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#1
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![]() Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., is there some significant history why easterly/westerly cruising altitudes were chosen on the basis of: 000-179 --- 180-359 as opposed to the more intuitive: 001-180 --- 181-360 ??? |
#2
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On Fri, 24 Sep 2004 18:36:21 GMT, "Icebound"
wrote: Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., is there some significant history why easterly/westerly cruising altitudes were chosen on the basis of: 000-179 --- 180-359 as opposed to the more intuitive: 001-180 --- 181-360 ??? Don't know why it was set up this way, but it's always been a good memory aid for me. Headings beginning with 0 remind me of O (the letter "o") which makles me think "Odd thousands + 500" -- Bryan |
#3
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"Icebound" wrote in message
.rogers.com... Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., is there some significant history why easterly/westerly cruising altitudes were chosen on the basis of: 000-179 --- 180-359 as opposed to the more intuitive: 001-180 --- 181-360 ??? Invented by a C-programmer perhaps? :-) More likely invented by someone who proposed odd altitudes 000 track = 180 and even tracks for 180 track = 360, and overruled by an ICAO committee that didn't understand the difference between an integer and a real. Julian Scarfe |
#4
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message .rogers.com... Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., 360 and 0 are used interchangeably for North. |
#5
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., is there some significant history why easterly/westerly cruising altitudes were chosen on Of course it is a real direction - its the same direction as 360. Its merely a piece of terminology that is no longer in use for one reason or another. If you understand the information and concept being conveyed, then the communication has been successful. I don't see one mode as more or less 'intuitive' than the other. |
#6
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![]() "John Gaquin" wrote in message ... "Icebound" wrote in message Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., is there some significant history why easterly/westerly cruising altitudes were chosen on Of course it is a real direction - its the same direction as 360. Its merely a piece of terminology that is no longer in use for one reason or another. Zero is no longer in use for north? Is it not the marine standard for north? |
#7
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message k.net... "Icebound" wrote in message .rogers.com... Since 000 is not a real direction... (North is 360) ..., 360 and 0 are used interchangeably for North. Well, yes and no. They mean the same thing, of course... but they are not really "used interchangeably". Direction 000 in a METAR is used to represent calm wind, not North wind. I have never seen "00" painted on a runway. Computer routines for calculating direction will often expect input and normalize results into the 1-360 range, not 0-359. Very rarely do you hear "... heading is 000" as opposed to "... heading is 360" etc.... |
#8
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![]() "Icebound" wrote in message ble.rogers.com... Well, yes and no. They mean the same thing, of course... but they are not really "used interchangeably". Well, how can they mean the same thing if one of them "is not a real direction"? Direction 000 in a METAR is used to represent calm wind, not North wind. I have never seen "00" painted on a runway. Computer routines for calculating direction will often expect input and normalize results into the 1-360 range, not 0-359. Very rarely do you hear "... heading is 000" as opposed to "... heading is 360" You'll find more compasses with 0 for north than with 360. |
#9
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![]() "Steven P. McNicoll" wrote in message ink.net... "Icebound" wrote in message ble.rogers.com... Well, yes and no. They mean the same thing, of course... but they are not really "used interchangeably". Well, how can they mean the same thing if one of them "is not a real direction"? "... is not used as a direction". I will admit to semantic sloppiness. Direction 000 in a METAR is used to represent calm wind, not North wind. I have never seen "00" painted on a runway. Computer routines for calculating direction will often expect input and normalize results into the 1-360 range, not 0-359. Very rarely do you hear "... heading is 000" as opposed to "... heading is 360" You'll find more compasses with 0 for north than with 360. I thought about that, but when I went looking, almost all compasses I could find had a big fat "N" there, and no number at all. |
#10
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On Fri, 24 Sep 2004, Steven P. McNicoll wrote:
Very rarely do you hear "... heading is 000" as opposed to "... heading is 360" You'll find more compasses with 0 for north than with 360. But more runways with "36/18" on the ends, rather than "00/18". Seems pretty interchangable to me... Brian. |
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