by Brett_Henderson » Fri Aug 18, 2006 8:43 pm
If you've got VOR navigating down pat; and can fly a hold that's referenced by the intersection of two radials.. then you're 1/2-way through the skills you'll need to be a good instrument pilot. Makes me excited to here that stuff.
As for VOR to VOR.. nine times out of ten, you're on one radial until you intersect another and so on.. Rarely flying to a VOR and then away from it... unless they line up nicely..
Straight-line navigation, for distances in the hundreds of miles, at cruising altitude, over unfamiliar territory, is very VERY tough when you're just referencing radials at certain points, with a sectional in one hand and the yoke in the other (enter A/P).. It can be done for the shorter trips that student would be taking when legs rarely exceed 100nm and you really can't stray too far off course anyway.
Throw in some clouds between you and the ground (man is THAT something to see) and, sans GPS, there's really no other way to accurately navigate hundreds of miles, VFR.