knots to mph

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Dan McGuire

Dead Reckoning

Over the years I owned a couple of airplanes, a Cessna 172 and a Cessna 140 and as the president of a military aero club, I got to fly a variety of other aircraft. In many ways the Cessna 140 was my favorite aircraft. Its only piece of navigation equipment was a magnetic compass, not even a clock. And also no radio. I was never surprised by the difficulty of dead reckoning navigation, only the accuracy. As long as I watched my drift and checkpoints and had the mental discipline to hold a heading for an extended period, it was usually very accurate. I found that following a VOR was pretty dull. I am not saying that any sailor should forget that the conversio to nm to sm is 1.15...etc, but that generally it makes little difference. A quick mental conversion is more than adequate.
 
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joe

Why convert?

All the charts I use are calibrated in nautical miles, at least in my side of the country. I don't drive to catalina, I sail a boat at sea level, I'm not concerned with how many statute miles or kilometers I sail so I don't fret converting. If a visiting landlubber wants to know the boat's speed in mph or how many miles it is to the marina I tell him that 6 nm equals about 7 land miles.
 
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