国外航校私照飞行员地面课Lesson 17.pptx
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Sierra Academy of Aeronautics PPL Ground;VFR Navigational Charts ;World Aeronautical Chart (WAC)
1:1,000,000 scale
Sectional
1:500,000 scale
Most commonly used
Terminal Aeronautical Chart (TAC)
1:250,000 scale
Only for congested airspace;VFR Navigation up to
Issued every 6 months
Background colors indicate elevation
;Latitude – lines running E and W parallel to Equator
Longitude – lines running N and S parallel to the Prime Meridian
“Longitude goes up and down, Latitude goes Round and Round”
For example Carbondale airport is
N37°46.68 / W89°15.12‘
;;;;;;;;;Requested that you remain 2,000 feet above any wildlife refuge
See Jeppesen Private Pilot Manual Section 4-C for more sectional information;Most complete source of Airport Information from the FAA
Seven regions
Issued every 56 days
;Decodes everything;;;
Pilotage/Dead Reckoning
Winds
Variation
Deviation
;Three common means of navigation
Pilotage
Using landmarks and Checkpoints
Dead Reckoning
Using computations of time, airspeed, distance, and direction
Radio Aids
Using radio navigational aids (Navaids);Course
Intended direction of flight across the ground measured in degrees from north.
“a line drawn on the map”
Heading
The direction in which the nose of the aircraft is pointing during flight.;;The angle between the course and the heading.
Can be calculated on E6-b before the flight
;Angle between true north and magnetic north.
;Isogonic Lines - Lines drawn across aeronautical charts to connect points having the same magnetic variation.
Agonic Line – 0? isogonic line, no variation;Magnetic compass error caused by local magnetic ?elds within the aircraft.
It is different on each heading.
It is different for each airplane.
;You will need
Plotter
E6B
Sectional
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