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Not that it matters terribly much, but there's a few things I don't get.
On a WAC, which is a Lambert chart, a straight line is more or less a great circle, right? However, to fly a great circle, you have to constantly adjust your heading. I still can't conceptually work out why, I must say. Any pointers? If you had a WAC chart that displayed the entire Northern Hemisphere on one chart, you could draw a straight line from Los Angeles to New York. Wouldn't this be a great circle? And if it is, why couldn't you just fly the single heading of that line? Is it that because of the fact that a chart that big would have different magnetic north references at different meridians, and what you would actually be drawing is a rhumb line? And speaking of rhumb lines, if you fly one by keeping a constant magnetic heading between two points, does that mean you actually describe a curve over the earth's surface? Thanks in advance, because I'm pretty confused. |
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