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#1
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Studying both for the FAA/IR and a UK IMC rating. The UK IMC give a
good clue to what it is. It allows flying in IMC but with limited IFR privileges. Essentially it is a get home safe rating. UK weather is so unpredicable that it is feasable to get caught out easily even with the most thorough of planning. Enough of that. Been doing test papers for the respective knowledge tests. The FAA questions are quite straight forward and I am doing good. Getting 75% right but will go for the test when I consistantly get 85+%. The IMC is a whole other ballgame where the theory can be a little bit too much. The passmark is 72%. Here is a fantastic question. No prizes for getting the right answer (with explaination) but anyone fancy a go? Given the following: Ground speed 90kts aircraft altitute 6000ft VOR transmitter at mean sea level Tan 40° = 0.839 assume 6000ft = 1nm Theoretically, for approximately how many seconds would you expect the morse identifier to be inaudible within the cone of silence if the aircraft is tracking directly TO the VOR followed by its reciprical directly away FROM the VOR? A - 7 seconds B - 20 seconds C - 67 seconds D - 100 seconds |
#3
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![]() Here is a fantastic question. No prizes for getting the right answer (with explaination) but anyone fancy a go? Given the following: Ground speed 90kts aircraft altitute 6000ft VOR transmitter at mean sea level Tan 40° = 0.839 assume 6000ft = 1nm Theoretically, for approximately how many seconds would you expect the morse identifier to be inaudible within the cone of silence if the aircraft is tracking directly TO the VOR followed by its reciprical directly away FROM the VOR? A - 7 seconds B - 20 seconds C - 67 seconds D - 100 seconds None of the above. The "cone of slience" causes morse and any other identifiers to become inaudible anytime the user is wearing one, as demonstrated on several "Get Smart" episodes. |
#4
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"John Harlow" wrote in message
... | | Here is a fantastic question. No prizes for getting the right answer | (with explaination) but anyone fancy a go? | | Given the following: | Ground speed 90kts | aircraft altitute 6000ft | VOR transmitter at mean sea level | Tan 40° = 0.839 | assume 6000ft = 1nm | | Theoretically, for approximately how many seconds would you expect the | morse identifier to be inaudible within the cone of silence if the | aircraft is tracking directly TO the VOR followed by its reciprical | directly away FROM the VOR? | | A - 7 seconds | B - 20 seconds | C - 67 seconds | D - 100 seconds | | None of the above. The "cone of slience" causes morse and any other | identifiers to become inaudible anytime the user is wearing one, as | demonstrated on several "Get Smart" episodes. Would you believe, A...? Uh,.. how about, B...? Missed it by ---||--- that much. |
#5
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Interested to hear you are doing the IMC and FAA IR. After getting my FAA
licence revalidated recently at Luton, I decided to carry on with some training. I am now three hours into my night rating and then will finish the IMC I started ten years ago and move on to the FAA IR. My instructor says that I could even go for a FAA commercial licence, as I have enough hours, but I'll leave that for now, sounds like hard work. Circuit bashing at Luton is hard enough already, imagine Easyjet and Ryanair being told they are number 2 to the cherokee on base! The interesting thing I found out is that if you get the IMC and then the FAA IR, if you fly in a "G" plane, you can use the IR rating once you leave the UK FIR. If it's a "N" reg, then obviously no problem the whole time. Regards John "Jeb" wrote in message om... Studying both for the FAA/IR and a UK IMC rating. The UK IMC give a good clue to what it is. It allows flying in IMC but with limited IFR privileges. Essentially it is a get home safe rating. UK weather is so unpredicable that it is feasable to get caught out easily even with the most thorough of planning. Enough of that. Been doing test papers for the respective knowledge tests. The FAA questions are quite straight forward and I am doing good. Getting 75% right but will go for the test when I consistantly get 85+%. The IMC is a whole other ballgame where the theory can be a little bit too much. The passmark is 72%. Here is a fantastic question. No prizes for getting the right answer (with explaination) but anyone fancy a go? Given the following: Ground speed 90kts aircraft altitute 6000ft VOR transmitter at mean sea level Tan 40° = 0.839 assume 6000ft = 1nm Theoretically, for approximately how many seconds would you expect the morse identifier to be inaudible within the cone of silence if the aircraft is tracking directly TO the VOR followed by its reciprical directly away FROM the VOR? A - 7 seconds B - 20 seconds C - 67 seconds D - 100 seconds |
#6
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"Randy at Home" wrote in message . cable.rogers.com...
