I am talking about without a moving map.
Could it be done just using DME just as easily?
No map.
Kinda. You can talk to your instructor and play with it. Have them pretend your CDI failed. It’s certainly possible to do it, but you then don’t know where to get on, or more importantly, or off of the arc.
In a way you’re just centering the CDI to see what radial you’re on, if that helps visualize it. The 10 thing for both is just to keep an enormously shallow turn going.
Have you done one yet or just ground schooling it right now? Most are ten miles long and take an eternity in anything slow. Since most students are still working on aircraft control, straight and level, then a small turn, then straight and level... are things they know how to do.
Then they’re just adding in the 10 degree thing with the CDI as an additional task and feel overloaded at first. That feeling will go away as aircraft control becomes second nature. Then arcs in GA airplanes start to feel like they take an eternity.
Then they’re only interesting if you have like 30 knots of wind aloft blowing you off of the ground track.
Since ground wind is often generally in the same direction ... you get on the arc and about halfway around you feel good, zooming along with a tail wind and then get blown way off as you’re trying to complete it since that’s the point where a wind down the runway will mess with you the most as you remembered you forgot to dial up the ILS in a single Nav/CDI panel or simulated failure of all but one Nav radio.
You think “It’s not time to turn toward the runway yet” and forget you’ll almost always need a crab angle on the part where you’re 90 degrees off of the runway heading.
You’ll have fun.
I’ll let ya in on another trick. You’ll probably also lose the CDI as one of the simulations. Your mag compass is now your friend, if you can hold level for a bit to let it settle between turns.
I’m ruining all of your CFIIs fun. LOL.
Yep. If you’re outside the arc on the DME or inside of it, fix it. Outside requires a big turn. Inside if not too far, just stay wings level in no wind. You’ll fly back out to it. Big turn to intercept then.
The whole “turn 10” thing is just a starter. You really have to turn as much as it takes to hold the distance.
The 10 & 10 thing is just a technique. Mostly because flying the tiny bank continuous turn needed would be a pain at bugsmasher speeds.