Navigation Questions

Download as docx, pdf, or txt
Download as docx, pdf, or txt
You are on page 1of 237

Navigation Question Bank

THE EARTH
1. Which of the following statements is true of a great circle?

a) It is the path radio waves that travel over the Earth


b) The smaller arc of it represents the shortest distance between two points on the Earth
c) Its plane passes through the center of the Earth
d) All of these

2. Which of the following statements is false of a small circle?

a) A radio wave never follows a small circle path


b) The smaller arc of it does not represent the shortest distance between two points on the Earth
c) Its plane does not pass through the center of the Earth
d) All lines of latitude are small circles
3. The latitude of a place is its angular distance:
a) N/S of the Equator to a maximum of 180 N/S
b) E/W of the Equator to a maximum of 90 E/W
c) N/S of the Equator to a maximum of 90 N/S
d) E/W of the Equator to a maximum of 180 E/W
4. The dlat and dlong between A (6433S 12036W) and B (1027N 11324E)
is:

dlat

dlong

a) 7500 12600
b) 5406 0712
c) 7500 0712
d) 5406 12600
5. Which of the following statements is false about a rhumb line?

a) It is a line of constant direction on the Earths surface


b) All lines of latitude Rhumb lines but not great circles
c) All meridians are Rhumb lines and semi great circles
d) If the Rhumb line bearing of A from B is 090(T), the Rhumb line bearing of B from A is
270(T)

6. Which of the following statements about Earth convergency is false?

a) It is the angle that any two meridians converge on the Earth


b) It is the angle that a great circle bearing changes as it passes across two meridians
c) The angle of Earth convergency between meridians at the Equator is dlong
d) The angle between two meridians at the pole is dlong

7.

The formula for Earth conversion angle is:

a) 2 x Earth Convergency
b) dlong x sine Mean Latitude
c) dlong x sine Mean Latitude
d) dlong x cosine Mean Latitude

8. Which of the following statements about departure is false?

a) It is measured in nautical miles


b) It is the distance E/W between two meridians
c) Its formula is dlong x sine lat
d) Its value at the Equator is dlong converted to minutes of arc

9. C is in the same hemisphere as D. The Great Circle bearing of D from C is


044(T) and of C from D is 220(T). The hemisphere of C and D, and the
Rhumb line track from C to D are:

Hemisphere
a) Northern
b) Southern

Rhumb Line C to D
040
042

c) Southern

044

d) Northern

046

10.The Great Circle track from A (2000N 1000W) to B (4000N 17500E)


is 060(T). The Great Circle track from A to B is:

a) 240(T)
b) 245(T)
c) 250(T)
d) 230(T)

11.Calculate the convergency of meridians between 30North 175East and


30North 165West to the nearest whole degree

a) 5
b) 10
c) 17
d) 9

12.A is at 5500N 15100W and B at 5500N 16253W. what is departure?

a) 584 NM
b) 397 NM
c) 567 NM
d) 409 NM

13.Consider the following statement on the shape of the Earth:

a) The diameter of the Earth is the same at all latitudes


b) The longest diameter is between the poles
c) It is slightly flattened at the poles
d) The diameter at the Equator is about 60 NM longer than the diameter between poles

14.Consider the following statement on the longitude:

a) Longitude is stated in degrees upto 360


b) The value of longitude will never exceed 90
c) The largest value of longitude is 180
d) The largest value of change of longitude is 90

Navigation Question Bank

DICS

DIRECTIONS, MAGNETISM AND SPEED

1. Directions are stated:

a) As a reference direction and a number of degrees


b) In degrees with reference to True North when plotted with reference to the
latitude/longitude grid on a chart
3. c) In degrees in a 360 system, starting out clockwise from the reference direction
4. d) All 3 answers are correct

2. The angular difference between Compass North and Magnetic North is:

a) Variation
b) Deviation
c) Inclination
d) Magnetic Correction

3. The angular difference between the geographical meridian and magnetic


meridian running through the same position is:

a) Variation

b) Deviation
c) Inclination
d) Magnetic Correction

4. Given Variation 6E, Deviation 4W, Heading 136True. What is the


compass heading?

a) 130
b) 138
c) 134
d) 126

5. Variation in a position is 13W, and True track is 136. Consider the


following statements:

a) The compass track is 149


b) The magnetic track is 149
c) Looking North from this position, ther Magnetic North pole seems to be located to the east of
the true north pole
d) The position most likely is located at northern latitudes and on eastern latitudes

6. In the areas close to the magnetic poles, magnetic compasses are not to any
use in air navigation, mainly because:

a) The field strength of the Earths magnetic field is at its weakest in this area
b) The distance from the Magnetic Equator is too long
c) The horizontal component of the Earths magnetic field is too weak
d) The inclination is insufficient in these areas

7. The red end of a direct reading compass needle will point:

a) North and upwards in the northern hemisphere


b) North and upwards in the southern hemisphere
c) South and downwards in the southern hemisphere
d) South and upwards in the southern hemisphere

8. Dip is the angle between:

a) The H and Z components measured from the vertical


b) The Z component and the earths magnetic field measured upwards
c) The H and Z components measured from the horizontal
d) The H component and the earths magnetic field measured from the horizontal

9. True Heading is 355(T), Variation is 12W, Compass Heading is 002(C). The


magnetic heading of the aircraft is - and the deviation is

a) 343(M) 7W
b) 343(M) 19E
c) 007(M) 5W
d) 007(M) 5E

10.Compass Heading is 237(C), magnetic heading is 241(M) with the variation


12W:

a) Deviation is 4W and True North is east of Compass North


b) Deviation is 4E and Compass North is west of True North

c) Deviation is 4W and Magnetic North is east of Compass North


d) Deviation is 4E and True North is west of Compass North

Navigation Question Bank


THE TRIANGLE OF VELOCITIES

1. Consider the following statements:

a) The exact length of a 1 of arc is longer at high altitude than at sea level, when the arc is
observed from the centre of the Earth
b) In any position on the surface of the Earth, the length of 1 of arc East/West is equal to the
length of 1 of arc North/South in the same position on a perfect sphere
c) The exact length of a 1 of arc varies a little from position to position because the Earth radius
vary
d) All 3 statements are correct

2. Given True course 300, Drift 8R, Variation 10W, Deviation -4. Calculate
compass heading?

a) 306
b) 322
c) 294
d) 278

3. 1 Nautical Mile equals:

a) 1855 metres
b) 6076 feet

c) 0.869 Statute Mile


d) 3281 Yards

4. Given Drift angle 4R, Magnetic Variation 8W, Magnetic Heading 060. What
is the true track?

a) 072
b) 064
c) 048
d) 056

5. 265 US-GAL equals: (Specific gravity 0.80)

a) 862 kg
b) 895 kg
c) 940 kg
d) 803 kg

6. Kilometre is defined as:

a) The mean length of a 1/40000 part of the Equator


b) A 1/10000 part of the meridian length from Equator to the pole
c) 0.621 Statute Mile
d) 0.454 Nautical Mile

7. Construct the triangle of velocities showing the following data: TH 305, TAS 135 kt W/V
230/40, Period of time from 1130 to 1145. What is the track in this period of time?

a) 310
b) 290
c) 322
d) 316

8. Given TAS 110 kt, True heading 020, Actual wind 330(T)/36 kt. Calculate
the drift angle and GS.

a) 15 Left 97 kt
b) 15 Right 97 kt
c) 17 Right 91 kt
d) 17 Left 91 kt

9. Construct the triangle of velocities showing the following data: TH 305, TAS
135 kt W/V 230/40, Period of time from 1130 to 1145. What is the GS in this
period of time?

a) 130 kt
b) 135 kt
c) 145 kt
d) 97 kt

10.Flying on a true heading of 207, TAS is 158 kt, W/V is 310/25. Calculate true
track.

a) 190
b) 215
c) 207

d) 198

11.Given TAS 290 kt, True heading 070, Actual wind 010(T)/40 kt. Calculate
the drift angle and GS.

a) Drift angle 8 Left, GS 273 kt


b) Drift angle 7 Right, GS 260 kt
c) Drift angle 7 Right, GS 273 kt
d) Drift angle 7 Left, GS 273 kt

Navigation Question Bank

CHARTS

1. If an earth distance of 100NM is represented on a chart by a line 7.9 inches


long, the length of a line in inches representing 50 km is:

a) 2.00
b) 2.13
c) 2.18
d) 2.20

2. A what distance in mm would 2 fixes taken 20 minutes apart appear on a 1:1


000 000 Scale chart if the GS was 180 kt.

a) 108
b) 96
c) 111
d) 103

3. A Mercator has a scale of 1:6 000 000 at the Equator. How many statute
miles are represented by 5 inches at 60S?

a) 948
b) 474
c) 237
d) 711

4. A straight line drawn on a chart measures 5.827 inches and represents 148
km. The chart scale is:
1. a) 1:500 000
2. b) 1:1 000 000
3. c) 1:1 500 000
4. d) 1:2 000 000

5. On a constant scale chart 1.28 inches represents 88 NM. The scale is:

a) 1:2 000 000


b) 1:5 000 000
c) 1:100 000
d) 1:1 500 000

6. On a Mercator chart the distance between 60N 017W and 60N 019W is 8
inches. The chart distance between 00N/S 017W and 00N/S 019W would
be:

a) 4 inches

b) 8 inches
c) 16 inches
d) 9.24 inches

7. The scale of a chart is 1:730 000. How many cm on the chart are equivalent to 37 NM on the
Earth?
a) 3.2
b) 0.3
c) 9.4
d)10.6

8. The scale of a chart is 1:500 000. How many inches on the chart are
equivalent to 127 km on the Earth?

a) 100
b) 10
c) 18.5
d)24.5

9. A straight line on a chart of 9 inches is equivalent to 432 NM on the


Earth. The chart scale is:

a) 1:2 000 000


b) 1:2 500 000
c) 1:5 000 000
d) 1:3 500 000

10.A straight line on a chart of 25.4 cm is equivalent to 137 NM. What is the
scale?

