Student "Flies Beam" on Ground to Speed Up Training

Item

An inexpensive method of training for student pilots learning radio orientation as associated with “blind” flying has been made available through development of a compact radio-signal instrument designed for ground instruction. Approved by American and British air force officers, airline pilots, instructors and students, the Orientator aids the student in acquainting himself with the numerous signal blends found in “flying the beam,” thus reducing by about 75 percent the four to eight hours of flight training usually required.

Title (Dublin Core)
Student "Flies Beam" on Ground to Speed Up Training
Subject (Dublin Core)
en
en
en
en
Article Title and/or Image Caption (Dublin Core)
Student "Flies Beam" on Ground to Speed Up Training
Language (Dublin Core)
eng
Temporal Coverage (Dublin Core)
World War II
Date Issued (Dublin Core)
1941-07
Is Part Of (Dublin Core)
Popular Mechanics, v. 76, n. 1, 1941
pages (Bibliographic Ontology)
96
Rights (Dublin Core)
Public Domain (Google digitized)
Source (Dublin Core)
Google books
References (Dublin Core)
United States of America
Great Britain
Archived by (Dublin Core)
Enrico Saonara
Alberto Bordignon (Supervisor)
Spatial Coverage (Dublin Core)
United States of America
United Kingdom