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#1
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Here's the real life scenario: The bearing (GPS track ) from Mojave
(KMHV) to Inyokern (KIYK) California is 006 Mag up along the east face of the Sierra Nevada. Heading home the other day in VMC, the airmass spilling off the Sierra was giving me a healthy quartering tail wind from the left (port if you prefer) side. In order to maintain the GPS track line I was holding in a crab angle of nearly ten degrees. A little arithmetic says my magnetic heading was 356. So, for safety purposes to avoid trying to occupy the same finite airspace as one of my fellow flyers, should my altitude have been 6500 for the mag heading -- or 7500 for the ground track? It is a tight corridor; SUAs and cumulus-granitus don't allow for much zig-zagging to add ten degrees to either side, which I've always considered unacceptable anyway. |
#2
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The reg says "magnetic course," and if you successfully figured out the
appropriate wind correction, your ground track would have been the same as your magnetic course. Ergo, 7500. Bob Gardner "Casey Wilson" N2310D @ gmail.com wrote in message news:kPA5g.3298$6d4.231@trnddc03... Here's the real life scenario: The bearing (GPS track ) from Mojave (KMHV) to Inyokern (KIYK) California is 006 Mag up along the east face of the Sierra Nevada. Heading home the other day in VMC, the airmass spilling off the Sierra was giving me a healthy quartering tail wind from the left (port if you prefer) side. In order to maintain the GPS track line I was holding in a crab angle of nearly ten degrees. A little arithmetic says my magnetic heading was 356. So, for safety purposes to avoid trying to occupy the same finite airspace as one of my fellow flyers, should my altitude have been 6500 for the mag heading -- or 7500 for the ground track? It is a tight corridor; SUAs and cumulus-granitus don't allow for much zig-zagging to add ten degrees to either side, which I've always considered unacceptable anyway. |
#3
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In article , Bob Gardner wrote:
The reg says "magnetic course," and if you successfully figured out the appropriate wind correction, your ground track would have been the same as your magnetic course. Ergo, 7500. Just be very, very careful you understand what the controller means when he says, "squawk altitude" Morris |
#4
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![]() "Journeyman" wrote in message . .. Just be very, very careful you understand what the controller means when he says, "squawk altitude" Are you suggesting he means something other than turn on the automatic altitude reporting feature of your transponder? |
#5
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![]() "Journeyman" wrote in message . .. In article , Bob Gardner wrote: The reg says "magnetic course," and if you successfully figured out the appropriate wind correction, your ground track would have been the same as your magnetic course. Ergo, 7500. Just be very, very careful you understand what the controller means when he says, "squawk altitude" Pardon my confusion but what does a controller have to do with this? |
#6
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In article wVM5g.39847$C63.24161@trnddc06, Casey Wilson wrote:
your magnetic course. Ergo, 7500. Just be very, very careful you understand what the controller means when he says, "squawk altitude" Pardon my confusion but what does a controller have to do with this? It's an old joke. A controller telling you to squawk altitude means you need to turn on the transponder's mode C, not use your current altitude (7500') as the transponder code. Much hilarity ensues from misunderstanding this point. Morris (off to recalibrate my sense of humor) |
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