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2007-01-21 06:55:10 · 4 answers · asked by Michael 1 in Cars & Transportation Aircraft

4 answers

pick a heading on the "wind side", look directly opposite that heading on the other side of the wheel you will see the reciprocal ; for example, choose 360 degrees, the number directly opposite, 180, is the reciprocal heading. hope this helps

2007-01-21 12:21:51 · answer #1 · answered by al b 5 · 0 0

The easiest way is "plus two minus two"

If the heading (to the tens, like runway number) starts with 0 or 1 , add 2 to the first number and subtract two to the second number, for example, a 040 heading would be 04, so +2 -2 to get 22. If that doesn't work, then do "minus two plus two" so if it's for example, 310 would be 31, so -2 +2 would be 130.

2007-01-21 17:40:08 · answer #2 · answered by John 4 · 0 0

I am not really sure what your asking
I instruct the use of the E6B in ground school and am very proficient on its use ,however, with out more info, I cannot give you specific instructions.
Gleim has instructions on its use on line at:
http://www.gleim.com/aviation/computerinstructions.php
If this is not helpful, email me with more detail.

2007-01-21 16:14:00 · answer #3 · answered by cherokeeflyer 6 · 0 1

no

2007-01-21 14:58:10 · answer #4 · answered by qpac_101 2 · 0 2

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