a) 1:1 000 000


b) 1:500 000
c) 1:1 500 000
d) 1:2 000 000

11.The scale of a chart is 1:185 320. A straight line drawn on this chart is 15
cm. What is the equivalent length of this line on the Earth in NM?

a) 25
b) 30
c) 15
d) 45

12.The scale of a chart is 1:729 600. A straight line drawn on this chart is 8.9
cm. What is the equivalent length of this line on the Earth in NM?

a) 29
b) 35
c) 45
d) 60

13. Chart convergency on a Mercator chart is:


a) dlong x Sin Lat

b) dlong x Cos Lat


c) zero
d) dlong x Cos parallel of origin

14.On a Mercator chart, chart convergency equals earth convergency:

a) At the parallel of origin


b) At the Equator
c) At the parallel of tangency
d) All of these

15.On a Mercator chart the scale at 60 south compared with the scale at 30
south is:

a) Greater
b) The same
c) Smaller
d) 1/3 smaller

16.On a Mercator chart a rhumb line is:

a) A curve concave to the Pole


b) A curve concave to the Equator
c) A straight line
d) A curve concave to the central meridian

17.On a Mercator chart a great circle between two points is:

a) A straight line
b) A curve convex to the nearer pole
c) A curve convex to the Equator
d) Always on the equatorial side of the rhumb line between them

18.The scale of a Mercator chart is 1:5 000 000 at its parallel of origin. What is
the scale at 60 North?

a) 1:10 000 000


b) 1:7 500 000
c) 1:5 000 000
d) 1:2 500 000

19.The scale of a Mercator chart is 1:4000 000 at 30 North. What is the scale at
60 North?

a) 1:200 000
b) 1:230 000
c) 1:695 000
d) 1:800 000

20.The scale of a Mercator chart is 1:730 000 at the Equator. What is the chart
length to the nearest inch between meridians 3 degrees apart at 481/2
North?

a) 2
b) 18

c) 180
d) 20

21.On a Mercator chart the rhumb line track from A (20S 20W) to B (40S
40W) is 220(T). What is the great circle bearing of A from B?

a) 035(T)
b) 215(T)
c) 045(T)
d) 225(T)

22.On a Lamberts chart, chart convergency equals earth convergency:

a) At the Equator
b) The Poles
c) At the standard parallels
d) At the parallel of origin

23.On a Lamberts chart, the true appearance of a great circle (other than a
meridian) is:

a) A straight line
b) A curve convex to the nearer pole
c) A curve convex to the parallel of origin
d) A curve concave to the parallel of origin

24.On a Lamberts chart, the published scale is correct:

a) At the Equator
b) The Poles
c) At the standard parallels
d) At the parallel of origin

25. On a Lamberts chart, scale is least:


a) At the Equator
b) The Poles
c) At the standard parallels
d) At the parallel of origin

26.The chart convergency on a Lamberts conical conformal chart is stated as


being equal to the change of longitude x 0.5. A straight line track drawn on
this chart from A (30S 107W) to B (4250S 125W) measures 224(T) at A.
Calculate: The approximate rhumb line track from A to B is:

a) 233 (T)
b) 228 (T)
c) 219 (T)
d) 215(T)

27.The Great Circle bearing of A from B in Q 26 is:

a) 054(T)
b) 045(T)
c) 036(T)

d) 049.5(T)

28.The constant of the cone of a Lamberts conical conformal chart is given as


0.75. A straight line drawn from C (45N 60W) to E in 10W passes through
D in 28W. The direction of the track is 055(T) at C. Calculate: The direction
of the straight line track C to E, measured at D, is:

a) 067(T)
b) 079(T)
c) 055(T)
d) 031(T)

29.The approximate rhumb line track from C to D is:

a) 067(T)
b) 079(T)
c) 055(T)
d) 043(T)

30.The approximate rhumb line track from C to E is:

a) 098(T)
b) 036(T)
c) 093(T)
d) 074(T)

31. The approximate rhumb line track from D to E is:

a) 062(T)
b) 086(T)
c) 074(T)
d) 072(T)

32.A straight line track is drawn on a polar stereographic chart from A (85N
80W) to B (85N 130E). Calculate: The track angle (T) A to B measured at
A is:

a) 345
b) 015
c) 165
d) 195

33.The track angle (T) B to A measured at B is:

a) 345
b) 015
c) 165
d) 195

34.The track angle (T) A to B measured at 180E/W is:

a) 065
b) 085
c) 245
d) 155

35.The longitude at which the track angle A to B measures 270(T) is:

a) 035E
b)155E
c) 035W
d) 155W

36.For gyro steering purposes a polar stereographic chart is overlaid with


a rectangle grid aligned with the Greenwich (prime) meridian. The Track
angle, expressed in degrees grid, when the aircraft is at position 82N 113W
on a track of 205(T) is:

a) 318
b) 113
c) 092
d) 138

37. For gyro steering purposes a polar stereographic chart is overlaid with a rectangle grid
aligned with the Greenwich (prime) meridian. The Track angle, expressed in degrees grid, when
the aircraft is at position 70N 60E on a track of 090(T) is:
a) 150
b) 030
c) 330
d) 210

38.An aircraft at DR position 66N 29W obtains an ADF bearing of 141


(relative) from an NDB at position 64N 22W. The aircraft heading is

352(M), the variation at the NDB is 15W and at the aircraft 12W.
Calculate: The bearing to plot, on a Mercator chart, from the meridian passing
through the NDB:

a) 124
b) 298
c) 304
d) 308

39.The bearing to plot, on a polar stereographic chart, from the meridian passing
through the NDB:

a) 121
b) 294
c) 301
d) 308

40.The bearing to plot, on a Lamberts conformal conic chart having standard


parallels at 37N and 65N, from the meridian passing through the NDB is:

a) 126
b) 306
c) 295
d) 304

41.An aircraft at DR position 63S 47E obtains an RMI reading of 228 from a
VOR at position 67S 39E. The aircraft heading is 025(M), the variation at
the VOR is 15E and at the aircraft 11E. Calculate: The position line to plot,
on a Mercator chart from the meridian passing through the VOR is:

a) 055

b) 056
c) 059
d) 066

42.The position line to plot, on a polar stereographic chart from the meridian
passing through the VOR is:

a) 048
b) 059
c) 063
d) 033

43.The position line to plot, on a Lamberts conformal conic chart having a


parallel of origin at 55S, from the meridian passing through he VOR is:

a) 048
b) 059
c) 063
d) 033

44.A Lamberts conformal conic chart and a transverse Mercator chart covering
the same area of the Earths surface both have nominal scale of 1:3 000 000.
The standard parallels of the Lamberts chart are at 25N and 45N and the
central meridian of the transverse Mercator chart is 40E. Using this
information, answer the following: At position 50N 40E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale

d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

45.At position 25N 50E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

46.At position 30N 30E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

47.At position 45N 40E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

48.On a polar stereographic chart, Earth convergency is correctly represented:

a) At all points on the chart


b) At the Equator

c) At the pole
d) At the meridian of tangency

49.On a polar stereographic chart, a straight line is drawn from 70S 115W
to 70S 125E. Using this information, answer the following: The initial
direction (T) of this straight line track is:

a) 330
b) 060
c) 130
d) 210

50.The final direction (T) of this straight line track is:

a) 210
b) 330
c) 060
d) 130

51.The longitude of the most southerly point on the straight line track is:

a) 175W
b) 180E/W
c) 175E
d) 165W

52.On the chart, the most southerly point on this straight line track will appear
to be:

a) At a lower latitude than 80S


b) At 80S
c) At a higher latitude than 80S
d) At a higher latitude than 85S

53.For gyro steering purposes a polar stereographic chart is overlaid with


a rectangle grid so that 000(G) coincides with 000(T) along the 060E
meridian. The track angle expressed in (G), at position 80N 10W with the
aircraft making good a track of 300(M), local magnetic variation 25E, is:

a) 255
b) 335
c) 345
d) 035

54. With an aircraft on a heading of 125(T) the relative bearing of an NDB is determined as
310. Given that the difference in longitude between the aircraft and the NDB is 6 and that the
mean latitude between the aircraft and NDB is 68S, answer: The bearing to plot, on a Mercator
chart, from the meridian passing through the NDB is:
a) 252
b) 255
c) 258
d) 261

55.The bearing to plot, on a polar stereographic chart, from the meridian passing
through the NDB is:

a) 255
b) 261
c) 252
d) 249

56.The bearing to plot, on a Lamberts conformal conic chart (parallel of origin


48S), from the meridian passing through the NDB is:

a) 249
b) 255
c) 250
d) 259

SOLAR SYSTEM and TIME

1. What is the UTC/GMT of sunset in Hong Kong (2219N 114 12E) on 24 th


July?

a) 0221 25th July


b) 1044 24th July
c) 1107 24th July
d) 0244 25th July

2. Given the ST of the beginning of Evening Civil Twilight at Port Stanley


(Falkland Islands) (5142S 57 51W) on 23rd July?

a) 1613 23rd July


b) 1713 23rd July
c) 1539 23rd July
d) 1629 23rd July

3. The times of sunrise, sunset as given in the Air Almanac are with reference
to:

a) LMT for the observers meridian


b) ST for the observers meridian
c) GMT for the observers meridian
d) UTC for the observers meridian

4. In the Air Almanac twilight tables, the symbol //// means that:

a) Twilight lasts all day


b) The sun remains continuously above the horizon
c) The sun remains continuously below the horizon
d) Twilight lasts all night or day

