by Nav » Sun Sep 24, 2006 8:02 am
elite marksman, even in the pre-GPS days navigators could get a rough idea of wind strength/direction over water (in daylight anyway) by use of a drift-meter - which was a scope with a ground-glass screen, so arranged that you could look straight down and line the grid-markings up with the whitecaps. Took more skill than I possessed to get it right, but experienced people could make it work.
So I reckon that it's permissible, without 'stepping out of period', to use 'Shift-Z' at intervals to get wind strength/direction. After that, as voloberista suggests, be careful not to under-estimate the wind's effect on your course. If the wind's squarely abeam, I'd recommend allowing 3 degrees per ten knots of wind strength. Sounds a lot, but it's roughly right.
About VOR navigation, there's a great true-life story about its origins, for anyone interested. During WW2, about 1942, British Intelligence discovered that the Germans had set up fans of radio beams from Northern Spain and Western France to help U-boats navigate their way in and out of the Bay of Biscay.
When Prof. Jones, the legendary Head of Air Intelligence, heard about this, he immediately realised that RAF Coastal Command were flying patrols in the same area in all sorts of weather, trying to catch said U-boats, and losing a lot of people in so doing.
So he rang them up and asked them if they could use a bad-weather navigation system consisting of intersecting radio beams. Their reply was, "By God we could, answer to our bloody prayers, how soon can you set it up?" Being honest, he had to explain that the Germans had already done it for them, rather than claim the credit for himself. ;)
So instead of bombing the daylights out of the German beam stations, as they would normally have done, the RAF just developed the necessary receivers and made effective use of the excellent German navaid system for the rest of the War.