Title: Aeronautical Navigation
1Aeronautical Navigation
Written for the Notre Dame Pilot Initiative By
the Pilots of the University of Notre Dame
2Quote
- For the execution of the voyage to the Indies, I
did not make use of intelligence, mathematics or
maps. - Christopher Columbus
3Navigation
4Roadmap
- Terrestrial coordinates
- Chart projections
- Concepts of position
- Piloting dead reckoning
- Radio navigation systems
- Other electronic navigation systems
- Celestial navigation
5Terrestrial Coordinate System
- Great Circles The largest circle that can be
drawn on the surface of the earth all like it. - Equator
- Meridians
Equator
Meridian
Great Circle
6Terrestrial Coordinate System
- Small Circles-all other circles
- Parallels
7Longitude/Latitude
- Parallels of latitude are small circles (with the
exception of the equator) - Meridians of longitude are great circles
8Desirable qualities of a chart projection
- Maintain true shape of physical features.
- Maintain correct proportions of features relative
to one another. - True scale, permitting accurate measurement of
distance. - Rhumb lines plot as straight lines.
- Great circles plot as straight lines.
No chart has all of these!
9Mercator vs. Gnomonic
Mercator Projection
Gnomonic Projection
10Lambert Conformal Projection (Sectional Chart)
11Sectional Charts
12Airways Follow Great Circles
- V-12 from HAR to JST departs HAR westbound on a
heading of 281, and departs JST eastbound on a
heading of 096.
13Navigational concepts
- A circle has 360 degrees
- A degree has 60 minutes
- 1 of latitude is the same distance anywhere on
the earth. - How many miles is one minute of latitude?
- Ans. 1 min lat. 1 nm 2000 yds.
14Where are we?
- At the ROTC Building -point
- On Juniper Road -LOP
- ½ mile from Golden Dome -LOP(circle)
- Near Meijer
- Ambiguous(which one?)
- Imprecise(how far?)
- We will be there in 5 minutes
- Answer to when will we arrive there?
15Line of Position (LOP)
- A line that defines our position in 1-D
- Not necessarily straight
- Arc, circle, hyperbola, intersection of spheres
- Need a second line to define a fix in 2-D
- Need a third to be sure
16Navigational Elements
- Measurement
- Point
- Bearing
- Range
- 2 bearings
- 2 ranges
- Bearing range
- Results
- Fix
- LOP
- LOP (arc)
- Fix
- Fix
- Fix
Aviation Example Over SBN GIJ 178R GIJ 4.2
DME GSH 313/GIJ 178 GSH 16.3/GIJ 4.2 GIJ
178/4.2
17How do we get there?
- Plot a course
- Whats a course?
- path of intended motion
- Steer a heading
- Whats a heading?
- the direction the aircraft is pointed
- Make a good track
- Whats a track?
- the aircrafts path over the ground
18Course, Heading, Track
Big Bad Wind
19Types of Navigation Systems
- Pilotage
- Dead Reckoning
- Radio Navigation
- ADF
- VOR/DME/RNAV
- Electronic Navigation
- Loran
- GPS
- Inertial
- Celestial
20Basic VFR Navigation Techniques
- Pilotage
- Sectional chart
- Dead reckoning
- (DEDuced reckoning)
- Compass watch
21Nomenclature
- True magnetic courses are given in 3 digits,
e.g. 090 - Relative bearings are given in degrees or clock
position, e.g. 10º left of the nose, or 11
oclock
22Dead Reckoning
DEN
1300 DR
1200 DR
1100 DR
070
1000 DR
PHX
0900 DR
0800 Fix
23Types of Navigation Systems
- Pilotage
- Dead Reckoning
- Radio Navigation
- ADF
- VOR/DME/RNAV
- Electronic Navigation
- Loran
- GPS
- Inertial
- Celestial
24The Radio Compass
25ADF/NDB
- The ADF, or Automatic Direction Finder, is the
receiver in the aircraft
- The NDB, or Nondirectional Radio Beacon, is the
transmitting antenna on the ground
- The ADF is the receiver of the NDBs transmissions
26NDB
- The NDB is a ground-based radio transmitter that
emits a signal in every direction - Benefits
- Economic
- Easy to maintain
- Not line of sight
- Errors
- Susceptible to interference (T-Storms)
- Bounces around coastlines
27NDB
- Operates on 190-535kHz
- Range is 190-1750kHz
- Types
- HH 2000 watts 75nm range
- H 50-1999 watts 50nm range
- MH less than 50 watts 25nm range
- Compass Locator less than 25 watts 15 nm range
28ADF
- The ADF determines the bearing from the aircraft
TO the station - Needle ALWAYS points to the station
- Indicates relative bearing
- Bearing, measured clockwise, from the nose of the
aircraft TO the station - Card only indicates angle has nothing to do
with direction aircraft is pointed
29ADF
- Using relative bearing and magnetic heading,
magnetic bearing can be found - Actual heading to fly to the station
- MB MH RB
30Homing the NDB
- Homing
- Flying the aircraft on any heading required to
keep the needle pointed straight ahead (0 RB) - Works great without wind
- Takes longer and not direct with wind
31Tracking the NDB
- Tracking flying on a heading that maintains a
constant, desired track to/from a station - Find heading/course that takes you to the station
- Once off by 10, double the deflection and turn
towards station (head of the needle) - Once deflection equals correction, you are back
on course - Turn 10 towards needle
- Repeat as necessary and become more precise with
correction
32Intercepting the NDB
- Parallel course
- Note deflection
- Double it
- Turn towards needle
- Once deflection equals correction, you are on
course - Correct for wind (tracking)
- NOTE very similar to tracking
33Types of ADFs
- Fixed Card
- Always shows 0 at the top
- Moveable Card
- Can show magnetic heading at top
- Bad idea
- RMI Radio Magnetic Indicator
- Slaved to move with aircraft
- GREAT to have!
34Types of ADFs
Fixed Card
Moveable Card
RMI