5. The LMT of sunrise at Lat 0030S Long 4720W on 4 th December is:

a) 0451 LMT
b) 0640 LMT
c) 0256 LMT

d) 0545 LMT

6. The LMT of the beginning of evening civil twilight at Lat 5000S Long
12015E on 25th December is:

a) 1641 LMT 25th December


b) 2055 LMT 25th December
c) 0412 LMT 26th December
d) 2011 LMT 25th December

7. The LMT of sunrise at 3500S 2800E on 4th December is:


a) 0410
b) 0439
c) 0621
d) 0652

8. The GMT of Evening Civil Twilight at 4619N 03534E on 26 th July is:

a) 1751
b) 2238
c) 1754
d) 2016

9. The duration of Morning Civil Twilight at 6648N 09526W on 2 nd December


is:

a) 94 min

b) 90 min
c) 84 min
d) 80 min

10. The Standard Time of sunset at Hong Kong (2220N 114 10E) on 31st Dec is:
a) 0126 1st Jan
b) 1726 31st Dec
c) 1749 31st Dec
d) 1759 31st Dec

11.The LMT of the end of Evening Civil Twilight in latitude 7100N on 19 th Dec is:

a) 1330
b) 1301
c) 1350
d) 1400

12.For an observer in the Norfolk Island (2900S 16755E) the LMT of sunset
on 16th July is:

a) 1900
b) 1720
c) 1742
d) 1927

13. For an observer in the Lord Howe Island (3131S 15904E) the LMT of sunrise and the
duration of morning civil twilight on the 6th August are:
UNRISE

DURATION

a)

0519

34 min

b)

0647

25 min

c)

0503

34 min

d)

0644

25 min

14.The duration of Evening Civil Twilight at Moscow (5600N 03723E) on the


14th December was:

a) 13
b) 37
c) 47
d) 42

15. A flight departed Boston (Massachusetts, USA, 4222N 07100W), two hours after sunset
on 16th September. The flight time to Brussels (Belgium, 5055N 00431E) was 6 hours 30
minutes. The UTC time and date of departure was:
a) 16th 2023
b) 17th 0053
c) 17th 0823
d) 16th 1224

16.The UTC of sunrise at 5400N 01000E on 10 th July is:

a) 0308

b) 0224
c) 0300
d) 0344

17.In Hong Kong (2219N 11412E), the UTC of sunset on 24 th July is:

a) 0221 25th July


b) 1044 24th July
c) 1107 24h July
d) 0244 25th July

18.For an observer at 6250N 04857W on the 7 th July, the local time of sunrise
is:

a) 0208
b) 0524
c) 2252
d) does not rise

19.An observer in Korea (3800N 13300E) watches the sunset on 13 th August


local date. The duration of evening civil twilight would be:

a) 25 min
b) 38 min
c) 27 min
d) 20 min

20. An observer in Korea (3800N 13300E) watches the sunset on 13th August local date. The
time of sunset expressed as GMT would be:
a) 0350 14th
b) 0350 13th
c) 1006 13th
d) 1006 14th

21.An observer in Korea (3800N 13300E) watches the sunset on 13 th August


local date. The time of sunset expressed as Standard Time would be:

a) 1906 14th
b) 1858 14th
c) 1858 13th
d) 1906 13th

22.In its path around the Sun, the axis of the Earth has an inclination:

a) Varying between zero and 2327 with the plane of the path
b) Of 6633 with the plane
c) Varying with the season of the year
d) Of 2327 with the plane of Equator

23.The Suns declination is on a particular day 12.00 S. Midnight Sun may this
day be observed:

a) North of 7800S
b) South of 7800S

c) At 7800S only
d) North of 7800N

24.The term sidereal is used:

a) To describe how two positions of heavenly bodies are located sideways on the sky
b) To describe conditions with reference to the moon
c) To describe a situation or relationship concerning the stars
d) To describe the time interval between two successive transits of the real apparent Sun at the
same meridian

25.The mean Sun:

a) Is the middle position of the Sun


b) Has a declination equal to the apparent Sun
c) Moves with constant speed along the celestial Equator
d) Is only of interest to users of astronomical navigation

26.A day at a place as measured in local mean time starts:

a) When the mean sun transits the meridian of the place in question
b) When the mean sun transits the Greenwich meridian
c) When the mean sun transits the anti meridian of the place in question
d) When the mean sun transits the 180E/W meridian

27.The inclination of the Earths axis of rotation with the plane of the ecliptic:

a) Is causing the variation of length of the day during a year


b) Is stable throughout the year
c) Is causing the seasons, summer and winter
d) All 3 answers are correct

28.As seen from an observer on the surface of the Earth:

a) The sun is in a fixed position relative to the stars


b) The stars will seem to move from west to east during a year
c) The suns position relative to the stars is fixed throughout the year
d) The apparent sun is always in the plane of the ecliptic

29. If the Mean Sun moves 121 30 along the Equator, that equals:

a) 20 hours 10 minutes
b) 9 hours 15 minutes
c) 6 hours 20 minutes
d) 8 hours 06 minutes

30.The direction of the Earths rotation on its axis is such that:

a) Observed from the point above the North Pole, the rotation is counterclockwise
b) An observer on the surface of the Earth always will face west when observing sunrise
c) Any point on the surface of the Earth will move eastward
d) Any point on the surface of the Earth will move westward

31.When the Suns declination is northerly:

a) It is winter on the Northern Hemisphere


b) The sunrise occurs earlier at southern latitudes than northern latitudes
c) The daylight period is shorter on the Southern Hemisphere
d) Midnight sun may be observed at the South Pole

32.The length of an apparent solar day is not constant because:

a) The Earths speed in its orbit varies continuous, due to the orbit being elliptical
b) The Earths speed of rotation is not the same at all latitudes
c) The Suns declination is not constant
d) The Earth is moving with constant speed around the Sun

33.By the term transit of a heavenly body it is understood that:

a) The body is moving


b) The body is passing the meridian of the observer or another specified meridian
c) The body is passing the anti meridian of the observer
d) The body is at the same celestial meridian as another body

34.Atmospheric refraction:

a) Causes the sunrise and the sunset to occur earlier


b) Causes the sunrise and the sunset to occur later
c) Causes the sunrise to occur later and the sunset to occur earlier

d) Causes the sunrise to occur earlier and the sunset to occur later

35.When approaching the International Date Line from East longitude, you:

a) Should be prepared to increase your date by 1


b) Should increase your date by an extra date at the first midnight you experience
c) Should be prepared to decrease your date by 1
d) Should not change date at the first midnight you experience

36.The duration of twilight:

a) Will in the period around the Equinoxes increase as you approach the Equator from North or
South
b) Is generally longer in positions at high latitudes than in positions at lower positions
c) Is independent of the suns declination and only depends on the observers latitude and
longitude
d) Is longer in the morning than in the evening because of the refraction in the atmosphere

PRACTICAL NAVIGATION

1. A ground feature is observed in line with the wing tip whilst flying at 300 kt
GS. After 5 minutes the same feature is 7 behind the wing tip. What is the
aircraft distance from the ground feature? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 230 NM
b) 214 NM
c) 150 NM

d) 164 NM

2. A fix indicates you are 70 NM from a ground feature that is in line with the
wing tip. After 2 minutes the same feature is 3 behind the wing tip. What is
your Ground Speed? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 125 kt
b) 154 kt
c) 105 kt
d) 251 kt

3. A fix indicates you are 52 NM from a ground feature that is in line with the
wing tip Whilst flying at 210 knots. After 1 minute how many degrees behind
the wing will You see the ground feature? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 4
b) 7
c) 8
d) 3

4. A ground feature is observed in line with the wing tip whilst flying at 180 kt
GS. After 4 minutes the same feature is 5 behind the wing tip. What is the
aircraft distance from the ground feature? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 155 NM
b) 166 NM
c) 144 NM
d) 170 NM

5. A fix indicates you are120NM from a ground feature that is in line with the
wing tip. After 2 minutes the same feature is 2 behind the wing tip. What is
your Ground Speed? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 100 kt
b) 110 kt
c) 130 kt
d) 120 kt
6. Kerry (5210.9N 00932.0W) is 41 NM DME. Galway (5318.1N 00856.5W) is 50 NM DME.
What is your position? (Use chart E(LO)1)
a) 5242N 00827W
b) 5255N 00819W
c) 5219N 00809W
d) 5230N 00834W

7. What is the mean true track and distance from the BAL VOR (5318N 00627W)
to CRN VOR/DME (5318N 00856W)? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 272 89
b) 272 88
c) 270 89
d) 270 88

8. You are on the 239 radial 36 NM from SHA VOR (5243N 00853W). What is
your position? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 5212N 00915W
b) 5212N 00930W

c) 5215N 00930W
d) 5220N 00939W

9. What is the radial and DME distance from SHA VOR (5243N 00853W) to
Birr Airport (5304N 00754W)? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 068M 40NM
b) 068M 42NM
c) 060M 40NM
d) 060M 42NM

