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Old February 3rd 04, 05:51 PM
Michael 182
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There might be a better way, but I'd just approximate it by looking at the
VOR's nearby. You won't be more than a few degrees off.

Michael

"Geoffrey Barnes" wrote in message
ink.net...
The presence or absence of the compass rose on a VOR has no meaning.
It is purely at the discretion of the cartographer to omit it when he

feels it
would make the chart too cluttered.


All right, this makes sense to me. But as someone who is still a student,

I
have to ask a question here. Let's say that I'm planning to fly along a
specific VOR radial, and that this radial is not part of an airway. What

I
normally do is draw a line on the chart, and then read the radial on this
compass rose. But without the compass rose, how am I supposed to

determine
the radial that I need to follow? Most of the VORs in this area have not
been adjusted to keep pace with magnetic variation, and are therefore a

few
degrees off from both both the true course and the magnetic course.

I know that I can look up each VORs magnetic variation setting on
airnav.com, but what if that wasn't available?