With paper maps, I will deride you relentlessly if you turn the map to navigate. But with modern technology it's just silly not to present the data so that left is left and right is right and in front of you is in front of you.
The entire premise of a moving map is that the "ground" moves. Why would you discard that premise in one axis?Situation awareness should allow you to figure out which side is left and which is right. Modern technology even paints your position with a little airplane symbol. It’s just silly to configure the ground to move and the plane to remain stationary.
Tom
The entire premise of a moving map is that the "ground" moves.
Does your airplane fly off the screen or does the map move so that your plane stays on it? The map moves. Which is equivalent to the "ground" moving in your world view. So why is it ok for the ground to move left and right, up and down, but not ok for it to rotate? Makes no sense.Didn't realize that when we fly, the ground moves. Learn something new every day. So if I'm flying north, and you're flying SE, and someone else is flying W, which way is the ground moving?
i have always been a North Up kinda guy... but last few flights i have been flying track up and i think i like it more...
what do you prefer?
That's the beauty of night flying, you can't see the ground move.Didn't realize that when we fly, the ground moves. Learn something new every day. So if I'm flying north, and you're flying SE, and someone else is flying W, which way is the ground moving?
Not this crap again. LOL.
Does your airplane fly off the screen or does the map move so that your plane stays on it? The map moves. Which is equivalent to the "ground" moving in your world view. So why is it ok for the ground to move left and right, up and down, but not ok for it to rotate? Makes no sense.
Your premise is that the ground should not move, but that's EXACTLY what is happening in a moving map display. Hence the name "moving map".
And you consider that better than track up?Actually, on one of the GPS - the one without map stitching, when I have the sectional or low en route displayed, it flies off the screen. Check. And mate.
Does your airplane fly off the screen or does the map move so that your plane stays on it? The map moves. Which is equivalent to the "ground" moving in your world view. So why is it ok for the ground to move left and right, up and down, but not ok for it to rotate? Makes no sense.
Your premise is that the ground should not move, but that's EXACTLY what is happening in a moving map display. Hence the name "moving map".
And you consider that better than track up?
Shhh, don't tell anyone, but *I couldn't care less what someone else uses, I just like to argue, especially against irrational arguments like "I don't like my moving map to move"*As a "north up" guy, I still don't see the "moving map" function as the map moving, but rather as the window that allows me to see a portion of the map moving about a large virtual map, left, right, up, down, and diagonally. When it rotates, it looks to me like the world is spinning wrong and makes no sense. Hard to explain. I REALLY dislike trying to deal with track up. Like I said, it doesn't matter.. not a question of right or wrong, better or worse.. just what works better or worse for each of us individually. Cheers.
Modern technology presents the printed data right side up. It's like magic.So when you are track up with a sectional displayed, are you guys attempting to read the chart info upside down? Also, if track up was the way things were supposed to be, they would issue 360 differently oriented section charts. Since they don't, and even the digital sectional charts don't orientate the text to be track up, the only correct answer it north up.
Modern technology presents the printed data right side up. It's like magic.
North up in the plane, track up in the car. Works for me.
Cheers
I have yet to see a sectional programmed to rotate the text to align with track up other than true north.. Please provide evidence of this.
Modern technology presents the printed data right side up. It's like magic.