10.What is the average track (T) and distance between WTD NDB (N5211.3
W00705.0) and FOY NDB (N5234.0 W00911.7)? Refer to E(LO)1

a) 277 83 NM
b) 286 81 NM
c) 294 80 NM
d) 075 81 NM

RELATIVE VELOCITY

1. Aircraft A is at FL350, TAS 440 kt with an equivalent wind component (EWC)


of -50 kt and estimating TLA NDB at 0815. Aircraft B is on the same track at
FL310, TAS 480 kt with a wind component of -30 kt and estimating TLA at
0820. The time at which aircraft B will overtake A is:

a) 0848
b) 0844
c) 0852
d) 0856

2. Aircraft A is at FL350, M0.82, OAT -55C with an EWC of +25 kt and


estimating POL NDB at 1020. Aircraft B is on the same track at FL310, M0.82,
OAT -46C with a wind component of +40 kt and estimating POL at 1022.
The two aircraft will pass at:

a) 244 NM from POL


b) 232 NM from POL
c) 343 NM from POL
d) 299 NM from POL

3. Aircraft A passes over VOR A at 1110 enroute to VOR B 1232 NM away at


a Groundspeed of 490 kt. Aircraft B reports VOR B at 1123 on a reciprocal
track with a Ground speed of 380 kt. The aircraft will pass at:

a) 1243
b) 1246
c) 1237
d) 1241

4. The distance from A the aircraft in Question 140 will pass is:

a) 637 NM
b) 743 NM

c) 595 NM
d) 768 NM

5. An aircraft is cruising at M0.84, FL330, OAT -43C with a wind component of


-30 kt and reports waypoint G at 2230. ATC instructs the pilot to reduce
speed to M0.76 at his discretion to be at waypoint H, 350 NM away, not
before 2320. The latest time at which the speed reduction can be made is:

a) 2230
b) 2237
c) 2233
d) 2241

6. Aircraft J is overhead YQT NDB at 0800 with a groundspeed of 300 kt. Aircraft
K is following on the same track with a groundspeed of 360 kt and is
overhead YQT at 0825. The time at which the aircraft will be 100 NM apart is:

a) 0832
b) 0825
c) 0850
d) 0856

7. The aircraft in Question 143 are routing to VBI VOR 196 NM from YQT. The
minimum groundspeed reduction that aircraft K must make at YQT to be 120
NM behind J when J passes VBI is:

a) 115 kt
b) 21 kt
c) 63 kt
d) 39 kt

8. Use the following information to answer Questions 145, 146, 147: Aircraft A
is overhead waypoint 1 at 2330 enroute to waypoint 2, 750 NM away at
a groundspeed of 490 kt. Aircraft B checks waypoint 1 on the same track but
4000 ft lower at 2335 with a groundspeed of 535 kt. If no speed changes are
made the distance from waypoint 1 that the aircraft will pass is:

a) 487 NM
b) 505 NM
c) 525 NM
d) 543 NM

9. Aircraft B is instructed to reduce speed to 490 kt to cross waypoint 2, 2


minutes after aircraft A. The latest time for speed reduction is:

a) 0003
b) 0008
c) 0013
d) 0018

10.At the point of speed reduction the separation of the two aircraft is:

a) 20 NM
b) 14 NM
c) 18 NM
d) 16 NM

11.Aircraft A, FL330, TAS 400 kt, EWC -30 kt, estimates point X at 1620.
Aircraft B, FL 370, TAS 515 kt, EWC -40 kt, estimates point X at 1625. Both
aircraft are on the same track. The time aircraft B will pass aircraft A is:

a) 1637
b) 1642
c) 1647
d) 1629

12.An aircraft with a GS of 300 kt is overhead J at 1100. This aircraft is followed


by another at the same FL, GS 360 kt, which arrives overhead J at 1125. Both
aircraft are following the same route to K, 220 NM from J. The first time the
aircraft will be 120 NM apart is:

a) 1130
b) 1125
c) 1144
d) 1151

13.Aircraft X, GS 315 kt is over point C at 1200 on the direct track to D. At 1224


aircraft Y, flying the same route at the same FL, but with GS 405 kt, passes
over point C. At what time will the separation between the aircraft be 90 NM?

a) 1225
b) 1248
c) 1245
d) 1224

14.An aircraft with a GS of 285 kt is overhead P at 0630. Another aircraft follows


this aircraft, GS 318 kt, and reports overhead P 15 minutes later. Both
aircraft are following the same track. Using the above information, answer

the following question and Question 152. The time at which the distance
between the aircraft has reduced to 40 NM is:

a) 0727
b) 0742
c) 0651
d) 0636

15.How far from P will the slower aircraft be at this time?

a) 270 NM
b) 342 NM
c) 160 NM
d) 28 NM
16. On a flight from A to B, distance 720 NM, an aircraft whose GS is 360 kt is instructed to
delay arrival by nine minutes. It is decided that this will be accomplished by reducing the GS by
60 kt. The minimum distance from B that this reduction can be carried out is:
a) 54 NM
b) 45 NM
c) 270 NM
d) 324 NM

17.On a flight from E to F, distance 720 NM, an aircraft, GS 250 kt is instructed


to delay arrival by six minutes. This is to be accomplished by reducing the GS
to 200 kt. The minimum distance from F that this reduction can be carried out
is:

a) 130 NM
b) 25 NM

c) 100 NM
d) 125 NM

18.Aircraft A, TAS 402 kt, EWC -30 kt, estimates point Q at 2348. Aircraft B, TAS
455 kt, EWC -40 kt, estimates point Q at 2333. Both aircraft are on the same
track. Using the above formation, answer the following question and Question
156. What is the latest time aircraft A must reduce TAS to 366 kt so as to
arrive overhead Q, 20 minutes after aircraft B?

a) 2241
b) 2301
c) 2313
d) 2257

19.How far from Q is aircraft B at the time calculated above:

a) 248 NM
b) 138 NM
c) 1,473 NM
d) 218 NM

20.An aircraft TAS 500 kt, HWC 78 kt, is requested not to cross position X, 630
NM away, before 1754. The request is made at 1612. What is the latest time
at which the aircraft TAS can be reduced to 400 kt, in order to cross position X
at 1754:

a) 1703
b) 1624
c) 1701
d) 1654

POINT OF SAFE RETURN AND POINT OF EQUAL TIME

1. Calculate the distance to the PSR from origin, point A, given:

Safe endurance

2.5 hours

TAS

200 kt

W/V

200/25 kt

Track A B

047

a) 200 NM
b) 212 NM
c) 224 NM
d) 246 NM

2. Calculate the distance to the PSR from origin, point A, given:

Safe endurance

3 hours 54 minutes

Ground speed out

180 kt

Ground speed home

200 kt

a) 370 km
b) 390 NM
c) 370 NM

d) 390 km

3. Calculate the time to the PSR, given:

Safe endurance

3 hours

Ground speed out

170 kt

Ground speed home

185 kt

a) 1 hour 36 min
b) 1 hour 34 min
c) 1 hour 32 min
d) 1 hour

4. Calculate the distance to PSR, given:

Safe endurance

11 hours

Ground speed out

478 kt

Ground speed home

575 kt

a) 3871 NM
b) 2781 NM
c) 2500 NM
d) 2871 NM

5. Calculate the time and distance to the PSR given a turbojet aircraft requiring

statutory reserve of 30 minutes given:


COAT

-47C

Mach

0.78

W/C Out

+ 140 kt

Trip distance

5100 NM

Total endurance 11 hours 30 minutes

a) 2625 NM 8 hours
b) 2225 NM 2 hours
c) 2265 NM 8 hours
d) 2100 NM 2 hours

6. How does the wind component affect the PSR? An increase or decrease in
wind component will - the distance to the PSR?

a) Increase
b) Decrease
c) Not change
d) Increase or decrease

7. Calculate the distance to PSR, given:

TAS

450 kt

EWC Out

-100 kt

Safe endurance 6 hours

a) 1283 NM
b) 1085 NM
c) 1283 NM
d) 1085 NM

8. Calculate the time to the PSR, given:

Safe endurance

6 hours 30 minutes

Ground speed out

225 kt

Ground speed home

145 kt

a) 2.54 hours
b) 2 hours 54 min
c) 30 hours
d) 2 hours 10 minutes

9. Calculate the distance to the PSR, given:

Safe endurance

10 hours

TAS

454 kt

W/V at 25 000ft

270/100 kt

Heading Out

090

Flight Level

250

a) 2100 NM
b) 2160 NM
c) 2200 NM
d) 2222 NM

10.What is the distance to PSR, given:

Safe endurance

4 hours

Ground speed out

140 kt

Ground speed home

90 kt

a) 193 NM
b) 219 NM
c) 229 NM
d) 232 NM

11.An aircraft departs point A to route via points B and C to get to D. Given the
data

below, where does the PSR lie in relation to A?


Sector

Distance

TAS

W/C

A-B

1000 NM

500 kt

+50

B-C

1500 NM

500 kt

-200

C-D

50 NM

500 kt

Zero

Total (ATC) Endurance 8 hours


Required Reserves

30 minutes

a) 1635 NM
b) 1729 NM
c) 1808 NM
d) 1812 NM

12.As far as the critical point is concerned, the PET always moves wind.

a) Into
b) Out of
c) Because of
d) Around

13.An aircraft is in the cruise having departed point A at 1200 hours UTC.
Aircraft systems are functioning properly. A passenger, however, has suffered
from a major heart attack, and has not responded well to onboard treatment.
The pilot has the option to use an (on-track) en-route alternate, and must
decide whether to return to base or continue to the alternate. The pilot must
therefore decide where he is in relation to PET for this type of emergency, in
order to expedite a landing as soon as possible. Fuel is sufficient for any
reasonable course of action.

At what time will he calculate the PET should be / should have been reached?

Cruise speed (TAS) outbound


Highest available safe cruise speed

400 kt
430 kt

Distance from base to en-route alternate 2000 NM


Equivalent Wind Speed (out / in)
(home)

+90 kt
-90 kt

a) 1259 UTC
b) 1435 UTC
c) 1400 UTC
d) 1337 UTC

14.Given the following information, calculate the time taken to reach the PET:

A to B is 500 NM
TAS is 300 kt
EWC out / on -25 kt, back +30 kt

a) 30 minutes
b) 45 minutes
c) 59 minutes
d) 61 minutes

MAGNETISM AND COMPASSES

1. Deviation due to vertical soft iron varies:

a) Directly with the tangent of the dip angle


b) Directly with H, the horizontal component of the Earths magnetic field
c) Directly with Z, the vertical component of the Earths magnetic field
d) Inversely with the tangent of the dip angle

2. Coefficient B is the sum of:

a) P and cZ
b) P and fZ
c) Q and cZ
d) Q and fZ

3. Coefficient C is the sum of:

a) P and fZ
b) P and cZ
c) Q and cZ
d) Q and fZ

4. A change in the deviation of the magnetic compass will occur with an


increase of magnetic latitude because:

a) Residual dip increase with an increase in latitude


b) The Z component of the Earths magnetic field increase with an increase in latitude
c) Horizontal hard iron increases with an increase in latitude
d) Horizontal hard iron decreases with an increase in latitude

5. When carrying out a compass swing, you must align:

a) True North and magnetic North


b) Magnetic North and compass North
c) True North and compass North
d) Compass lubber line and compass North

6. In a turn from 045 to 315 through North, in the Southern hemisphere,


the movement of the magnet system of a direct reading compass when
viewed from above, and the effect of liquid swirl caused by the movement,
are:

Magnet System

Liquid Swirl

1. a) Clockwise Reduce
2. b) Anti-clockwise Reduce
3. c) Clockwise Increase
4. d) Anti-clockwise Increase

5. During deceleration after a landing on a northerly runway in the Northern

Hemisphere, the magnetic compass will indicate:

a) An apparent turn to the North


b) No apparent turn
c) An apparent turn to the South
d) A heading fluctuation about 360

8. What are the primary methods of achieving Horizontality, Sensitivity,


and Aperiodicity in a Direct Reading Compass?

