Lowrance electronic AirMap 600c User Manual

Page 37

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Following a course by "chasing the needle." Fig. 1, plane has veered off

course to the right by nearly 3 nautical miles, away from the needle.

Fig. 2, pilot turns on heading of 348º, steering left toward CDI needle to

intersect intended course. Fig. 3, pilot has intercepted his route and is

virtually on course.

The most important graphic element, however, is the CDI needle. The

CDI and the cross track error scale instantly show you the distance to

the course line, as well as the direction to steer to get back on course.
In the example above, fig. 1 shows the pilot off course to the right, so
the CDI needle appears to the left of the plane symbol. Fig. 3 shows the

pilot back on course, so the CDI needle appears to line up with the

course arrow. If you steer toward the CDI needle line, you'll always be

heading in the correct direction to get back on course.

NOTE:

The examples above all show navigation to a waypoint, the most
common method of GPS navigation. To show navigation from a way-

point, see the instructions on the OBS Hold feature later in this sec-

tion.

Navigating with OBS Hold
AirMap contains an OBS Hold feature to help you navigate along a pilot-
selected radial to or from a location. You must first turn on navigation to a

location before you can access OBS Hold. While running a route or navi-

gating to a waypoint, you launch OBS Hold from the Navigation Page;

just press the right or left arrow to initiate it.

Fig. 1

Fig. 2

Fig. 3

CDI needle

Course arrow

TO arrow

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