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Dead Reckoning Procedures in Air Navigation

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  18 January 2010

R. H. Fry
Affiliation:
(Royal Air Force Flying College, Manby
P. J. Wells
Affiliation:
(Royal Air Force Flying College, Manby

Extract

In the early days of air navigation, dead reckoning procedures were inevitably closely allied to those practised at sea, but the rapid development of aviation has considerably reduced these early similarities. To talk generally of D.R. practices is therefore no longer feasible. It is the purpose of this article to outline some of the air procedures and instruments in use, and to give an indication of the reason that lay behind their adoption.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Royal Institute of Navigation 1954

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References

REFERENCES

1Parker, J. B. (1953). Determining the most probable position. This Journal, 6, 44.Google Scholar
2Anderson, E. W. (1952). The treatment of navigational errors. This Journal, 5, 103.Google Scholar