LongRoadBob
Cleared for Takeoff
I'm sure this is just a brain fart but...
I passed the exam. It's been a little while now since then, and I realized that latitude lines can be used to judge nautical mile distances when flying relatively north-south, but I am stuck (in a northern latitude, 60 deg is my home base) with the thought that the longitudinal lines cannot really reflect distances since the distance is less as one goes more northern.
So though I know one degree of latitude is 60 nm, how can the longitudinal lines be used to judge distance? Say one is flying NE, there has to be a (shorter?) variance to actual distance, or is the great circle playing into this somehow?
A distance at 60 deg north can not be the same at 71 deg. North. On the chart. How does this work again?
I passed the exam. It's been a little while now since then, and I realized that latitude lines can be used to judge nautical mile distances when flying relatively north-south, but I am stuck (in a northern latitude, 60 deg is my home base) with the thought that the longitudinal lines cannot really reflect distances since the distance is less as one goes more northern.
So though I know one degree of latitude is 60 nm, how can the longitudinal lines be used to judge distance? Say one is flying NE, there has to be a (shorter?) variance to actual distance, or is the great circle playing into this somehow?
A distance at 60 deg north can not be the same at 71 deg. North. On the chart. How does this work again?