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11/29/2017 4:16 PM
 

Not necessarily a function of iFly but maybe.  Back when i first got my private ticket, I was flying my wife to another airport to have lunch with family.  I was requesting flight-following even though I didn't have a good idea of the mileage to the nearest C airport, so when i radioed in my request, I pulled a mileage number out of (somewhere) and gave that as my distance.  I knew where I was due to familiarity with the terrain and visuals, but I did not know how far away in miles I was from the airport.  Well, of course, the controller corrected my mileage number, and it was embarassing.  To use the iFly circle now (with attendant zoom,) involves some guesswork and some appreciable time with head down in the plane.  Oh, and the above scenario was long before iFly was even thought of.  :)

So how do you guys do it?  I'm more accustomed now to following where I am on the sectional even if I know the area but still it's a bit of guesswork for me.

Thanks.

 
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11/29/2017 6:58 PM
 

I make sure I know where I am before calling ATC.  Usually, it's 10 nm west of Podunk airport, etc.

 
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11/29/2017 9:02 PM
 

> So how do you guys do it? <

If I know I'm going to call ATC, I'll make a point of finding *something* I can give a distance and direction from/to, then I give an approximation.  Even if it isn't someting ATC might use.  "... three miles South of Bass Lake..."  No matter how precise your report, ATC can always find a way to make you sound wrong.  They can wait until you're several miles beyond where you were when you first called, give you a precise distance and radial off of a VOR, etc.  They have to have fun once in a while too!

 
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11/30/2017 5:40 PM
 

I'm pretty sure the OP is asking for what technique iFly users prefer to find distances/bearings in order to make a good position report to ATC, not how to verbalize a position report.

I generally use the distance ring like you described in your intial post, but if you're looking for other options I can think of two:

1)  Tap and hold on an airport or navaid (or any arbitrary point on the map).  When the circle of dots turns green (about a half second), let go.  The top of the box that pops up will give you the distance to that point on the map, rounded to the nearest nm.

2)  Touch the screen with two fingers, one on your ownship and one on the point you want to measure from.  (Separate the taps by a few milliseconds, touching your ownship first and then your target point.)  Hold for a second or so, then let go.  A line will appear, anchored where your first finger touched and stretching to where your second finger touched, with a box in the middle showing distance and bearing to target.  You can use one finger to grab either endpoint and move it around, and the line will persist through pan/zoom until you single-tap somewhere on the map background to dismiss it.

Actually, I'm not sure we're using the same distance circle, because you say, "To use the iFly distance circle requires some guesswork."  If you're talking about the black compass circle that's always present around your ownship and changes in distance when you change zoom levels, then yes, that might require some guesswork if there's not a zoom level that plops that circle right on top of the point you want to reference yourself to.

But the feature I typically use is to touch the screen and drag.  This will create a light-blue "dynamic distance ring" that goes through a crosshair at the center of the screen.  You can then pan the map so that your target point either falls under the crosshairs or any other part of the blue arc, and you'll see a distance box attached to the arc so you know the exact distance to your target.  No guesswork required.

 
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12/1/2017 11:19 PM
 

Thanks, guys.

 

 
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