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Old 23rd Feb 2014, 12:32
  #21 (permalink)  
 
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"Lorenz also made the Lorenz beam landing aid, which was the first of it's type appearing in the mid 30s."
Precursor of I.L.S., and used a similar system of two overlapping beams. Whereas I.L.S. had a display, the left/right of centreline was aural. No glide path, descent was done by starting a steady descent when passing a marker.

As regards Sonne, I have read (either R.V. Jones book, or a book "Aircraft vs. Submarine" by Alfred Price) that once it had been established what it was, plans were being made to destroy the transmitters. When the senior navigation officer of Coastal Command heard of this ( by chance, and at a late stage) he asked, successfully, that they be left in operation, on the grounds that they were more use to Coastal Command than the were to the Germans.

I remember that in the mid 60's, we still had on the Shack charts with a Consol overlay printed in them so that a position could be plotted directly, without all the nause of doing convergence corrections
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Old 23rd Feb 2014, 13:05
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European Consol stations:

Bushmills 'MWN' 266 K/cs
Stavanger 'LEC' 319 K/cs
Ploneis (Quimper) 'FRQ' 257 K/cs
Lugo 'LG' 285 K/cs
Seville 'SL' 315 K/cs
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Old 23rd Feb 2014, 23:42
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Used to use Consol on Varisties lumbering out of Finningley in the early 70's, the charts were printed in a very pretty 40's style. Decca letdowns were also common in the Dominie, as ISTR one of the lines was virtually straight and passed through the airfield. It was very good from about 90nm out, provided there was no lane jump ...
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Old 23rd Feb 2014, 23:48
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Ploneis (Quimper) 'FRQ' 257 K/cs

I often wundered why this station had 2 names which seemed interchangeable or combined. The combination is simple Ploneis is a hamlet in the district of Quimper. The single name uses are are a bit different, I have just found a web site which suggests that Quimber and Ploneis were separate stations. Quimper being the original German Sonne 6 and Ploneis is a replacement. The 2 sites appear to be about 8 miles apart.
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Old 24th Feb 2014, 01:19
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The last A-N range that I know of was shut down in early 1980s in Saltillo Mexico. When Jepp said to pull it from the manual, I stuck the chart away. I'll look it up when I get home.
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Old 24th Feb 2014, 13:43
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In the 1970s, Puddy Catt was flying the RAF's last Meteor F8 to an airshow in Europe...

"Report the XXX VOR"
"Sorry, don't have VOR!"
"OK, sir - report the XXX NDB"
"Sorry, don't have ADF!"
"OK sir, squawk XXXX and ident"
"Sorry - no parrot. Not even an egg!"
"Sir - what navaids do you carry?"
"I'm talking to you on it!"

Some Air Trafficker once asked me what navigation system we used to route to the entry point of the Lichfield RVC. "We use a FUNS", I told them. When asked what a FUNS was, I replied "Food-powered Universal Navigation System - and he's sitting 2 feet behind me!".

I started off with Rebecca / Eureka in the Jet Provost, plus UHF/DF. A year later, offset TACAN in the Gnat seemed like space age magic in comparison!
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Old 24th Feb 2014, 14:18
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._ ._ ._ ._ _____∆_____ _. _. _. _.
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Old 24th Feb 2014, 15:50
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I am surprised no body has mentioned Omega. The first world wide radio nav aid.

The only thing on a Nimrod that never went wrong
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Old 24th Feb 2014, 22:00
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Omega? In the context of this thread, hardly a Vintage Navaid - indeed it wasn't fitted to the VC 10 till after I'd finished. That said, its very mention here serves to point up how things have moved on in the last 25 years or so.

Personally, I'm more taken aback by having learned the trade in the mid-60s on the Varsity, somewhat less well equipped than Halifaxes and Lancasters at the end of WW2, in that we had no H2S.
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Old 24th Feb 2014, 23:44
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Omega. The first world wide radio nav aid.
...and now withdrawn ... unlike Loran!!
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Old 1st May 2014, 19:16
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European Consol stations:

Bushmills 'MWN' 266 K/cs
Stavanger 'LEC' 319 K/cs
Ploneis (Quimper) 'FRQ' 257 K/cs
Lugo 'LG' 285 K/cs
Seville 'SL' 315 K/cs
Wasn't Stavanger (LEC) called 'Varhaug' as well? The NDB is still there; I used it yesteday!

I used to have an old NAT plotting chart from 1970 which had Consol and Loran lines printed on it.

What about the long-range version of Decca; Dectra?
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Old 2nd May 2014, 13:02
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There was a Consol station just north of San Francisco. I believe it was deactivated sometime in the early 70's. We would occasionally use it when coming back from Hawaii or Japan in the 707's
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Old 2nd May 2014, 17:55
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more Consol

As Spooky 2 says - San Francisco 'SFI' plus Nantucket 'TUK' - known as Consolan in the USA

As Talkdownman says for Europe -

Plus Andoya 'LEX' - Bjornoya 'LJS' and Jan Mayen 'LMC'

and for USSR - on Novaya Zemlya 'KN' and Provideniya 'RB'

LFH
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Old 25th Nov 2015, 15:54
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Ray Selkirk R.I.P

And he flew it to the USA too. It's all in his memoires - not yet in print, but we live in hope.
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Old 25th Nov 2015, 16:44
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I remember John Townsend teaching us all about Gee, too...
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Old 25th Nov 2015, 18:14
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The Atlantic weather ships could also offer bearings and distance according to some posters on another thread. Here are two excerpts of an Atlantic chart dated May 1970 which shows many of the nav aids referred to in previous posts.

NA west
NA east
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Old 25th Nov 2015, 20:56
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http://sometimes-interesting.com/2013/12/04/concrete-arrows-and-the-u-s-airmail-beaco

Saw this recently.... V early navigation !
http://sometimes-interesting.com/201...beacon-system/
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Old 28th Nov 2015, 15:24
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Vintage Navaids

No mention of Rebecca-Babs. Used that in 1952-3 . Homing on Gee accurate, fly down a postion line, if one happens to line up with runway. One did at Aldegrove
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Old 28th Nov 2015, 18:18
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An apocryphal story that might have originated in BEA's Highland & Island service:

Practising VDF letdowns, the R/O would get the QDMs from ATC and pass them on to the pilots. One R/O allegedly would look out of the window, note current a/c position and pass on a QDM based on his observation without bothering ATC.
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Old 28th Nov 2015, 21:17
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Cool

In our patch, NDBs are not being installed any more and not replaced when time exed.
Australia had its own unique DME relying on a signal from the A/C to excite the station to reply and measure the time etc.
Stations were limited to the number of A/C they could handle which at the time was not a problem.
The VAR was lots of fun in a DC-3, which was slow enough to be able to stick with the aural null.
One was at Kalgoorlie, visuals to Perth and reverse to Forrest, Aural to Norseman and Laverton, favourite route check stuff.
There is more power in my GPS than the entire DC-3 navaids of the 60s, but not as much fun to follow.
memories are some times better than the actual in many things!!!

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