scooter2525
Very well Member
Yeah, but did they UNVEIL their announcement of their publication of their notice of their intention?
They still need to schedule the unveiling their announcement of their publication of their notice of their intention.
Yeah, but did they UNVEIL their announcement of their publication of their notice of their intention?
Putting all our global-nav eggs in the GPS basket, as a nation, isn't wise IMHO.
If a single, domestic national system to back up GPS is identified as being necessary, the Department of Homeland Security will complete an analysis of potential backups to GPS.
GPS isn't immune to meaconing, intrusion, jamming and interference (MIJI). Putting all our global-nav eggs in the GPS basket, as a nation, isn't wise IMHO.
That's why I think GPS with NDB sites is about the best possible bet. NDB is cheap to maintain, and in the flat land gets you down low enough. ILS/LOC approaches as backup approaches.
Someone ask me (or Doug, Polar, etc.) how we navigate across the ocean without GPS.
Someone ask me (or Doug, Polar, etc.) how we navigate across the ocean without GPS.
When I was teaching at Big Bend Community College, the George, Washington LORAN was just south of our practice area. Those are some mighty big towers and they just updated the strobes on them so they are very eerie to see in the fog.
Dead reckoning i bet?
Hehe, only as a lost resort. Find a contrail and follow it. No, what I was referring to was our primary means of navigation when the plane does not have GPS installed - IRUs (inertial reference units). They are completely internal and not dependent on any navigational aid. Sure, you might get some map shift or drift but, for the most part, pretty darn good. Relatively old tech too.
Are the IRUs off of lasers? or is that strictly IRS?
IRU/IRS same same for our purposes.
The old Litton 99's had ring laser gyros, and the new systems, as far as I know, operate the same.
I remember reading an article one time about flying across Russia when it opened up. You were required to have a Russian navigator (I wish it was a Russian radio operator, but that's a whole 'nother deal). The writer said the navigator would shoot the stars or sun and be within about 0.1 of the GPS.
Pretty good, eh?
That's awesome, I wish I knew cel nav, that stuff is amazing.
Lol, when I worked at the Army/Navy store in Anc a couple of polar guys would come in periodically and talk about when russia was opening and how, bored out of their minds for countless hours across the steppe, they would pretend to be SAC crews bombing targets. One of those polar guys taught me about the miracle that is skype too. That wasn't you was it?
Are you guys still required to have a russian nav on board? I've heard that was a requirement for the VFR route to provediniya but the last time they did that was awhile ago.
Wizardry and magic, as far as I'm concerned. I do know a guy that crossed the north pole in a DC8 using a wrist watch and the sun. Then again, he's way too smart to be flying planes for a living.
No...but yes, it is periodically boring.
No
sorry to be such a let down. :laff:
You're kidding about the bolded part right. As for the rest, no worries, just curious.