Horizontality
a) Low CG
b) Low CG
c) Strong magnets
d) High CG

Sensitivity

Aperiodicity

Jeweled pivot

Wires in the fluid

Large magnets

Immerse in fluid

Immerse in fluid

Damping filaments

Jeweled pivot

Damping filaments

9. If a turn is made from 130 to 230 with reference to a DGI, what will the DRC
read on initial roll out?

a) 230 in the Northern hemisphere


b) 210 in the Southern hemisphere
c) 210 in the Northern hemisphere
d) 250 in the Southern hemisphere

PRESSURE INSTRUMENTS AND RADIO ALTIMETERS

1. With reference to an altimeter, what will be the effect if the static source
becomes blocked during the climb:

a) It will indicate a large increase


b) It will progressively under read
c) It will indicate zero
d) It will progressively over read

2. If a servo altimeter has a quoted accuracy of 1 hPa, what is the accuracy at


FL 300 and FL390:

a) 70 ft and 105 ft
b) 70 ft and 83 ft
c) 47 ft and 83 ft
d) 47 ft and 105 ft

3. When flying an aircraft from an area of warm air to an area of cold air, the
altimeter will:

a) Under reads

b) Stays the same


c) Over reads
d) The instrument will act as a VSI

4. A vibrator may be fitted to an altimeter to overcome:

a) Aperiodicity
b) Frictional lag
c) Hysteresis
d) Horizontality

5. Lag in an IVSI is virtually eliminated by means of:

a) An accelerometer system
b) A vibrator
c) A bimetallic strip
d) A ceramic choke unit

6. A blockage occurs in the ram air source and drain hole, with the static source
open. The airspeed indicator in a non-pressurised aircraft will:

a) Read a little high


b) Act like an altimeter

c) Read a little low


d) Freeze at zero
7. An airspeed indicator has a leak in the circuit supplying pitot air, what will be seen on the
indicator:

a) Act as an altimeter
b) Over read
c) Under read
d) Remain affected

8. An ASI circuit consist of pressure sensors, the Pitot Probe measures:

a) Dynamic pressure
b) Total pressure
c) Total pressure and Static pressure
d) Static pressure

9. The CAS is obtained by applying to the IAS:

a) An instrument and position/pressure error correction


b) An instrument and density correction
c) A compressibility correction
d) A compressibility and density correction

10.The white arc on an ASI indicates:

a) Vso at the lower end and Vfe at the upper end


b) Vsi at the lower end and Vfe at the upper end
c) Vso at the lower end and Vno at the upper end
d) Vsi at the lower end and Vne at the upper end

11.Mach number is defined as the ratio of:

a) TAS to LSS
b) IAS to LSS
c) CAS to LSS
d) EAS to LSS

12.Which of the following instruments have a feed of pitot pressure:

I Altimeter
II ASI
III VSI
IV Mach meter
V ADC

a) All

b) II, III, IV and V


c) II, IV and V
d) II and IV
13. If the static vent becomes blocked during a descent:
I Altimeter will under read/Mach meter will under read
II VSI will indicate a climb/ASI will over read
III Mach meter will over read/VSI reduces to zero
IV ASI over reads/Altimeter over reads
V VSI indicates descent/Altimeter does not change

a) III and IV
b) I and V
c) III and V
d) II and I

14.A conventional Mach meter consists of:

a) An ASI with an altitude capsule


b) An ASI with a mach scale
c) An altimeter corrected for density
d) A VSI and altimeter combined

15.What does a Mach meter measure?

T = Total pressure, S = Static pressure, D = Dynamic pressure

a) T S/S
b) D S/S
c) D + S/T
d) D/T S

16.What are the inputs of the Air Data Computer:

I TAT
II SAT
III Angle of attack
IV Static pressure
V Dynamic pressure
VI Pitot pressure
VII Electric power

a) I, III, IV, VI and VII


b) I, II, III, V and VII
c) I, III, V and VI
d) II, IV and V

17.A modern radio altimeter uses the frequency band:

a) HF
b) VHF
c) SHF
d) UHF
18. Which is the operation frequency for a radio altimeter?

a) 430,000MHz
b) 4,300 MHz
c) 430 MHz
d) 4.3 MHz

19.A radio altimeter is:

a) Ground based and measures true height


b) Aircraft based and measures true altitude
c) Aircraft based and measures true height
d) Ground based and measures true altitude

20.The radio altimeter is used for accurate height indication on modern


transport aircraft between:

a) 50 ft and 2450 ft
b) 0 ft and 5000 ft

c) 50 ft and 5000 ft
d) 0 ft and 2500 ft

GYROS

1. An air driven DGI will have:

a) One degree of freedom and a horizontal axis


b) Two degrees of freedom and a vertical axis
c) One degree of freedom and a vertical axis
d) Two degrees of freedom and a horizontal axis

2. The properties of a gyroscopic flight instrument are:

I Rigidity
II Precession
III Inertia
IV Instability

a) I, II, III and IV


b) I and II
c) II and IV
d) I, II and III

3. The sources of error in a DGI are:

I Earth rate
II Transport wander
III Manufacture
IV Gimbal lock
V Rigidity
VI Precession

a) I, II, and III


b) I, II, III, IV, V, VI
c) I, II, III and IV
d) II, III, IV, V and VI

4. What will the drift rate of a frictionless gyro at a mean latitude of 30N
traveling from 30W to 36W in two hours if the latitude nut is set for 50N?

a) +2.5/hour
b) +5.5/hour
c) -5.5/hour
d) +11.0/hour

5. A Gyro used in a Rate of turn and bank indicator will have:

a) Two degrees of freedom and a horizontal spin axis


b) One degree of freedom and a horizontal spin axis
c) Two degrees of freedom and a vertical spin axis
d) One degree of freedom and a vertical
6. The needle and ball of a TBI are both displaced to the right, what condition is shown:

a) A left turn with too much bank


b) A right turn with too little bank
c) A right turn with too much bank
d) A left turn with too little bank

7. What angle of bank is required for a Rate 1 turn for an aircraft traveling at
180 kt?

a) 10
b) 18
c) 25
d) 30

8. A Gyro used in an instrument which, provides roll and pitch information, has:

a) One degree of freedom and a horizontal spin axis


b) Two degrees of freedom and a horizontal spin axis

c) Two degrees of freedom and a vertical spin axis


d) One degree of freedom and a vertical spin axis

9. If an Aircraft carries out a 270 turn to the left, what will a classic AH
indicate?

a) Nose up, bank left


b) Nose down, bank left
c) Nose up, bank right
d) Nose down, bank right

10.A gravity erector system is used to correct the errors on:

a) An artificial horizon
b) A directional compass
c) A gyromagnetic compass
d) A turn indicator

BASIC RADIO PRINCIPLES

1. The distance traveled by a radio wave in the direction of propagation during


one cycle is:

a) Frequency

b) Polarisation
c) Cyclic range
d) Wavelength

2. The speed of radio waves in free space is:

a) 30 million m/s
b) 161 800 m/s
c) 300 million m/s
d) 1860 NM/s

3. The frequency corresponding to a wavelength of 1.4 km is:

a) 214 MHz
b) 214 kHz
c) 116 Hz
d) 4.7 kHz

4. A wavelength of 3 cm is equivalent to a frequency of:

a) 3 GHz
b) 300 GHz
c) 100 MHz

d) 10 GHz

5. A radio aid operating on a frequency of 114.95 MHz would be in the:

a) VHF band
b) UHF band
c) MF band
d) SHF band

6. Radio work is confined to a spectrum of frequencies between 3 kHz and 300


GHz mainly because:

a) Very high power inputs are necessary at extremely long wavelengths


b) Large aerials are required at extremely high frequencies, coupled with problems of static and
attenuation of very long wavelengths
c) Atmospheric static affects very low frequencies also radio waves of extremely
short wavelengths are severely attenuated
d) Both a) and c)

7. Attenuation of radio waves is usually caused by:

a) Absorption
b) Scattering
c) Geometrical dispersion

d) Any or all of these

8. The process by which the amplitude of a radio carrier wave is varied in


sympathy with the amplitude & frequency of as audio wave is known as:

a) Frequency modulation
b) Pulse modulation
c) Phase modulation
d) Amplitude modulation

9. The bandwidth of a transmission is:

a) Twice the maximum frequency of the modulating audio wave


b) The width of one sideband
c) The difference between carrier and audio frequencies
d) Half the modulating frequency

10.The emission code for a VOR is:

a) A9W
b) F
c) A1A
d) A8W

11.The range at which ground waves can be received depends upon:

a) The frequency & power of transmission


b) Height of aerials and interference
c) Nature of terrain
d) All of the above

12.The principal source of attenuation in the ionosphere and of the refraction of


VLF waves during daylight is:

a) The D layer
b) The E layer
c) The F layer
d) All of these

13.Regarding HF communications, frequencies used by night are usually:

a) The same as daytime frequencies


b) Lower than daytime frequencies
c) Higher than daytime frequencies
d) Higher or lower depending on the strength of the ionosphere

14.Which of the following is attributed to VHF/UHF propagation?

