In my opinion, this guy’s videos are the best for training. Very concise, no fluff or opinion, & his choice of training aids & the way they are laid out make the mini-lesson very easy to follow. I wish I would’ve found this when I started 🤦🏻♂️
Dude, your stuff is simply the best training I've ever seen. Your video on holding pattern entry erased a ton of confusion, and this video is an incredibly practical and easy tutorial on VOR. I'm thinking about starting my instrument training and if I do I'll be getting your course. As a former high school physics teacher I'll give you the highest compliment I know: you've got the gene.
Good video. I've been lost twice. The first time while in the Air force and in the practice area, the haze drifted in and I couldn't see the base. So I started heading back in the direction where I thought the base would be and after a period of time, I figured it was time to call the base control tower for some help. They found me 90 miles off course and with radar brought me back home. That's when I decided it was time to learn how to navigate using my one VOR in my Cessna 150 rented out of the base aero club I was in. The second time I got lost was in California while doing a cross country for my 100-mile pilot requirements. Although I know I could follow the freeway to get back home, I thought I would try out my skills to find my position using the one VOR in the Cessna 152 that I was flying at the time. By homing in on two VOR stations and using triangulation to find my position on my Sectional chart, I found the nearest airfield and headed to it. I landed at the field and asked to see if I had the right airfield, and I did. Now I knew where I was and recalculated a new course and continued on my cross country. Practice, Practice, Practice never hurts.
I don’t know why I just discover your channel ,the most simplest and easiest way of explaining for all type of understanding I get it in just under 1 min
That was, one of the best explanations of working your VOR. For some reason it clicked to me this time. It's about the 10 video I've watched regarding this. I suppose I was picking up some level of knowlege from the other UA-cam lessons, but yours made it all come together. Thanks!
Back in 1984 when had barely had my private pilot check ride, a friend put it in the simplest terms: In order to fly to a VOR, tune it in, rotate the OBS so that the CDI is centered with the TO/FROM flag in "TO", and then fly the heading displayed on top of the OBS. As soon as put my hands on an airplane with a VOR, I played with this in flight and found that it just... works.
Wow, these are great videos! Could you consider doing a video on the differences between ATD, FTD, and FFS simulators as well as when/how to log time? I know many pilots (myself included) find this confusing!
I know this is nitpicky, but the best way to find the exact radial that an airport that does not have a VOR/TACAN on the field is usually the A/FD. In fact, TAOS is not the closest VOR but rather SAF (Santa Fe VOR) is. In the AFD it not only gives you the radial and frequency but also the distance. That way, if you're flying around using radio navaids you can quickly find the proper radial without whipping out your ruler or guesstimating the radial by eyeballing the chart. (Ofc you can also just use Garmin Pilot or ForeFlight's on-screen ruler but that's cheating!) The other advantage to using the A/FD versus just eyeballing, especially in mountainous terrain, is that the A/FD will also identify unusable radials. It's very possible that at certain altitudes and on certain radials the terrain will block the VOR signal. This becomes more apparent the farther away a VOR is due to both the height of the terrain and the curvature of the earth, especially with small aircraft flying at low altitudes. The video is terrific, though, and I've subbed to give students some good videos to use when teaching them these concepts. It's funny that they chose to use KTGI as an example at the last part of the video, though. Maybe they train a lot in that area. In IFR we're generally taught to plan to avoid restricted areas wherever possible, even when they are under ATC control. Yes, ATC will route you around an active restricted area, though you're unlikely to receive an amended clearance instead, and yes you can still use the chart to determine activity times, but it's pretty clear from the chart that Victor-1 is charted to fly between the restricted areas, likely for a reason. R4006 is restricted from 3500 feet to FL250. I'm not sure why the folks producing the video chose to use a VOR chart vs the low-level IFR chart. /shrug (More nitpicking, but KTGI actually lies on the 156 radial and not the 152 radial. I found this both on Airnav and by setting up a flight plan using Garmin Pilot. At roughly 30NM between the VOR and the airport, a 4 degree deflection would be roughly two miles off course to the NE of the airport. Again, more thought experiment stuff but learning to use the right charts and procedures when setting up IFR flights is extremely critical.)
