Quote:
Originally Posted by Roblex
A simpler solution, especially if you got into that dogfight way out at sea and cant use visual nav to find the target, is to just fly roughly towards where you think the 150/330 line is (in our case maybe 60 or 240) then when your ADF says 330 turn to 150 and you will be back on your original track.
It also occurs to me that if two or more bombers were aiming for a target in range of two beacons then you can plot the bearings from both beacons to the IP point for the bomb run. The lead bomber tunes to one beacon and flies using it as you have described but the second bomber tunes to the second beacon, follows the lead bomber and when his RDF shows the predefined bearing has been reached you know you are at the IP even if it is obscured by cloud and you can turn on to the targets bearing and drop to the bombadiers position.
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Exactly!
See, it's simple once people start thinking about is as simple lines drawn on the map
In fact, tuning two beacons at the same time and plotting their bearing intersection on the map can give you your exact position.