
by krazyj
hey thanx

but I'll take all the lessons and then put some weather on and try again..

any advice on the VOR lesson ??

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 2:14 pm
by Moach
VOR navigation is not as complicated as it may seem...

my advice is: after you tune the nav radio, remember to press the swap button... or else it doesn't work ::)

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 3:56 pm
by Meinas
cool beans, VORs arent hard at all, when I first started playing with em, I freaked out, but a few years down the road they're up there on my list of prefered nav aids with gps ;D ;)

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 8:21 pm
by Billerator
Nice work.  8)

VOR's are great, and it means you can save money not buying a flashy GPS. Now get reading some navigation lessons.

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Tue Mar 23, 2004 11:55 pm
by Staiduk
...and remember to check that little 'To/From' flag. Missing that one can be....embarrasing. ;D

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2004 12:29 am
by IcedFoxtrotter
Exactly Staiduk. F**king VOR'S. They aren't any better in real life. I would always confuse which direction I was going when I was working on my private.

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Wed Mar 24, 2004 2:56 am
by BFMF
VORS are simple to understand and use once you learn how. I've been using VORS for navigation since I learned on FS98, and i'm quite comftorable with them.

Once I took Groundschool for the first time last year, I was one of the few people  in the class who understood them.

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Sat Mar 27, 2004 4:29 am
by Eskimo
[quote]Congratulations!

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Sun Mar 28, 2004 7:17 am
by Real_Aviator
VOR's.  Simple things.  Think of being above your plane, looking down on a 2D plane (scuse the pun).

Lets go to England.  Gatwick (EGKK).  Tune to 115.3  Thats EGLL's southern arrival hold called Ockham.  (London Heathrow - Bugger of an airport to fly in Commercially).

Take off from Gatwick's East runway (08R), and go to 3000ft.  When you pass 1500 feet, turn left.  Now, this will bring you facing North.  As you set the OBS (Omni Bearing Selecter) at 360(deafult), and you are South of the OCK VOR, you will see a TO flag.  That is because you are South of the VOR flying TO it.  You are flying North, which also happens to be 360 that is set on the OBS.

Intercept the VOR 360 Radial.  Bascailly, aim for the needle.  Think of it from above.  You are pretty much directly south of the OCK VOR.  You go to the right, East, and need to turn towards it on the 360.  Imagine that line going from South to North through the VOR.  You are to the right of it now, flying East, so turning left 90 degrees will take you parallel to it, and a further 45 degrees weill have you intercepting it.

Once the CDI (course deviation indicator) becomes centered, you should be "flying the 360 radial to OCK".  

If you continue on that track (DONT USE AUTOPILOT for this NAV excersise, just alt and speed control if you want), you will of course fly over the VOR.  When that happens, you are in a "dead zone" where you are neither going TO it or flying FROM it.  The needle CDI will go crazy or flip to the side, but eventually when you come out the other side, it will say FROM.  Now, you are flying FROM the OCK VOR tracking the 360 Radial.

Apply this concept to any direction and its easy to understand.

Of course, as well as using VORs in real world Navigation, we also use Intersections.  These are imaginary points in space, which have been named by two radials of 2 nearby VORs intersecting.  A popular one used from South UK airports going to Europe is ORTAC.  Do a search and you should find it on the GPS database in FS2004.

Hope this helps.

Dan

Re: first certificate

PostPosted: Sun Mar 28, 2004 7:51 am
by Fozzer
...and what about good old NDB's, (Non Directional Beacons)..... 8)...!
Some pilots don't seem to like them, I don't know why, but my local airfield, EGBS), has a transmitter right in the middle of the airfield and guarantees that I don't get lost.
...I just tune my radio into the frequency and follow the needle...it takes me home... ;)...!

Cool, or what...!

Cheers all..!

Paul.