I do not know my longitudes from my latitudes. Most drone pilots bought their stuff off amazon and can't even spell what my auto correct can. It will be like being back in the Air Force to get this. OMG, I can hardly wait to study .......again!
N42724, I know you know this. But to explain it for Bob, in North America, latitude is North of the equator and longitude is West of the 0* longitude. Look for Lat/long numbers (degrees) on the sectional along the main lines, big squares. Two squares is one degree. Each big square you see is 30' (minutes) by 30'. Count the small ticks (minutes) on the squares, for longitude, going west is higher degrees, for latitude, going north is higher degrees. Each tick is further divided into "seconds." The seconds are not depicted so you have to interpolate them. Halfway between the ticks is 30" (seconds).Next question. Do you know how to use lats/longs to pinpoint a location on a sectional chart?
Helpful, but it's also like trying to learn a foreign language from a dictionary.Must have for people learning or using FAA sectionals
https://www.faa.gov/air_traffic/fli...aero_guide/media/Chart_Users_Guide_12thEd.pdf
Another way to remember latitude from longitude is to associate a latter with latitude. Horizontal rungs of a latter are like the latitude lines of the globe. Latter = LatitudeEasy way to remember Lat/long. Think of a globe of the earth, sitting on a table. If you remember lateral as side to side, like a pass in football, than Lat = lateral = latitude, or side to side. The equator is a latitude line.
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