Well, how about a primer on how to do it then? .....So, you personally don't know how to do this?
I'm a newbie to the site. I was drawn to this forum by the navigation discussion and mhcasey's question that started it. I'm guessing that too much detail, beyond the "pencil method" links I provided above might be unwelcome here by the forum moderator. Many of the questions and comments here are similar to comments I heard thru the 70s and 80s. Not 'how to perform a fix-to-fix', but 'how to avoid doing them if possible'. But you can contact me at
qutch1234567@hotmail.com if you want extensive details. And yes, I know the technique. I taught it at Moody AFB in the mid 70s before ATC HQ decided they wanted it isolated in the Arizona Human Resorces Lab at Williams AFB. It gained a following, started some controversey since it wasn't the approved AFM or Stan Eval approved method. AF UPT was worried it might go viral, with unintended consequences. So it's a dying art, like doing complex math in your head without the aid of a calculator, or memorizing lists of all the telephone numbers you use instead of relying on your cell phone memory card. Practically everything is now an iPhone App, so no one is interested in retaining raw mental abilities. IPs who used the Temporal fix-to-fix technique looked like Dustin Hoffman in the movie Rain Man, savants.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yCvYKiNW4vQ http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IGqZOU6iz7A&feature=related (The Travolta movie Phenomenon also addresses the subject)
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FfyTSjsBSXQ&feature=related Amazing, watching pilots wind their way through a maze of multiple short range fixes, or afterburner thru a series of longer range fixes without sweating it. 3 Dimensional, back to back, climbing and descending fix-to-fixes so short they were completed in the arc of the turns and during altitude changes. Acrobatics on instruments. Well beyond what a pilot using a computer can do. I always thought it was a shame that the technique was quaranteened to the laboratory, HQ brass, and pyscho-babble forums for scientists. (like the Handbook of Aviation Human Factors linked above). It reduced the need for reliance on expensive avionics. Savant-like navigational abilities were triggered in ordinary students with a short instructional session. It became a scientific curiousity for a while, with the few IPs who knew how to do it being used as Air Force lab rats for study, instead of teaching.
I'll do a primer as you requested, in this forum, if its permitted. If poser765 and you want to know how it works, you can also contact me directly. I'll set you up with a fix-to-fix practice program that will help you perfect the technique (or the AF approved pencil method). When I left the AF they told me the technique was Classified, but since I see its showing up in books and on the internet now, I guess its out of the Arizona Lab they locked it in.