I like to fly in Flight Gear and since it's very limited in terrain textures, I find a lot of fun in navigating through VORs. I actually find it easier than using NDB
Funny, I never found VORs hard to figure out. The technical specifics of how they work (radial based on phase angle of two overlapping waves, or something like that) I'm not all that clear on, but the use of them always seemed very straightforward and easy to figure out. Even as GPS became more prevalent in aviation I preferred to stick with VORs for the longer trips (and pilotage for the shorter ones).
It was you and more interest back in the day when you used to have to track In and outbound of an NDB. There it was infinite number of bearings. The way you figured out how to how you got to the station with a fixed compass card was to take the indicated bearing and add your current heading. If the amount was greater than 360 you would then subtract 360 and that would be the magnetic bearing to the station. Learning to track an NDV outbound had its thrills to. You can still do this on the G 1000 if you set your bearing #1 or bearing #2 to a VOR while tracking the magenta line for the GPS. The VOR needle will act just like an ADF. Station passage will be noted when the needle spins 180°.
So if you are flying to the station with a from indication, you will have reverse sensing, but if you are flying from it with a from indication, you will have normal sensing. Is that correct? This is the only area I have trouble with when it comes to VORs.
Why do you have to knock VORs as headaches? Lol. I know they are becoming outdated, but love them! Been flying with them since day one. Then again, I didn't have consistent access to a plane with GPS until this week, so I'm sure I'll be transformed soon!
You don’t have reverse sensing with a HSI. Reverse sensing is a poor description. It is more like situational awareness. I will give you a good example of this. You’re driving along in your car on the road heading southbound. You’re holding a map normally north up or you have your GPS set north up. At the next intersection you need to make a turn toward a location you see on the map located to your right. If you look at the map and make a right turn you’ll be going in the wrong direction. The proper way is either flip the map around to the direction you’re traveling or you make a left turn. The map appears in your mind to make a right turn which is actually the wrong way. If you notice on a GPS giving you directions it will say make a left and if you look at the upper left-hand corner the arrow will show a left turn but the magenta line appears to go to the right. (Only if set to NORTH UP). This is all part of situational awareness. This is why the HSI was invented. It also helps because it is slaved to the compass so you don’t have to keep setting directional Gyro every 10 minutes. Hope this helps. Remember, heading to a radial or intersection, with a FROM indication, if the needle and the station are on the same side, you’re not there yet. If they are opposite, you past it. The same is true for a localizer which shows a feather portion of the arrow on both sides of the runway, but the feathering is on the same side. This used to be called the right side and the left side. It was so much easier to figure out when the VOR instrument in the cockpit had a blue arc 150Hz and a yellow arc 90 Hz at the bottom of the instrument. You were than able to realize whether you were in the blue zone or the yellow zone.
Im not sure I understand your point about wind as a problem? If you fly the needle who cares what the wind is doing since you are already correcting for wind maintaining your heading.
This is literally the best explanation of reverse sensing I’ve ever heard. You’re awesome, making VORs easy!
In my opinion, this guy’s videos are the best for training. Very concise, no fluff or opinion, & his choice of training aids & the way they are laid out make the mini-lesson very easy to follow. I wish I would’ve found this when I started 🤦🏻♂️
Dude, your stuff is simply the best training I've ever seen. Your video on holding pattern entry erased a ton of confusion, and this video is an incredibly practical and easy tutorial on VOR. I'm thinking about starting my instrument training and if I do I'll be getting your course. As a former high school physics teacher I'll give you the highest compliment I know: you've got the gene.
Thanks, high praise from a teacher!