a) Direct waves super-refraction


b) Direct waves ionosphere ducting
c) Ground waves ionosphere ducting
d) Sky waves D layer attenuation

15.If the power of a transmitter is quadrupled, the range effectively would:

a) Increase 1.4 times


b) Double
c) Quadruple
d) Remain the same

16.What is the wavelength of a VOR?

a) Metric
b) Decimetric
c) Heximetric
d) Centimetric

17.If the strength of a radio signal decreases away from the transmitter, this
effect is called:

a) Attenuation
b) Ducting
c) Refraction
d) Fading

18.What wavelength are used for NDB?

a) Hectometric
b) Metric
c) Centimetric
d) Decimetric

VHF DIRECTION FINDING

1. VDF for aeronautical use provides service in the frequency band:

a) 108 136 MHz


b) 118 137 MHz
c) 130 300 MHz
d) 108 118 MHz

2. The indicator of the ground VDF equipment responds to:

a) The carrier wave received


b) The identification transmitted from the aircraft
c) The voice modulated signal transmitted by the aircraft
d) The signal being reflected from the aircraft

3. If, when you are requesting a QDM from an airfield, you are offered a QGH, it
means?

a) The VDF unit is prepared to give you assistance during an approach to the airfield,
based on VDF bearings
b) The VDF service will be handled by a different VDF unit, operating on the same frequency
c) The bearing will only be accurate when the aircraft is flying above the QGH level
d) The service will be limited to bearings, no positions will be given by the DF station

4. A ground DF (VDF) station will normally provide the following bearings to


an aircraft in flight:

a) QTE/QDM
b) QUJ/QNH
c) QNE/QNH
d) QDR/QFE

NDB AND ADF

1. The basic information given by the ADF is:

a) The magnetic bearing from the aircraft to the NDB


b) The relative bearing from the aircraft to the NDB
c) The true great circle track from the NDB to the aircraft
d) The magnetic direction of the loop aerial with reference to the sense aerial

2. Which of the following statements regarding an aeronautical NDB is correct?

a) It operates in the MF/HF band


b) To overcome the limitations caused by line of sight propagation, high power transmitters
must be used
c) It is very simple, transmitter being required to transmit only a carrier wave
and identification
d) In Europe, most NDBs operate in the frequency band 455 1750 kHz

3. Which of the following is the ICAO allocated frequency band for ADF
receivers?

a) 108.0 MHz 117.9 MHz


b) 200 1750 MHz
c) 200 1750 Hz

d) 190 1750 kHz

4. Homing on an NDB:

a) Calls for an assessment of the drift


b) Is most effective in strong winds
c) Will in most situations result in frequent heading changes when approaching the NDB
d) Will result in passing the NDB along the planned track

5. Flying in the vicinity of CB clouds and using ADF:

a) The ANT position of the function switch can be used to listen for NDB ID
b) Strong static emitted from the CB may cause the ADF needle to deflect towards the CB
c) The static emitted from the CB during daytime will fade soon after you have passed it
d) All 3 answers are correct

6. An aircraft is flying on heading 330 and relative bearing to an NDB is


190. Calculate QDR:

a) 360
b) 160
c) 340
d) 140

7. An aircraft is flying on heading 300, variation in the area 13W and the
realative bearing is 350. Calculate QDM:

a) 110
b) 290
c) 300
d) 150

8. The bearings from NDBs are least accurate at:

a) Midnight
b) Midday
c) Dawn and Dusk
d) The accuracy does not change during night or day

9. Fading of an ADF signal, together with a hunting needle, is indication of:

a) Quadrantal effect
b) Thunderstorm effect
c) Night effect
d) Mountain effect

VOR AND DOPPLER VOR

1. The antenna polar diagram of a conventional VOR:

a) Is always directed toward the aircraft


b) Is like a figure of 8
c) Is a pencil beam
d) Rotates at 30 revolutions per second

2. The TO/FROM indicator of a VOR:

a) Tells whether you are now flying towards or from the VOR
b) Tells whether a track equal to the selected bearing will bring you to or away from the
VOR
c) Tells whether the deviation indicator shows that you should manoeuvre the aircraft towards or
from the CDI needle
d) Tells whether you should turn the aircraft towards or away from the CDI indication

3. In order to establish what radial you are on, you could:

a) Read the OBS when the CDI is centred and the TO/FROM is showing TO
b) Rotate the OBS until the CDI is centred and the TO/FROM indicator is showing FROM.
Then read the radial on the OBS

c) Turn the OBS to make the TO/FROM change from TO to FROM. The OBS is now indicating
the radial you are on
d) Turn the aircraft until the CDI is centred. The aircraft magnetic heading is now the reciprocal
of the radial you are on

4. The height of a VOR above MSL is HT(VOR) feet, and the aircraft is flying at
true altitude HT(a/c) feet. Which equation will show maximum range in NM of
reception of this VOR?

a) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) + 1.25 times square root of HT(VOR)
b) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) + 1.25 times of HT(VOR)
c) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) 1.25 times square root of HT(VOR)
d) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) 1.25 times of HT(VOR)

5. What degrades the accuracy of a VOR?

a) Static interference
b) Propagation errors due to uneven terrain
c) Night effect
d) Coastal effect

6. In a conventional VOR (CVOR), which element of the transmission uses


amplitude modulation and which uses frequency modulation?

a) The variable-phase and bearing use AM. The ATIS information is FM

b) The variable-phase is AM. The reference is FM


c) The reference and ATIS is AM. The variable-phase is FM
d) The reference is AM. The variable-phase is FM

7. An aircraft is required to approach a VOR station via the radial 340. Which of
the following indications should be seen on the VOR/ILS deviation indicator,
and what is the position of the TO/FROM indicator?

a) 340 with the TO flag showing


b) 340 with the FROM flag showing
c) 160 with the TO flag showing
d) 160 with the FROM flag showing

8. If using VOR bearing information beyond the published protection range,


errors could be caused by:

a) Interference from thunderstorms


b) Coastal refraction
c) Night effect
d) Interference from other transmitters

DISTANCE MEASURING EQUIPMENT

1. In the DME system:

a) The aircraft equipment is called a transponder


b) The receive and transmit frequency is always split by 63 MHz
c) The operation is similar to a primary radar system
d) The channels are referred to as X channels paired with VORs and Y channels paired with
ILS localisers

2. The airborne DME equipment will transmit pulse pairs at a comparatively high
PRF:

a) At all times, except when the panel control LO is operated


b) When the distance presented is above 50 NM
c) Whenever a stable signal is being received from the selected ground station
d) When first switched on and after a channel selection

3. System, or beacon, saturation of the DME system:

a) Occurs when the aircraft DME set has been in operation for an extended period of time,
without being put into the STAND/BY mode
b) Occurs when many aircraft, being at along distance from the DME, are demanding a reply
c) May occur when more than 100 aircraft are demanding replies from a single ground
station
d) All 3 answers are correct

4. If a VOR station and a DME station, having different locations, are selected
to provide a fix:

a) Two sets, with separate frequency control, are required in the aircraft
b) Two positions, being ambiguous, will be presented
c) Two different IDs will have to be checked
d) All 3 answers are correct

5. Using modern DME equipment meant for general navigation use, the
accuracy expected is:

a) + 2 NM
b) + 5 NM or 0.25% of the slant range, whichever is greater
c) + 2 NM + 0.25% of the slant range, whichever is greater
d) + 2 NM + 3.0% of the slant range

6. How many aircraft will saturate a DME station?

a) 200 aircraft
b) 100 aircraft
c) 50 aircraft
d) 2700 aircraft

7. A DME transceiver does not lock on to its own reflections because:

a) The PRF of the pulse pairs is jittered


b) It used MTI
c) The interrogation and reply frequencies differ
d) The reflections will all fall within the flyback period

8. An aircraft is passing overhead a DME station at FL 240. What is the DME


indication?

a) 0 DME
b) 1 DME
c) 4 DME
d) 6 DME

INSTRUMENT LANDING SYSTEM

1. Consider the following statements on ILS:

a) An ILS approach may be flown if the localizer, glide path and marker beacons/DME are
operational
b) If the localizer is out of service, an ILS approach with increased decision height (DH) may be
carried out
c) ILS is the primary precision approach facility for civil aviation
d) When the pilot is reaching the decision height (DH) he may only continue the approach if both
localizer and glide path indications are within one dot from the centre positions

2. Which of the following frequencies does ILS use?

a) 112.10 MHz
b) 111.20 MHz
c) 108.45 MHz
d) 109.35 MHz

3. The ILS glidepath transmitter is located:

a) No more than 600 m from the localizer transmitter


b) About 150 m upwind from the threshold and about 300 m from the centre line of the runway
c) About 300 m upwind from the threshold and about 150 m from the centre line of the
runway
d) As close to the runway threshold as possible without causing an obstruction to aircraft

4. The glidepath transmitter operates on:

a) 36 VHF frequencies, paired with localizer frequencies


b) The frequencies 90 and 150 MHz
c) On frequencies found by multiplying the localizer frequency by 2
d) 40 frequencies from 329.15 MHz to 335.00 MHz

5. If the ILS monitoring equipment senses a shift or changes outside set limits in
the basic transmission:

a) The Tower Control will inform any inbound aircraft about the inaccuracy
b) The technicians on duty will switch on the stand/by ILS equipment
c) The pilot on ILS approach will be notified by the identification signal disappearing
d) The transmissions on a Cat I ILS will be stopped within 6 seconds

6. The middle marker is identified by:

a) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 1300 Hz and an amber light
b) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 800 Hz and an amber light
c) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 800 Hz and a white light
d) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 1300 Hz and a white light

7. What is the width of the localizer from full fly left through centre to full fly
right on the cockpit localizer indicator?

a) 10
b) 20
c) 5
d) 2.5

8. When flying outside the ILS published coverage area, you may expect:

a) Incorrect/false signals
b) Correct signals
c) Always fly up signal
d) Always fly down signal

