If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#21
|
|||
|
|||
How many people grew up
believing elemenopee was a letter itself? It isn't? Maybe =that's= why I have so much trouble reading. Why did they build the ocean so close to the shore? Jose -- Math is a game. The object of the game is to figure out the rules. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#22
|
|||
|
|||
"Jose" wrote in message ... Why did they build the ocean so close to the shore? To reduce travel time to picnics at the beach. |
#23
|
|||
|
|||
I thought it was "Visual Omni Range", meaning multi-directional and you got
to see the display as opposed to the aural radio ranges. wrote in message oups.com... Hi, I am an aspiring flight student. I'd like my first message to this group to be one with foot in mouth: I am not convinced that the term VOR stands for "Very high frequenncy omnidirectional range." The problem is that, if I were an electrical engineer designing such a device, knowing in advance how it worked, I'd be highly inclinded to call it a "Very high frequency ominidirectional radiator" given that it radiates in all directions using the VHF band. Yet both the chapters by Rod Machado that comes with Micrsoft Flight Simulator and the handbooks from the FAA say that it stands for "...ominidirectional range", so I might be barking up a tall tree here, but just a thought. Is there anyone here whose experience in flight precede the advent of VOR that could say what it stands for? Thanks, -Chaud Lapin- |
#24
|
|||
|
|||
"Franklin Newton" wrote in message ink.net... I thought it was "Visual Omni Range", meaning multi-directional and you got to see the display as opposed to the aural radio ranges. Huh? Maybe you are thinking of DME. |
#25
|
|||
|
|||
"Franklin Newton" wrote
I thought it was "Visual Omni Range", meaning multi-directional and you got to see the display as opposed to the aural radio ranges. Ah-ha...somebody else as old as I am. :-) That's how I first heard it way back in the early fifties. By the late fifties, we had VORs in our Navy aircraft, but the emphasis on my final instrument check-ride was still on the "aural" A-N Range for both enroute navigation and approaches. How pleasant to get to the first fleet squadron to find that it was all VOR/ADF/GCA flying. Bob Moore |
#26
|
|||
|
|||
"Mike W." wrote in message ... The R means Range and always has. I still don't understand why the word 'range' is in there, a VOR doesn't give you any distance to or from anything unless you use two or more of them to determine your position. You can determine distance from a VOR with the aid of a clock and a bit of math. Turn 90 degrees to the inbound course and time 5 or 10 degrees of the arc. Note that this also works with an ADF. Times here are in minutes. Time to station = time * 60 / degrees change Distance from station = time * TAS / degrees change This one works with knots or MPH but MPH gives distance in statute miles instead of nautical miles. If close to the VOR (seconds = minutes * 60) Time to station (minutes) = seconds/degrees change (usually 10 degrees) You can typically do the math in your head fairly close or more accurately with a wiz wheel or a calculator. |
#27
|
|||
|
|||
Why is there so many letters in the word "ABBREVIATION"?
Why isn't PHONETICALLY spelled with an F? Did Adam and Eve have belly buttons? -Frank |
#28
|
|||
|
|||
("Frankster" wrote)
Did Adam and Eve have belly buttons? Yes. They were, um, outies ...as in they're "5000." Word. Montblack |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
Similar Threads | ||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
American nazi pond scum, version two | bushite kills bushite | Naval Aviation | 0 | December 21st 04 10:46 PM |
Hey! What fun!! Let's let them kill ourselves!!! | [email protected] | Naval Aviation | 2 | December 17th 04 09:45 PM |
How Aircraft Stay In The Air | Sarah Hotdesking | Military Aviation | 145 | March 25th 04 05:13 PM |
Great circle formulae, True cource and actual heading | Sims | Piloting | 27 | October 11th 03 01:55 PM |
Former head of cadet discipline says she never saw a 'true rape' | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | September 11th 03 08:37 PM |