I still prefer a whiz wheel to elctronic calculators or apps
https://www.gleimaviation.com/2019/12/27/celebrating-the-e-6bs-80th-birthday/
I still have one in the side pocket of my airplane. It's great for quick conversions of mph/kt or calculating TAS from IAS, or doing a quick fuel/ETA calculation. Of course, I'm old enough to know how to use a slide rule, which is what an E6B is, fundamentally.
No, just the same except there are scales to convert knots to warp speeds.Is that a special version for solar wind?
I certainly know where my Pickett N4-ES is located...
Somewhere I have a whiz wheel flight computer for a B-17. I need to donate it to a aviation museum.
That's in great shape! I wonder if Udvar-Hazy or one of the other aviation museums would be interested. They could take proper care to preserve it for another 75+ years in that condition.A former neighbor of mine gave me this E-6B his father used while serving with the 650th Bombardment Squadron of the 411th Bombardment Group during WWII. His father eventually rose to become a general in the Air Force. He had no idea what it was and brought it to me one day asking if I knew what it was. Since I knew all about it and how to use it, he wanted me to have it. I've held onto it for about 15 years wondering what I should do with it. It's probably not that rare and not likely to have seen combat given the 650th was a training squadron. I do feel honored that he asked me to have it. Looks like they were flying Douglas A-20G Havoc light bombers.
View attachment 81571
A lifetime ago I had to show a student I.D. to get a student discount on Icelandic Airways.
So I made one!
Does that logo look familiar?
Hopefully the statute of limitations has run on that one!
My mom found one at a church sale that's just the plain circle, without the rectangular metal plate attached. I like it a lot better -- simpler for one-handed operation. And it's certainly faster than tapping through menus on a tablet or panel-mounted GPS. I'm actually a bit obsessed with it these days, and just like to sit and play around with it sometimes. It's also way faster for converting between litres and gallons (something I have to do a lot) than opening up the calculator on my phone.
View attachment 81581 View attachment 81582
It looks similar to Jeppesen's take on the E6-B in their CR* series, but this one appears to be from "Allegheny Plastics Inc" rather than Jepp. The extra Mach calculations are a bit overkill for my Cherokee.Isn’t that a CR-3?
Looks like part of Spock's three-dimensional chessboard!View attachment 81587 This is something I got when my father-in-law passed away. I’m not sure what it is. The only clues I have are I know he was a sonar operator in the Navy. First in blimps, then in helicopters. I know after his service, he also sold onboard radar systems for RCA. Anyone have any ideas?
Agreed. I still have two of them, but honestly, I've only used them during ground school classes, twenty years ago. Was fun to learn, but I immediately purchased a Sporty's electronic E6B. Funny how I never got rid of them, but I no longer own a rotary phone, typewriter, cassette player or reel-to-reel tape recorderI tossed mine years ago.
With multiple computers in the plane (GPS/Nav/Comm, MFD, PFD, iPad and smartphone) I can get all that in multiple ways.
They were a great device decades ago, but now not so much. Oh sure, it's still useful, but the PFD shows me TAS, GS and where the wind is coming from and how fast.
Yes, electronic devices are steadily taking over the functions of the whiz wheel. But if you’re fluent with an E6B, the calculations are just so easy and quick. There might be something wrong with me, but I even look forward to running calcs on the wheel.
But the looks you get at a $100 hamburger place, when you whip out an E6B and do some flight planning - priceless.
It's also a trade-off. An E6-B has a steep learning curve (up-front investment), but is faster than opening an app or GPS page and typing in numbers--assuming I don't just do it in my head, I can convert litres to gallons, or solve speed/time/distance problems far faster with an E6-B.No, there’s nothing wrong with us. We are simply from a different era with a different skill set. Sometimes I wonder though, would people who never had to use an E6B, charts and a plotter, really understand those calculations that are being made.
The learning curve is steep (compared to a calculator or app), because you have to master a lot of conventions that aren't clearly labeled, and also learn to use the right orders of magnitude. Use, however, is very simple, as you describe.Well explained except I just absolutely can’t buy the steep learning curve. How can anything be more simple to learn than to slide one number under a marker, find another number of interest and read the adjacent number?