MICROWAVE LANDING SYSTEM AND RADAR PRINCIPLES

1. In a primary radar system:

a) The aircraft plays the secondary role, just listening to the radar signals from the ground radar
b) All radio frequency energy is produced by the radar located at the radar site
c) The radar is primarily used for range finding
d) The radar is the primary aid for ATC

2. What governs the theoretical maximum range of primary radar?

a) Frequency
b) Wavelength
c) Pulse repetition frequency
d) Pulse width

3. Primary radar operates on the principle of:

a) Medium wave technique


b) Pulse technique
c) Doppler technique
d) None of the above

4. When dealing with radar the term PRF is used, PRF is measured in which unit?

1. a) Number of pulses per minute


2. b) Number of oscillations per second
3. c) Number of pulses per second
4. d) Number of oscillations per minute

5. Consider the following statements on primary radar:

a) Precipitation will reduce the range of radars operating on low frequencies to larger extent than
radars operating on higher frequencies
b) Target shape and size has little influence on the radar maximum range
c) Temperature inversions may increase the maximum detection range
d) The most common radar indicator is called an A scope

6. In order to achieve narrow beam width with a radar antenna of a set size:

a) The carrier frequency must be low


b) The PRF must be high
c) The pulse length must be kept short
d) The wave-length must be short

7. In a radar set the purpose of the TR switch is:

a) To change the whole set from receive mode to transmit mode


b) To protect the receiver while the pulse is transmitted
c) To set the time reference of the indicator
d) To secure that the Time of Return is registered

8. A radar system has a PRF that is 1200. Calculate the maximum unambiguous
range:

a) 125 NM
b) 135 NM
c) 68 NM
d) 250 NM

9. Long range surveillance radar may typically use a frequency of :

a) 1000 MHz

b) 600 MHz
c) 3000 MHz
d) 10 GHz

10.Why does the aircraft transponder system not respond to its own
transmissions when reflected from the ground?

a) Different frequencies are used 60 MHz apart


b) Pulse repetition frequency changed
c) The transponder system does not reply to its own reflected signals, but these responses are
rejected by the transponder system at the site
d) The aircraft signal is not reflected

11.Which combination of characteristics gives the best resolution in a primary


search radar?

a) Long pulse length and wide beam


b) Short pulse and wide beam
c) Long pulse and narrow beam
d) Short pulse length and narrow beam

12.The purpose of a radio transmitter is:

a) To produce a carrier wave with a constantly changing frequency

b) To produce a radio frequency electric current and deliver this energy to the antenna
c) To produce a carrier wave to the audio frequency output of the transmitter
d) All three answers are correct

GLOBAL NAVIGATION SATELLITE SYSTEMS

1. The most favoured type of GPS receiver for use in civil transport aircraft is:

a) The Five Satellite Receiver


b) The Multi Channel
c) The Multi Satellite Receiver
d) The Universal Receiver

2. One task of the control segment of the satellite navigation system


NAVSTAR/GPS is to:

a) Monitor the status of the satellites


b) Manufacture and launch satellites
c) Manipulate the signals of the selected satellites to reduce the precision of the position fix
(Selective availability SA)
d) Grant and monitor user authorisations

3. The clock in the GPS receiver is corrected to the GPS time system:

a) By synchronizing it with the time signal sent by the Master satellite


b) By mathematically adjusting the lines of position from four satellites to a perfect fix
c) Using the average of the time signal received from at least 3 satellites
d) Automatically as soon as signals from 1 satellite is received

4. The GPS satellites will complete an orbit in approximately:

a) 6 hours
b) 12 hours
c) 24 hours
d) 21 hours

5. GPS system satellites transmit their signals on two carrier waves 1575 MHz
and 1227 MHz and supply two possible codes accessible according to user
(civil or military). Commercial aviation uses:

a) Only the 1575 MHz carrier wave and two codes


b) Only the 1227 MHz carrier wave and one code
c) The two carrier waves and one public code
d) Only the 1575 MHz carrier wave and one code

6. In the NAVSTAR/GPS satellite system, receiver clock error:

a) Is negligible small because of the great accuracy of the atomic clocks in the satellites

b) Is the biggest part of the total error and cannot be corrected


c) Can be minimized by synchronizing the satellite clock with the receiver clock
d) Is corrected by using signals from four satellites

7. Differential GPS is a system that allows the GPS receiver to correct known
errors in the position calculations. Which errors are corrected?

a) Receiver clock error and receiver noise


b) Receiver noise
c) Receiver clock error, ephemeris satellite clock and ionosphere delay
d) Ephemeris

AIRBORNE WEATHER RADAR

1. How many degrees will an AWR be pitched to establish whether a cloud is


level with the aircraft, assuming a 5 beamwidth?

a) + 2.5
b) 2.5
c) 0
d) 5

2. What are the advantages of using a slotted waveguide antenna in AWR?

a) More side lobes and concentrates the power in sharper beams


b) Less side lobes but the beams tend to be wider
c) More side lobes but the power is concentrated in sharper beams
d) Less side lobes and concentrates power in sharper beams

3. In AWR that has a colour cathode ray tube, the areas of greatest turbulence
are indicated on the screen by:

a) Iso-echo areas which are coloured black


b) Iso-echo areas which are coloured magenta
c) Blank Iso-echo areas where there is no colour
d) Large flashes of flashing red colour

4. The purpose of the contour circuit on a monochrome airborne weather radar


is to:

a) Indicate severe areas of CAT


b) Show areas with heavy precipitation as dark areas on the display surrounded by bright
returns
c) Disable the receiver swept gain function in order to achieve maximum amplification
d) Enable the radar to be used for terrain clearance

5. A frequency of AWR is:

a) 9375 MHz
b) 9375 kHz
c) 9375 GHz
d) 93.75 MHz

6. The main task of an AWR is:

a) To detect areas of potentially severe turbulence ahead of the aircraft


b) To detect and present a radar picture of clouds with precipitation ahead of the aircraft
c) To detect areas with strong winds ahead of the aircraft
d) To detect and relay to meteorological offices information on the weather in the area ahead of
the aircraft

Arunaksha Nandy

NAVIGATION QUESTIONS

1. Pressure Altitude is 27,000 feet, OAT = -35C, Mach No = 0.45, W/V =


270/85, Track == 200T. What is drift and groundspeed?

18L / 252 knots

15R / 310 knots

17L / 228 knots

17R / 287 knots

G/S = 240 knots, Distance to go = 500 nm. What is time to go?


a

20 minutes

29 minutes

2 h 05 m d

OAT = +35C, Pressure alt = 5000 feet. What is true alt?


a

4550 feet b

5550 feet c

4290 feet d

5320 feet

2 h 12 m

4
Course 040T, TAS 120 knots, Wind speed = 30 knots. From which direction will the
wind give the greatest drift?
a

215T

230T

235T

240T

5
Required course 045T, W/V = 190/30, FL = 55 @ ISA, Variation = 15E. CAS = 120
knots. What is mag heading and G/S?

052M

154

067M

154

037M

154

037M

113

An aircraft flies a great circle track from 56N 070W to 62N 110E.
The total distance travelled is?
a

3720 NM b

5420 NM c

1788 NM d

2040 NM

7
You are flying 090C heading. Deviation is 2W and Variation is 12 E. Your TAS is 160
knots. You are flying the 070 radial outbound from a VOR and you have gone 14 nm in 6
minutes. What is the W/V?
a

158T /51 b

060T /50 c

340T / 25

055T / 25

The sensitivity of a direct reading magnetic compass is:


a

Inversely proportional to the horizontal component of the earths magnetic

Proportional to the horizontal component of the earths magnetic field.

Inversely proportional to the vertical component of the earths magnetic field.

field.

d
Inversely proportional to the vertical and horizontal components of the earths
magnetic
field.

An aircraft at position 60N 005W tracks 090 (T) for 315 km.
On completion of the flight the longitude will be:
a

10

11

12

13

002 10W

000 15E c

000 40E d

005 15E

What is the definition of magnetic variation?


a

The angle between the direction indicated by a compass and Magnetic North.

The angle between True North and Compass North.

The angle between Magnetic North and True North.

The angle between Magnetic Heading and Magnetic North.

At the magnetic equator:


a

Dip is zero

Variation is zero

Deviation is zero

The isogonal is an agonic line

Which of these is a correct statement about the Earths magnetic field:


a

It acts as though there is a large blue magnetic pole in Northern Canada

The angle of dip is the angle between the vertical and the total magnetic force.

It may be temporary, transient, or permanent.

It has no effect on aircraft deviation.

Where is a compass most effective?

14

About midway between the earths magnetic poles

In the region of the magnetic South pole

In the region of the magnetic North pole

On the geographic equator

The value of variation:


a

is zero at the magnetic equator

has a maximum value of 45 E or 45 W

has a maximum value of 180


d

cannot exceed 90

15 You are in the northern hemisphere, heading West, and the aircraft is accelerating.
Will a direct reading magnetic compass over-read or under-read? Is the compass indicating
a turn to the north or to the south?
Compass

Indicating turn to

over-reads

north

over-reads

south

under-read

north

under-reads

south

16 What is the advantage of the remote indicating compass (slaved gyro compass) over
the direct reading magnetic compass?
a

It is lighter

It is connected to a source of electrical power and so is more accurate

It senses the earths magnetic field rather than seeks it. So is more sensitive

It is not affected by aircraft deviation

17 You are in the Northern hemisphere, heading 135 C on a Direct Reading Magnetic
Compass. You turn right in a Rate 1 turn for 30 seconds. Do you roll out on an indicated
heading of?

18

Greater than 225

Less than 225

Equal to 225

Not possible to determine

IRS differs from INS in that it:

a
gravity.

Has a longer spin-up time and is not affected by vertical accelerations due to

Has a shorter spin-up time and suffers from laser lock.

Does not need to correct for coriolis and central acceleration.

d
Does not experience Schuler errors as accelerometers are strapped down and are not
rotated by a VIR feedback loop.

