How did Trans World Airline navigate from say, New York to London before the days of modern navigational aides?
What about Los Angles to Hawaii?
Inertial navigation?
Uses a highly sensitive set of accelerometers and gyroscopes to measure the instantaneous accelerations of the vehicle. Summed over time, that gives velocity, and summing velocity over time gives position in relation to the starting point. INS dates back at least to 1960, possibly before, although the technology has improved dramatically from the mechanical gyros and accelerometers of that era, producing greater reliability and better accuracy over longer periods of time. We had INS in all three aircraft I flew in the military (A-6, RF-4, F-111). The beauty of it in that application was that it was non-emitting and did not rely on external signals, so it couldn't be jammed and it didn't give away our location. See http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inertial_navigation_system for more details.Inertial navigation?
The SR-71 had a serious celestial nav system built into them.
I've always wanted to learn celestial navigation. The issue has been finding a good sextant that isn't going to cost me an arm and leg.
Pressure pattern navigation seems like an interesting concept.
Celestial navigation?
The military had Loran in WWII. My dad, a B-24 pilot, told me they used it to develop approaches to their home station as well as a few others and emergency stations in southeast England. It required a good navigator to operate and read the scope. I'm assuming it was relatively short ranged.
Jim R
Collierville, TN
N7155H--1946 Piper J-3 Cub
N3368K--1946 Globe GC-1B Swift
The military had Loran in WWII. My dad, a B-24 pilot, told me they used it to develop approaches to their home station as well as a few others and emergency stations in southeast England. It required a good navigator to operate and read the scope. I'm assuming it was relatively short ranged.
Jim R
Collierville, TN
N7155H--1946 Piper J-3 Cub
N3368K--1946 Globe GC-1B Swift
That came after Omega, I'm not sure if aviation used Decca. Then Loran A, again not sure if t went to aviation; then came inertial systems then Loran C.
Low range Nondirectional beacons and open loop antennas.
Trans Ocean?
That would be Loran A back then, and it, as well as Loran C, had ADF type range.
Depends on atmospherics. Just like when we did it on ships. I don't recall exactly how far out I was, but I did some DF back in the Atlantic when I was sailing 3M. It worked fine....just pain in the butt to do all the calculations.
Ummmm....no. In the 1980's, they had T-43's with a small hole in the rioof through which a periscopic sextant could be thrust. BTDT. The really ancient trainers with a dome were long gone when I went through USAF cel nav training in Spring 1980.Air Force still had a trainer at Mather(?) Sacramento navigator school in the late 80s with clear domes at the top of the fuselage.
Ummmm....no. In the 1980's, they had T-43's with a small hole in the rioof through which a periscopic sextant could be thrust. BTDT. The really ancient trainers with a dome were long gone when I went through USAF cel nav training in Spring 1980.
I remember reading a comment by a 1930's vintage record breaking flyer when asked how he always made his destination so accurately. He said that he flew the calculated heading without making any wind corrections on the assumption that these would cancel out as he flew through weather systems. Seemed to work for him, made it from England to Australia!
Ummmm....no. In the 1980's, they had T-43's with a small hole in the rioof through which a periscopic sextant could be thrust. BTDT. The really ancient trainers with a dome were long gone when I went through USAF cel nav training in Spring 1980.
Trans Ocean?
Yes. Your probably to young to have used ocean ship November, Oscar, or zebra
Air Force still had a trainer at Mather(?) Sacramento navigator school in the late 80s with clear domes at the top of the fuselage.