tacodaemon
Muse
- Joined
- Jun 22, 2006
- Messages
- 571
I've put you in the driving seat, now what heading is it for New York?
Carry on without turning and we'll soon be in Canada. Anything from 340 to 10
degrees will still put us in Canada.
You are now in the pilot's seat. What will be your heading for New York.
All I know is that 180 or so will see over Texas eventually, so that's no good.
The best I can offer is somewhere more than 90 and less than say, 170.
Don't forget, because of the simplistic 'follow the smoke' that went on before, we are now flight 11 and we have no GPS.
I don't know how long we've been since take off, or what the speed of the plane has been, I'll guess if you like. Meanwhile, kindly give me a heading, once you have managed to turn the plane around.
I stand corrected -- he really doesn't think the navigation would be possible. Despite all the information he's been given about the technology available in a commercial airliner, he apparently thinks they get by with a map, compass and dead reckoning.
Say, mal, you didn't happen to learn this from a 1980s TV documentary everyone's forgotten, did you?