Dude
Good video. I've been lost twice. The first time while in the Air force and in the practice area, the haze drifted in and I couldn't see the base. So I started heading back in the direction where I thought the base would be and after a period of time, I figured it was time to call the base control tower for some help. They found me 90 miles off course and with radar brought me back home. That's when I decided it was time to learn how to navigate using my one VOR in my Cessna 150 rented out of the base aero club I was in.
The second time I got lost was in California while doing a cross country for my 100-mile pilot requirements. Although I know I could follow the freeway to get back home, I thought I would try out my skills to find my position using the one VOR in the Cessna 152 that I was flying at the time.
By homing in on two VOR stations and using triangulation to find my position on my Sectional chart, I found the nearest airfield and headed to it. I landed at the field and asked to see if I had the right airfield, and I did. Now I knew where I was and recalculated a new course and continued on my cross country. Practice, Practice, Practice never hurts.
I don’t know why I just discover your channel ,the most simplest and easiest way of explaining for all type of understanding I get it in just under 1 min
This has to be one of the best VOR videos I've seen. I've watched many and this one made sense right off the bat.
That was, one of the best explanations of working your VOR. For some reason it clicked to me this time. It's about the 10 video I've watched regarding this. I suppose I was picking up some level of knowlege from the other UA-cam lessons, but yours made it all come together. Thanks!
Your IFR training videos are the best I've found anywhere. Thank you!
Back in 1984 when had barely had my private pilot check ride, a friend put it in the simplest terms: In order to fly to a VOR, tune it in, rotate the OBS so that the CDI is centered with the TO/FROM flag in "TO", and then fly the heading displayed on top of the OBS. As soon as put my hands on an airplane with a VOR, I played with this in flight and found that it just... works.
Excellent lessons.
I must say, your lessons are really well made. They are absolutely brilliant.
This man is a legend
Excellent material from this channel. Curious to know what flight sim software you're using in the videos. Please let me know. Thx.
Wow, these are great videos! Could you consider doing a video on the differences between ATD, FTD, and FFS simulators as well as when/how to log time? I know many pilots (myself included) find this confusing!
Yours are the best videos. Thank you!
This was so helpful! Thank you!
I know this is nitpicky, but the best way to find the exact radial that an airport that does not have a VOR/TACAN on the field is usually the A/FD. In fact, TAOS is not the closest VOR but rather SAF (Santa Fe VOR) is. In the AFD it not only gives you the radial and frequency but also the distance. That way, if you're flying around using radio navaids you can quickly find the proper radial without whipping out your ruler or guesstimating the radial by eyeballing the chart. (Ofc you can also just use Garmin Pilot or ForeFlight's on-screen ruler but that's cheating!)
The other advantage to using the A/FD versus just eyeballing, especially in mountainous terrain, is that the A/FD will also identify unusable radials. It's very possible that at certain altitudes and on certain radials the terrain will block the VOR signal. This becomes more apparent the farther away a VOR is due to both the height of the terrain and the curvature of the earth, especially with small aircraft flying at low altitudes.
The video is terrific, though, and I've subbed to give students some good videos to use when teaching them these concepts.
It's funny that they chose to use KTGI as an example at the last part of the video, though. Maybe they train a lot in that area. In IFR we're generally taught to plan to avoid restricted areas wherever possible, even when they are under ATC control. Yes, ATC will route you around an active restricted area, though you're unlikely to receive an amended clearance instead, and yes you can still use the chart to determine activity times, but it's pretty clear from the chart that Victor-1 is charted to fly between the restricted areas, likely for a reason. R4006 is restricted from 3500 feet to FL250. I'm not sure why the folks producing the video chose to use a VOR chart vs the low-level IFR chart. /shrug
(More nitpicking, but KTGI actually lies on the 156 radial and not the 152 radial. I found this both on Airnav and by setting up a flight plan using Garmin Pilot. At roughly 30NM between the VOR and the airport, a 4 degree deflection would be roughly two miles off course to the NE of the airport. Again, more thought experiment stuff but learning to use the right charts and procedures when setting up IFR flights is extremely critical.)
