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Getting From Here to There

Gemini Sparkle

Key Takeaways:

  • The article details traditional VFR navigation methods like dead reckoning (calculating position) and pilotage (using visual checkpoints).
  • Pilotage was historically aided by "air markings"—towns and airport names painted on roofs, a program initiated by Phoebe F. Omlie and continued by the Ninety-Nines.
  • While traditional methods are now less frequently used due to electronic aids like GPS, they remain important for knowledge exams and flight tests.
  • Jeppesen has introduced new VFR+GPS charts, specifically designed for modern pilots who use GPS as their primary navigation tool, featuring enhanced visual and cultural data.
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One way that some instructors whet the appetite of prospective flight students is to take them on a short cross-country flight for a “hamburger” during the introductory flight. It usually works pretty well. The budding aviator returns from the flight brimming with excitement and anxious to share the experience with ground-bound friends and family.

After that introductory flight, the hooked student is typically restricted to the airport traffic pattern and a local practice area designated for airwork. The frustration of not being able to make consistently smooth landings blurs the fond memory of actually going somewhere.

FLYING Staff

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