troopernflight
Well-Known Member
I've been looking at something for 3 hours on Pilot's Web in regards to time/distance to station computations, and my brain is fried.
Using the One to Sixty Rule, it says:
Distance between bearings / Distance to the station is proportional to Degrees between bearings / 60.
It further explains that the "Distance between bearings" is a fuction of the aircraft's speed and lapsed time:
(a) Speed=Distance/Time.
They break it down by using basic algebra into:
(b) Distance between bearings= Speed / 60 * Minutes
Combining a and b forms the final formula:
Distance to station= TAS * Minutes flown / Degrees between bearings
I know I can just memorize this formula, but I'm trying to understand how it was derived from the original One to Sixty Rule. I really struggle with understanding math. A gold star to anyone who can explain this in terms I can understand.
Using the One to Sixty Rule, it says:
Distance between bearings / Distance to the station is proportional to Degrees between bearings / 60.
It further explains that the "Distance between bearings" is a fuction of the aircraft's speed and lapsed time:
(a) Speed=Distance/Time.
They break it down by using basic algebra into:
(b) Distance between bearings= Speed / 60 * Minutes
Combining a and b forms the final formula:
Distance to station= TAS * Minutes flown / Degrees between bearings
I know I can just memorize this formula, but I'm trying to understand how it was derived from the original One to Sixty Rule. I really struggle with understanding math. A gold star to anyone who can explain this in terms I can understand.