Maybe it is a dirty little secret. We should not do it but I suspect many do. Complacency? Minor issue?
Maybe it is a dirty little secret. We should not do it but I suspect many do. Complacency? Minor issue?
Maybe it is a dirty little secret. We should not do it but I suspect many do. Complacency? Minor issue?
Yup! But so far, I've only gotten a victor airway once. Most often direct to a fix, and once in a while "cleared as filed"... i.e. direct.All the time. Here in the NE, you'll almost always get victor airways as a matter of course. Down south, if I ask for direct, I usually get it, unless RADAR is out. Then the 480 shines. Select the airway and get on it. The thing even shows you all the intersections on the airway with your ETA to each one...Makes position reports a dream.
We should not do it but I suspect many do.
Isn't that what happened in Brazil? The two airplanes were on the same airway but mistakenly at the same altitude.On the other hand, if many people did it using GPS, I suppose that might increase collision potential, due to more aircraft being precisly centered on the airway.
I'm betting this is a trick question
Wasn't there something discussed years ago about the difference between a VOR radial making up an airway and the great circle nav provided by GPS for the same route?
A VOR radial is a great circle route.
Isn't that what happened in Brazil? The two airplanes were on the same airway but mistakenly at the same altitude.
I'm betting this is a trick question
Wasn't there something discussed years ago about the difference between a VOR radial making up an airway and the great circle nav provided by GPS for the same route?
Yes. The mistake was the controller's, they were both level at their assigned altitudes.
If I am flying from Harrisburg VOR to Myton VOR they are pretty much at the same latitude, so the radial on a chart between the two is 270. But the great circle route has an initial heading of 290ish.
No, the radial on a chart between the two is 291.
If I am flying from Harrisburg VOR to Myton VOR they are pretty much at the same latitude, so the radial on a chart between the two is 270. But the great circle route has an initial heading of 290ish.
Yes, I know - outside of service volumes and all that, but the point remains.
I draw straight lines on a chart, not arcs as I don't have a giant compass. an east west line on the chart is 270ish true, and HAR doesn't have 20 degrees of variation.
Assuming the signal could be received over the distance, the circle route is the shortest route in space. Not considering relativistic effects of gravity, the VOR transmission will follow a straight line in space. The shortest distance between the two locations would require the departure from HAR on approximately the radial that aligns with a true course of 281 degrees. This is about 11 degrees north of true west. Arriving at MTU, the course would be approximately 259 degrees true, about 11 degrees south of west. The arc is to the north on a flat surface chart, but is the shortest distance on the surface of a sphere (stretch a rubber band between the two points on a globe to simulate it). To convert those to VOR magnetic radials, one would have to adjust the HAR radial by the 1985 variation of 10 west and the MTU radial by the 1980 variation of 14 East. So to go direct between the two VOR's, assuming you could, you would track outbound on the HAR 292 radial and the 065 radial inbound to MTU.
I draw straight lines on a chart, not arcs as I don't have a giant compass. an east west line on the chart is 270ish true, and HAR doesn't have 20 degrees of variation.
If you lay a rubber band down on the globe between the points to form the shortest distance, it will lie almost on Des Moines, IA. Your straight line falls lower onto Mo and never even touches IA. At Chicago, you are almost 100 NM to the south whereas the rubber band is approximately 35 NM south. Radio waves just are only familiar with following a straight line thru space, curves not so much. However, a straight line in space appears as a curve on a flat chart that is constructed by a projection of the varying latitudes onto the sphere. The opposite is true, the straight line on the chart with varying latitude is always a curve in space.
Then you're not drawing radials.
I'm pretty sure that any vector from a VOR is on a radial.
How do you define "vector" for this purpose?
Draw a line segment on chart originating from HAR VOR to MTU VOR using a straight edge, and the pencil moving at 2inches/second. (A vector needs a direction and velocity, you know.) Look to see where line crosses the circle around the VOR. Yep, looks like it's on a radial.
Actually a vector requires direction and magnitude. Velocity is itself a vector quantity, specified by speed and direction.
If you extend that 270° "vector", what we call a "radial", west to W110° 7.62' longitude, you'll find yourself about 580 miles south of MTU.
I didn't say it was the correct radial to get to MTU if drawn on a chart vs what's actually flown. I said it was on a radial.
If I am flying from Harrisburg VOR to Myton VOR they are pretty much at the same latitude, so the radial on a chart between the two is 270. But the great circle route has an initial heading of 290ish.
Yes, I know - outside of service volumes and all that, but the point remains.
No, that's not what you said, this is what you said:
The radial between them, extended without regard to service volume, is not the 270° radial, it's the 291° radial.
The radial on the CHART shows one thing. The radial in real world however is another. The initial heading is 291, but I have to come off that radial at some point, because the radial from MTU would not be 111. You can't keep flying the 291 radial and get to MTU.
You could if the signal went that far. The magnetic track would vary along the flight to maintain the centerline of the radial, but the radial setting on the VOR would remain the same if you wanted to fly the shortest path.
The radial on the CHART shows one thing. The radial in real world however is another, and it's only an initial heading. I have to come off that radial at some point, because the radial from MTU would not be 111 - it's 065. You can't keep flying the 291 heading to get to MTU.
Yes, you were correct when you said "great circle route has an initial heading of 290ish", the initial heading will always match the radial at the source. That's pretty much what is meant by initial heading. You were wrong when you said the radial between HAR and MTU is the 270° radial, if it extended that far.