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#41
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Bob Moore wrote:
Andrew Sarangan wrote So, I still don't agree that navigation systems have advanced to the point where we can abandon the magnetic based instruments. Hmmmm....I wonder how we used to navigate 'over-the-pole' back before INS? Hint....Grid Navigation, an unslaved DG referenced to true north. I don't claim to know anything about navigation over the poles, but if it is as simple as you say it is, why do we continue using the magnetic compass for every-day navigation? My guess is that it must be complex, difficult, expensive or unreliable. |
#42
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Mxsmanic wrote:
"Grumman-581" writes: And high enough that the sky was dark even when the sun was out -- at least from the photos that I've seen published... Yes, but the ANS could recognize stars even from the taxiway in broad daylight. I still don't know how it managed that. Jupiter, Saturn, and Venus are visible to the naked eye in broad daylight at sea level, if you know exactly where to look. I've seen them all, at times when I knew their approximate position relative to the moon. You must look in exactly the right place -- an error of a half degree or so puts them out of the central field of view of your eyes and renders them invisible against the glare of daylight. The brighter stars are just outside the ability of most people's naked eyes to see in broad daylight, but a small pair of binoculars will pick a few out nicely. Again, proper aim is crucial. Only a handful of the brightest stars will typically be visible at any given time, but you don't need very many for navigation. It sounds like the optics of the SR-71's nav system are at least as good as a standard issue Mk 1 pair of eyeballs coupled with a 7x35 pair of binoculars. It may be that, for rapid startup, the system needs some hint of the location and time of day to figure out where to begin its search for stars, but I'm just guessing on that point. |
#43
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#44
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#45
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Andrew Sarangan writes:
I don't claim to know anything about navigation over the poles, but if it is as simple as you say it is, why do we continue using the magnetic compass for every-day navigation? My guess is that it must be complex, difficult, expensive or unreliable. I think magnetic headings are still used because of the vast inertia of the installed base of avionics and instruments, plus the inertia of so many pilots who have been raised on that. I certainly won't quarrel with using magnetic navigation as a back-up, but I do question basing normal navigation on a compass, which is relatively unreliable compared to more modern methods. If the SR-71 could navigate reliably by the stars half a century ago, I think most aircraft could navigate reliably today using much more modern satellite systems. -- Transpose mxsmanic and gmail to reach me by e-mail. |
#46
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... Yes, but the ANS could recognize stars even from the taxiway in broad daylight. I still don't know how it managed that. http://www.sr-71.org/blackbird/manual/4/4-3.php |
#47
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"Mxsmanic" wrote in message
... The leakage was trivial, and it rapidly warmed up enough to seal the leaks. I once asked Mary Shafer ( SR-71 Chief Engineer NASA Dryden Flight Research Center, Edwards, CA) about whether it was true that the SR-71 leaked like a sieve... She replied something like, "to say that it leaks like a sieve would be to insult all sieves" or maybe it was, "a sieve that leaked that much would be pretty useless"... Here's some interesting readings if you are so inclined: http://www.netwrx1.com/skunk-works/v05.n129 In certain situations, 1200 lbs would leak off prior to takeoff... |
#48
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Mxsmanic wrote:
Andrew Sarangan writes: So what instrument would you suggest we use for true headings? A combination of INS and GPS would work. It would be at least as accurate as a compass. Accuracy isn't the problem. Would it be as reliable? Would it be affordable and workable in airplanes that lack electrical systems? And would it work when those electrical systems failed? If you're talking about high budget commercial aviation, any nav system that has the processing power to decode the GPS signals has the power to apply a local magnetic deviation to its heading or course output. Updates to the magnetic deviation can be distributed as needed with the updates to the nav database. So for these users, it's sort of arbitrary which reference is used, as long as there is an agreed upon reference. For the gliders, Piper Cubs, and other moderate budget flyers, the price and reliability differences between a compass and an INS weigh significantly in favor of the compass. There is the further issue of inertia. Every pilot flying today learned to use magnetic headings. Every airplane cockpit has an instrument (or several instruments) to prominently display the magnetic heading to the pilot. To convert wholesale would entail a period of minor confusion at least. Finally, what problem would it solve? The shifting of the Earth's magnetic poles is slow, relatively predictable, and something we have lived with for awhile. While true headings may be more elegant and stable over the very long term, that elegance doesn't add much practical value. --Rich |
#49
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wrote in message
oups.com... Finally, what problem would it solve? The shifting of the Earth's magnetic poles is slow, relatively predictable, and something we have lived with for awhile. While true headings may be more elegant and stable over the very long term, that elegance doesn't add much practical value. It's the typical case of a solution in search of a problem... |
#50
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Mxsmanic wrote:
I certainly won't quarrel with using magnetic navigation as a back-up, but I do question basing normal navigation on a compass, which is relatively unreliable compared to more modern methods. Unreliable? The magnetic compass is about as reliable is it gets. There's one moving part, no power source, and the Earth's magnetic field is good for another few thousand years. What's unreliable about that? Of the cannonical "watch and compass" navigation kit, the watch is by far the less reliable of the two. |
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