This is the best I"ve seen
great video, you’re a great teacher. this shit is hard to grasp and you’ve made it click
what sim software are your using? It really helps with your great descriptions
Excellent presentation. Thanks
I like to fly in Flight Gear and since it's very limited in terrain textures, I find a lot of fun in navigating through VORs. I actually find it easier than using NDB
Could you plz upload video about point to point nav by tcn?
Funny, I never found VORs hard to figure out. The technical specifics of how they work (radial based on phase angle of two overlapping waves, or something like that) I'm not all that clear on, but the use of them always seemed very straightforward and easy to figure out. Even as GPS became more prevalent in aviation I preferred to stick with VORs for the longer trips (and pilotage for the shorter ones).
It was you and more interest back in the day when you used to have to track In and outbound of an NDB. There it was infinite number of bearings. The way you figured out how to how you got to the station with a fixed compass card was to take the indicated bearing and add your current heading. If the amount was greater than 360 you would then subtract 360 and that would be the magnetic bearing to the station. Learning to track an NDV outbound had its thrills to. You can still do this on the G 1000 if you set your bearing #1 or bearing #2 to a VOR while tracking the magenta line for the GPS. The VOR needle will act just like an ADF. Station passage will be noted when the needle spins 180°.
So if you are flying to the station with a from indication, you will have reverse sensing, but if you are flying from it with a from indication, you will have normal sensing. Is that correct? This is the only area I have trouble with when it comes to VORs.
What course to fly for intercept?
Just project the CDI needle along the To/From flag arrow direction onto the compass rose.
These videos are fantastic
Why do you have to knock VORs as headaches? Lol. I know they are becoming outdated, but love them! Been flying with them since day one. Then again, I didn't have consistent access to a plane with GPS until this week, so I'm sure I'll be transformed soon!
how did you get a 172 with that garmin setup on msfs?
this is confusing as when you deduct the reciprocal ie 180° You dont get the correct bearing witch ISNT 135° ????
thanks again
You don’t have reverse sensing with a HSI. Reverse sensing is a poor description. It is more like situational awareness. I will give you a good example of this. You’re driving along in your car on the road heading southbound. You’re holding a map normally north up or you have your GPS set north up. At the next intersection you need to make a turn toward a location you see on the map located to your right. If you look at the map and make a right turn you’ll be going in the wrong direction. The proper way is either flip the map around to the direction you’re traveling or you make a left turn. The map appears in your mind to make a right turn which is actually the wrong way. If you notice on a GPS giving you directions it will say make a left and if you look at the upper left-hand corner the arrow will show a left turn but the magenta line appears to go to the right. (Only if set to NORTH UP). This is all part of situational awareness. This is why the HSI was invented. It also helps because it is slaved to the compass so you don’t have to keep setting directional Gyro every 10 minutes. Hope this helps. Remember, heading to a radial or intersection, with a FROM indication, if the needle and the station are on the same side, you’re not there yet. If they are opposite, you past it. The same is true for a localizer which shows a feather portion of the arrow on both sides of the runway, but the feathering is on the same side. This used to be called the right side and the left side. It was so much easier to figure out when the VOR instrument in the cockpit had a blue arc 150Hz and a yellow arc 90 Hz at the bottom of the instrument. You were than able to realize whether you were in the blue zone or the yellow zone.
I like your explanation on this one :)
What computer simulator is this? It’s very cool
Wondering the same thing..
Im not sure I understand your point about wind as a problem? If you fly the needle who cares what the wind is doing since you are already correcting for wind maintaining your heading.
You, my friend need a patreon
Great video but flying at 1500 feet over the Long Island sound makes me scared lmao
Ur just making it harder
I did not understand a single sentence he was explaining. I was like, do I understand English?
Too hard