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Instrument Navigation Chapter 2, Section C

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Instrument Navigation. Chapter 2, Section C. VOR Navigation. Ground Based Transmitter 360 Radials Aligned with magnetic north Directional Line of sight. VOR Ground Facility. Ground Facilities - VOR. Operate in 108.0 - 117.95 MHz Band Standard Service Volumes (SSV) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Instrument Navigation

Instrument Navigation

Chapter 2, Section C

Page 2: Instrument Navigation

VOR Navigation

Ground Based Transmitter 360 Radials Aligned with magnetic north Directional Line of sight

Page 3: Instrument Navigation

VOR Ground Facility

Page 4: Instrument Navigation

Ground Facilities - VOR Operate in 108.0 - 117.95 MHz Band Standard Service Volumes (SSV)

High Altitude(HVOR) - 200 watts, up to 130 nm, used for airways

Low Altitude(LVOR) - about 100 watts, up to 40 nm, used for airways

Terminal(TVOR) - 50 watts, 25 nm, used for approaches

Page 5: Instrument Navigation
Page 6: Instrument Navigation
Page 7: Instrument Navigation
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Page 9: Instrument Navigation

VOR Receiver Checks VOT

180o TO, 360o FROM; +/- 4o VOR Ground Checkpoint

Indicated radial; +/- 4o

VOR Airborne Checkpoint Indicated radial; +/- 6o

Centerline of airway; +/- 6o Dual VOR Check

Within 4o

Page 10: Instrument Navigation

Using the VOR CDI To-From Indicator Intercepting a radial Tracking

wind correction Station passage

cone of confusion Reverse sensing

Page 11: Instrument Navigation

Omni Bearing Selector Course Deviation Indicator

TO/FROMRotating Course Card

Page 12: Instrument Navigation
Page 13: Instrument Navigation
Page 14: Instrument Navigation

Using the VORBasic VOR Indicator

each dot on CDI is 2o

full scale deflection is 10o

1 deg in 60 nm is 1 nm OBS

Horizontal Situation Indicator HSI incorporates HI, CDI, Glideslope makes easier to scan not reverse sensing except for using on BC

Page 15: Instrument Navigation
Page 16: Instrument Navigation

VOR Time & Distance Calculations

90 deg Method (no wind) Time to station=Time(sec)/bearing

change

Page 17: Instrument Navigation

VOR Time Distance - 900

Page 18: Instrument Navigation

Time to station (min)

Established inbound on a radial rotate the obs 10o to the left, turn the aircraft 10o to the rightNote the time and maintain heading until the cdi centers

60 x Min flown between bearing change Degrees of bearing change

Page 19: Instrument Navigation

Distance To station (NM)

TAS X Min. flown between bearing change Degrees of bearing change

Page 20: Instrument Navigation

Isosceles Triangle

5 minutes

A

B

C

5 minutes

Page 21: Instrument Navigation

ADF Navigation

Ground based transmitter Low/medium frequency (AM) Non-directional beacon (NDB) Not line of sight No receiver checks No flags - listen to Morse code

Page 22: Instrument Navigation

Operational Considerations

NDB Compass locator (LOM) - 25 watts, 15

NM MH - less than 50 watts, 25 NM H - 50 to 1999 watts, up to 50 NM HH - 2,000 watts or more, 75 NM

Page 23: Instrument Navigation
Page 24: Instrument Navigation

Using the ADF (fixed card) Magnetic heading + relative bearing =

magnetic bearing Intercepting a bearing Tracking

wind correction to the station from the station

Time and distance to a station Station passage

Page 25: Instrument Navigation

Rotating Card

Page 26: Instrument Navigation
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Page 28: Instrument Navigation

DME

Ground based - VOR/DME, VORTAC, ILS/DME, LOC/DME

Interrogation and response rate * time = distance

Uses slant distance - 1 NM away for each 1000’ elevation

Page 29: Instrument Navigation
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Page 31: Instrument Navigation

Area Navigation

VOR/DME, VORTAC based Phantom VORs

INS Self Contained

LORAN

Page 32: Instrument Navigation

Radio Magnetic Indicator RMI

HI, 1 or 2 pointers for the different stations

Pointers show the bearing to the station without mental calculations

Tail of the VOR pointer is the radial you are on

Page 33: Instrument Navigation
Page 34: Instrument Navigation

Global Positioning System(GPS

Describe how it works. A fog horn blows on the hour, … speed

of sound is 550 ft/s.Same for GPS except using speed of light.Accuracy within 300 meters 99.99% of timeVertical accuracy is not great. Accuracy can be improved by DGPS

Page 35: Instrument Navigation

Global Positioning System(GPS)

RAIM continuously monitors signals received

for validity required for IFR GPS

Page 36: Instrument Navigation

Global Positioning System(GPS)

Two Main types of IFR GPS enroute approved approach approved database must be updated frequently database contains info about airports,

intersections, VOR, NDB, etc

Lack of Standardization among manufacturers

Page 37: Instrument Navigation

GPS ApproachesGenerally has a LCD or LED CDI

“fly to the bars”

when navigating 30 miles away 1 dot is 1 nm, 5 nm full scale deflection

when closer ramps to 1 nm full scale deflection

as you fly the approach ramps down to 0.3 nm full scale deflection