Go | New | Find | Notify | Tools | Reply |
one of us |
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/new...omputer-hacking.html Yes Sir ,it's obsolete .....until it's needed ! I love my 45-70 | ||
|
One of Us |
There are many skills that modern society considers obsolete. Indeed, someday society may rue the lack of such "obsolete" skills. "For they have sown the wind, and they shall reap the whirlwind..." Hosea 8:7 | |||
|
one of us |
Just like having a compass, if you have a GPS. Always good to have a plan B in case A fails. Always wondered, do the Russians also use the American GPS positioning system ? 4 out of 26 cruise missiles in the wrong country sounds like a major FUBAR. Grizz Indeed, no human being has yet lived under conditions which, considering the prevailing climates of the past, can be regarded as normal. John E Pfeiffer, The Emergence of Man Those who can't skin, can hold a leg. Abraham Lincoln Only one war at a time. Abe Again. | |||
|
one of us |
Dad was one of the first 13-14 Army Air Corp. navigators to learn celestial navigation in 1938-1939- 1940 TWA or Pan Am. They then took that skill back to their units to teach the other navigators. Jim "Whensoever the General Government assumes undelegated powers, its acts are unauthoritative, void, and of no force." --Thomas Jefferson | |||
|
one of us |
Whatever happened to inertial navigation? | |||
|
one of us |
" I never did understand how I got from one postage stamp sized island to another 1,000 miles apart in the middle of the Pacific " Said one old Army pilot ! But they did ! | |||
|
one of us |
That's why pilots have good navigators. | |||
|
one of us |
The US GPS system has built in errors just for this type of things. Its only a major FUBAR if you care. | |||
|
One of Us |
I learned semaphore but never the use of the sextant.As we all know that knowledge was kept from the crews in the English ships of the line for obvious reasons.As to obsolete;those who know me here know that I build sheet metal vintage replications (with period correct tooling) among other things....Obsolete is only applicable when the next generation ceases to want to learn. Never mistake motion for action. | |||
|
One of Us |
Inertial navigation is alive and well- just about every large aircraft built since the 1980s uses it in some form or another. The trend as of late is to incorporate the air data computer into the same box as the laser ring gyros. so in Boeing parlance for example the IRU (inertial reference system) is now an "ADIRU" (air data inertial reference unit"). GPS information is also fed into the ADIRU so that it has more info to cross-check to verify position. Porosonik. Vetting voters= racist. Vetting gun buyers= not racist. Got it? | |||
|
one of us |
I used a sextant for years to shoot landmarks to relocate underwater pipes. Dave | |||
|
One of Us |
Can't speak for the Academy but I know for a fact the ships of the fleet never stopped teaching it. I retired as a Chief Quartermaster and every member of my Nav Team of every ship I ever served on knew how to shoot stars and sunlines and could navigate with them. Matter of fact it was a requirement that the Navy's QMs be able to demonstrate those skill sets. | |||
|
one of us |
GPS has some extrinsic problems as well. There was an effort to to use GPS to land commercial aircraft at Newark for awhile; occasional outages had them puzzled until it came to light that truck thieves were using GPS jammers on I-95 near the airport to keep the trucks from reporting their locations. Besides that, there were people using jammers to keep their wives from finding out where their mistresses lived. Always something... TomP Our country, right or wrong. When right, to be kept right, when wrong to be put right. Carl Schurz (1829 - 1906) | |||
|
One of Us |
The GPS in my truck goes crazy going through El Paso, it says I am a mile or so from where I really am. Mark | |||
|
One of Us |
I was taught to do an artillery "plot" on a plotting board. Which was, essentially, a wood board, a piece of paper, about two feet by two feet and a steel protractor (sort of looking) device. And you then worked out all the back angles to give the readings to be set on the guns. FACE (Field Artillery Computer Equipment) was just, this is 1970s, coming into use. My friend's son is currently in the Royal Artillery. I was talking to him. He says that nowadays it is all on computer and the "back up" is a second computer. | |||
|
Powered by Social Strata |
Please Wait. Your request is being processed... |
Visit our on-line store for AR Memorabilia