"John Harlow" wrote in message ... | | Here is a fantastic question. No prizes for getting the right answer | (with explaination) but anyone fancy a go? | | Given the following: | Ground speed 90kts | aircraft altitute 6000ft | VOR transmitter at mean sea level | Tan 40° = 0.839 | assume 6000ft = 1nm | | Theoretically, for approximately how many seconds would you expect the | morse identifier to be inaudible within the cone of silence if the | aircraft is tracking directly TO the VOR followed by its reciprical | directly away FROM the VOR? | | A - 7 seconds | B - 20 seconds | C - 67 seconds | D - 100 seconds | | None of the above. The "cone of slience" causes morse and any other | identifiers to become inaudible anytime the user is wearing one, as | demonstrated on several "Get Smart" episodes. Would you believe, A...? Uh,.. how about, B...? Missed it by ---||--- that much. The cigar goes to Bill for answer A and the explaination too. The answer book says the following: VOR signal propagation is omni directional in the horizontal plane but confined to an angle of 40 degrees to the vertical which creates an area in which there is no signal propagation. This area is known as the Cone of Confusion or Cone of Silence. However, the AM morse ident signal is propagated omni directionally in both the horizontal and vertical plane and therefore audible within the cone of silence. There are 4 morse idents every 30 seconds. Three consecutive VOR idents are transmitted at 7,5 second intervals followed 7,5 seconds later by a DME morse ident if a DME is co-located with the VOR. The nearest correct answer is A. I have not come across a question like this in the IR knowledge test, is it something an examiner would ask as part of the oral? In the UK you get this in the test but examiners are not likely to ask sucha question in the oral. |
#7
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"John Bishop" wrote in message ...
Interested to hear you are doing the IMC and FAA IR. After getting my FAA licence revalidated recently at Luton, I decided to carry on with some training. I am now three hours into my night rating and then will finish the IMC I started ten years ago and move on to the FAA IR. My instructor says that I could even go for a FAA commercial licence, as I have enough hours, but I'll leave that for now, sounds like hard work. Circuit bashing at Luton is hard enough already, imagine Easyjet and Ryanair being told they are number 2 to the cherokee on base! The interesting thing I found out is that if you get the IMC and then the FAA IR, if you fly in a "G" plane, you can use the IR rating once you leave the UK FIR. If it's a "N" reg, then obviously no problem the whole time. Regards John Got the night qualification at Christmas when in the USA. I used to have the IMC which I git straight after the PPL but decided that IMC and my level of experience were not to be mixed. Now a bit older and wiser Ihope, I can make better use of both especially when going to the US. Having the night qualification releases me to fly at night there. Getting the IR will complete the set. The advantage of having the IMC rating is that I can shoot the various instrument procedures with that to satisfy the IR currency even if I dont exercise the privileges of the FAA/IR. after all the book only requires that instrument approaches are carried out, and they will be in my logbook. With the number of approaches available at airports not in controlled airspace it becomes even easier. I reckon I could do 6 different types of approaches from within an hour of where I fly from. The RAF can help out as well. With our weather, then it makes sense to practice them anyway. When I did my IMC, the let down I had to do on the flight test was a VDF/DME in real IMC at Swansea (always was IMC in Swansea as well as very windy). That was fun and required a lot of work as I remember having to continually transmit for the QDM and QDR. |
#8
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Your flight test was similar to my first night lesson. I was told it was to
be "an appreciation of instruments" refresher. My instructor is an IR rated 737 pilot, so we took off in iffy weather, entered cloud at 600ft and didn't see anything but the wings until we popped out of cloud at 700ft on approach! My first instrument flight for ten years and I did quite well. John "Jeb" wrote in message om... "John Bishop" wrote in message ... Interested to hear you are doing the IMC and FAA IR. After getting my FAA licence revalidated recently at Luton, I decided to carry on with some training. I am now three hours into my night rating and then will finish the IMC I started ten years ago and move on to the FAA IR. My instructor says that I could even go for a FAA commercial licence, as I have enough hours, but I'll leave that for now, sounds like hard work. Circuit bashing at Luton is hard enough already, imagine Easyjet and Ryanair being told they are number 2 to the cherokee on base! The interesting thing I found out is that if you get the IMC and then the FAA IR, if you fly in a "G" plane, you can use the IR rating once you leave the UK FIR. If it's a "N" reg, then obviously no problem the whole time. Regards John Got the night qualification at Christmas when in the USA. I used to have the IMC which I git straight after the PPL but decided that IMC and my level of experience were not to be mixed. Now a bit older and wiser Ihope, I can make better use of both especially when going to the US. Having the night qualification releases me to fly at night there. Getting the IR will complete the set. The advantage of having the IMC rating is that I can shoot the various instrument procedures with that to satisfy the IR currency even if I dont exercise the privileges of the FAA/IR. after all the book only requires that instrument approaches are carried out, and they will be in my logbook. With the number of approaches available at airports not in controlled airspace it becomes even easier. I reckon I could do 6 different types of approaches from within an hour of where I fly from. The RAF can help out as well. With our weather, then it makes sense to practice them anyway. When I did my IMC, the let down I had to do on the flight test was a VDF/DME in real IMC at Swansea (always was IMC in Swansea as well as very windy). That was fun and required a lot of work as I remember having to continually transmit for the QDM and QDR. |
#9
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John,
I could even go for a FAA commercial licence, as I have enough hours, but I'll leave that for now, sounds like hard work. Actually, it's not. The big issue is the written - the flying part is just more precise flying and the Chandelle bit. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
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