Quick mental math for the cockpit
On Sep 18, 12:48*am, 5Z wrote:
One minute of LATITUDE is approximately a nautical mile. *Use your
fingers as a crude caliper to measure distances on the chart.
Double the distance and multiply by 100 for 30:1
Triple the distance for 20:1
I'd set my GPS for STATUTE miles then use the above math while flying
the club's ASK-21 for a conservative glide for home.
Use an E6-B to calculate L/D. *Some high end aviator watches have one.
Distance in NM vs altitude and the pointer indicates glide ration
needed to make the goal. *Update every few miles and if the L/D
remains constant, then you're on glide. *If it gets smaller, then you
have it in the bag.
I recall the huge amounts of heads down time in the pre-GPS days while
on a tight final glide or over unfamiliar terrain as I tried to figure
out precisely where I was.
-Tom
Thanks for the tips, as a new glider pilot this is very useful info.
Tom
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