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Working out heading and ground speed
boeing777mark
Topic Author
boeing777mark created the topic: Working out heading and ground speed
Hi guys I have stumbled on question 51 page 6.7 in the VFR study guide trying to determine the heading and grounspeed to be flown!! I have just completed most of the questions on page 3.3.8 exercise 9 to find its pretty straight forward using the CR-3 calculator but for some reason can't work out how to crack question 51
boeing777mark replied the topic: Re: Working out heading and ground speed
Hi bob the question I am stuck on is on page 6.7 question 51, I was referring to exercise 9 as they are the same question and seem to have gotten exercise 9 correct but have stumbled on question 51.
So my question is can you explain how to work out question 51
Richard replied the topic: Re: Working out heading and ground speed
Since you were getting other problems correct, maybe there is just one of those hard to spot silly mistakes in your working of this problem somewhere.
Things to check: the Wind information given is from an ARFOR so it is in degrees true and the required track is also given in degrees true. The answer however is asking for your heading in degrees magnetic. Make sure you work with wind and track in true and convert the answer (the heading) into magnetic by applying the 10 degrees of variation correctly.
When I do this problem I get the answer (a). What answer are you getting with your working? If you haven't spotted the problem yet, we can step through the process for you...
boeing777mark replied the topic: Re: Working out heading and ground speed
Hi Richard thanks so much for your reply, if its ok can you do an example using the CR-3 for me using that same example as Q51 as I keep getting the incorrect answer!!
Richard replied the topic: Re: Working out heading and ground speed
Hi Mark,
I got 123 kts as in the book.
You have the following information:
W/V = 150/45 (in degrees True)
TR(T) = 080 Deg ,
Variation = 10 Deg E,
TAS = 145kts.
1) Set up the TAS:
Align 145 with the TAS indicator arrow. This sets you up for your TAS of 145 kt.
2) Set up the True Course
Align the inner disc so the true track of 080 is lined up with the "TC" marker.
3) Find the Headwind and Crosswind Components
Find 150 on the angular scale, follow the radial line inwards until it intersects the 45 kt arc (which you read from the vertical scale). Read off a headwind component of about 15kt and a crosswind component of about 42kt.
5) Find the drfit correction for the Crosswind
Go to the outside scale and find 42kt and read off the required correction angle of about 17 degrees.
Here comes the step you are forgetting:
6) Find Effective TAS
Because we have such a large correction angle (17 degrees) we need to adjust the TAS and use what's called the "Effective TAS". Next to the TAS indicator on the outer scale, you'll see some degrees marked in white on black. This shows how much adjustment to the TAS you need to make to compensate for the extreme heading correction.
17 degrees correction at a TAS of 145kt means your effective TAS is actually only 138kt.
7) Find GS
Subtract the headwind component of 15kt from your effective TAS: 138-15 = 123kt.
8) Find HDG
You apply the 17 degrees correction for the right crosswind to get a true HDG of 080+17 = 097.
Convert that to magnetic using the variation: 097-10E = 087 degrees Magnetic.
Answer: HDG: 087 degrees magnetic with a GS of 123 kt
You had simply forgotten to do the TAS adjustment for large drift corrections and apply your headwind to the effective TAS.