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CAA - Pilot's Guide to GPS

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Old 21st June 2010 | 15:55
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From: Quite near 'An aerodrome somewhere in England'
CAA - Pilot's Guide to GPS

The CAA has just produced a DVD entitled Pilot's Guide to GPS, but it can also be viewed at CAA - Pilot's Guide to GPS

It would be interesting to hear the views on this by the experienced GPS gurus on this website.....
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Old 21st June 2010 | 20:00
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From: Niort
Thank God these people were not around during WWII - new fangled systems like Oboe would never have been developed -and bombing accuracy would have remained 'nearest county'.

Despair.........................
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Old 21st June 2010 | 20:27
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From: Yorkshire
I must admit I ordered a DVD copy and thought it was aimed at someone who has never heard of GPS..
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 11:30
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From: Oxford
I like the idea that a GPS which has the latest database update (i.e 28 day AIRAC cycle) might not be as up to date with airspace changes as a chart which is printed once a year.

Doh!

Tim
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 12:14
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Well, perhaps it's useful for beginners who have no GPS experience, folk like me for example. I had a look at some of the pages and thought it was quite helpful.
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 12:38
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From: Niort
It spends far too long stating what might be wrong with GPS (but which is almost never the case).

As to practically using it for planning a route, monitoring airborne wind, time enroute and to go, picking sensible waypoints, using the internal databases, real route planning, i.e producing a PLOG from your planned route - almost nothing. Nothing about obvious 'sense checks' you can make to ensure your routing is correct and the thing is actually working.

And the user waypoints might be wrong!!!
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 17:50
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From: Here and there. Here at the moment but soon I'll be there.
Thanks for the heads-up on this BEagle. I just received my Garmin 696 (with XMWeather subscription ) and this is just what I need to get the most out of using it.
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 20:20
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From: London
It goes without saying that any method of navigation other than that taught in the PPL syllabus must be suspect! Following railway lines and such - what foolishness! There's no telling - there may be leaves on the line.
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 20:31
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From: Norfolk UK
I started using GPS for navigation on sailing boats over 20 years ago,before that Decca,and Loran was still being used.
I always plotted postions on chart every hour or less inshore or in busy shipping lanes,and cross checked both ways chart-GPS.
The last boat had a chart plotter in 1990,ie glass cockpit linked to radar and autopilot.
Why has it taken so long for GA to catch up?
The advice to not rely soley on an electronic device is,I believe,sensible.
Use the GPS but update the chart as you go.
Lister
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Old 22nd June 2010 | 20:52
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From: London
I learned the hard way about relying solely on GPS when the battery died suddenly! In any case straight line GPS is as boring to fly as Dead Reckoning - i.e. dead boring. I prefer to fly by identifying and tracking ground features. I fly not to get from A to B but for the experience and the freedom of flying where I want.
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