19

20

The period of validity of an FMS database is:


a

56 days

One week

28 days

Varies depending on the area of operational cover.

In an IRS:
a

The accelerometers are strapped down but the platform is gyro stabilised.

The platform is strapped down but the accelerometers are gyro-stabilised.

Accelerometers and platform are both gyro-stabilised.

Accelerometers and platform are both strapped down.

21

22

23

When initial position is put into an FMS, the system:


a

Rejects initial latitude error, but it will accept longitude error.

Rejects initial longitude error, but it will accept latitude error.

Rejects initial latitude or longitude error.

Cannot detect input errors, and accepts whatever is put in.

In a ring laser gyro, the purpose of the dither motor is to:


a

Enhance the accuracy of the gyro at all rotational rates.

Overcome laser lock.

Compensate for transport wander.

Stabilise the laser frequencies.

The FMC position is:


a

The average of the IRS positions

The average of the IRS and radio navigation positions

Computer generated from the IRS and radio navigation positions

Computer generated from the radio navigation positions

24 Which of the following can all be stored as five letter waypoint identifiers through the
CDU of a B737- 400 Electronic Flight Instrument System?
a

Airway names; navaid identifiers; airport names; waypoint code numbers

Waypoint names; navaid identifiers; runway numbers; airport ICAO identifiers

25

Waypoint names; navaid frequencies; runway codes; airport ICAO identifiers

Waypoint names; navaid positions; airport ICAO identifiers; airport names

The following waypoints are entered into an inertial navigation system (INS)

WPT 1: 60N 30W


WPT 2: 60N 20W
WPT 3: 60N 10W

NAVIGATION QUESTIONS For CPL/ ATPL


The inertial navigation is connected to the automatic pilot on the route WP1 WP2 WP3.
The track change on passing WPT 2 will be approximately:
a

a 9 increase

zero

b
d

a 4 decrease

a 9 decrease

26 What is the source of magnetic variation information in a Flight Management system


(FMS)?
a
The main directional gyro which is coupled to the magnetic sensor (flux valve)
positioned in the wing tip.
b
Magnetic variation information is stored in each IRS memory; it is applied to
the true heading calculated by the respective IRS
c
Magnetic variation is calculated by each IRS based on the respective IRS
position and the aircrafts magnetic heading
d

The FMS calculates MH and MT from the FMC position

27

In the Boeing 737-400 FMS, the CDU is used to:


a

manually initialise the IRS and FMC with dispatch information

automatically initialise the IRS and FMC with dispatch information

c
manually initialise the Flight Director System and FMC with dispatch
information
d
manually initialise the Flight Director System, FMC and Autothrottle with
dispatch information

28

What are the levels of message on the Boeing 737-400 FMC?


a

Urgent and Routine

Alert and Advisory

b
d

Priority and Alerting

Urgent and Advisory

29 An INS platform is kept at right angles to local gravity by applying corrections for the
effects of:

30

Aircraft manoeuvres

ii

earth rotation

iii

transport wander

iv

coriolis

gyroscopic inertia

i, iii and v

ii, iv and v

ii, iii and v


d

When and where are IRS positions updated?

i, ii, iii and iv

during all phases of flight

only on the ground during the alignment procedure

when the FMS is in IRS ONLY NAV operation

when the VHF Nav Radios are selected to AUTO

31 An aircraft equipped with an Inertial Navigation system (INS) flies with INS 1
coupled with autopilot 1. Both inertial navigation systems are navigating from waypoint A
to B. The inertial systems CDU s show:

XTK on INS 1 = 0
XTK on INS 2 = 8L

From this information it can be deduced that:


a

only inertial navigation No I is drifting

only inertial navigation No 2 is drifting

at least one of the inertial navigation systems is drifting

the autopilot is unserviceable in NA V mode

32 Aircraft position determined by radio navigation in the Boeing 737-40 0 FMC is


derived from:
a
bearings
c

VOR/DME

DME ranges and / or VOR / ADF

VOR/ADF

VOR / DME and DME / DME

33

34

On a triple-fit IRS system, present positions on the CDU:


a

will only differ if one IRS has been decoupled due to a detected malfunction

will only differ if an initial input error of aircraft position has been made

are likely to differ as the information comes from different sources

will not differ as the information is averaged

Gyro-compassing in an INS:

a
is possible in flight as the gyros can differentiate between acceleration due to aircraft
movement and initial alignment errors
b
is not possible in flight as the gyros can differentiate between acceleration due to
aircraft movement and initial alignment errors
c
is not possible in flight as the gyros cannot differentiate between acceleration due to
aircraft movement and initial alignment errors
d
is possible in flight as the gyros cannot differentiate between acceleration due to
aircraft movement and initial alignment errors

35 What are the positions (in the order left to right) on the Boeing 737-400 IRS MSU
mode
selector?
a

OFF

STBY

OFF

ON

OFF

STBY

OFF

ALIGN

ALIGN
ALIGN

NAV
NAV

ATT
NAV

NAV
ATT

36 An aircraft leaves at 0900UTC on a 250 nm journey with a planned groundspeed of


115 knots. After 74 nm the aircraft is 1.5 minutes behind the planned schedule. What is the
revised ETA at the destination?

1100

1110

1115

1054

37 In an INS /IRS, an azimuth gyro is found to have a drift rate. If t is the time since
selecting the MSU from ALIGN to Navigate, is the azimuth gyro heading error
a

Proportional to t

Proportional to t2

Proportional to t/2

sinusoidal

38 In an INS / IRS, an azimuth gyro is found to have a drift rate. 1ft is the time since
selecting the MSU from ALIGN to NAVigate, is the position error
a

Proportional to t

Proportional to t2

Proportional to tI2

sinusoidal

39 Laser lock is overcome in an IRS system by using a piezo-electric motor which utilises
the
principle of:
a

40

shake

A
1

SAGNAC

B
30 nm

dither

1 20 nm

ATA A is 1010. ETA B is 1030. ETA C is 1043.


ATA B is 1027. What is revised ETA C?
a

1040

1043

1038

1036

vibration

41

Isogrivs are lines that connect positions that have


a

c
strength

the same grivation

the same variation

0 magnetic dip

the same horizontal magnetic field

42 An aircraft at position 6000N 00522W flies 165 km due East. What is the new
position?
a

6000N 00820E

6000N 00224W

6000N 00108E

6000N 00108W

43 An aircraft at latitude 0220N tracks 180T for 685 kilometres. What is its latitude at
the end of the flight?
a

0350S

0250S

0210S

0855S

44 What is the average magnetic course and distance between 6000N 02000W and
Sumburgh VOR? (in the exam they gave an attached chart as an Annex for revision
practice use your Jeppesen Manual chart AT(H/L) 1 or 5 AT(HI))

Course

Dist

095

562

095

468

105

562

105

468

45 What is the average true track and distance between WTD NDB (5211.3N 00705.0W)
and FOY NDB (5234.0N 00911.7W) use your Jeppesen E (LO) l

Track

Dist

294

76

286

76

294

81

286

81

46 An aircraft is flying TAS 180 knots and tracking 090T. The W/V is 045/50. How far
can the aircraft fly out from its base and return within 1 hour?
a

74 nm

85 nm

102 nm

111 nm

47 You are flying a VFR route and have become uncertain of your position. Which is the
best course of action?
a

set heading towards a line feature coastline, river, or motorway

b
turn round and fly your flight plan tracks in reverse until you see something
you recognised before
c
fly a series of ever-expanding circles from your present position till yon findyour next check point
d

Turn round and fly your flight plan in reverse back to base

48 An aircraft is at FL140 with an IAS of 210 and a true OAT of -5C. The wind
component is -35 knots. When the aircraft is at 150 nm from a reporting point, ATC
request the crew to lose 5 minutes by the time they get to the beacon. How much do they
need to reduce IAS?

15 knots

25 knots

30 knots

20 knots

49 An aircraft has a TAS300 knots and a safe endurance of 10 hours. If the wind
component on the outbound leg is 50 knots head, what is the distance to the point of safe
endurance?
a

1500 nm

1458 nm

1544nm

1622 nm

50 An aircraft has a TAS of 300 knots and is over a stretch of water between 2 airfields
500 nm apart. If the wind component is 60 knots head, what is the distance from the first
airfield to the critical point?
a

250 nm

200 nm

300 nm

280 nm

NAVIGATION QUESTIONS

51

X
1

Y
30 nm

Z
20nm

ATA X is 1420. ETA Y is 1447. ATA Y is 1450.


What is new ETA Z?
a

52

1506

1512

Given:
Airport elevation is 1000 feet.
QNH is 988 hPa

1510

1515

What is the approximate airport pressure altitude?


a

320

1680

-320

680

53 An aircraft starts at position 0410S 17822W and heads true north for 2950 nm, then
turns 90 degrees left, and maintains a rhumb line track for 314 kilometers. What is its final
position?
a

5500N 17422W

4500N 17422W

5500N 17738E

4500N 17738E

54 You are heading 0800T when you get a range and bearing fix from your A WR on a
headland at 185 nm 30 left of the nose. What true bearing do you plot on the chart?
a

050 from the headland, using the headlands meridian

050 from the headland, using the aircrafts meridian

230 from the headland, using the headlands meridian

230 from the headland, using the aircrafts meridian

55 By what amount must you change your rate of descent given a 10 knot increase in
headwind on a 3 glideslope?
a

50 feet per minute increase

30 feet per minute increase

50 feet per minute decrease

30 feet per minute decrease

56 In which months is the difference between apparent noon and mean noon the
greatest?
a

November and February

March and September

b
d

January and July


June and December

57 5 hours 20 minutes and 20 seconds hours time difference is equivalent to which


change of longitude?
a

81 30

78 15

79 10

80 05

58 The main reason that day and night, throughout the year, have different durations is
due to the:
a

earths rotation

relative speed of the sun along the ecliptic

inclination of the ecliptic to the equator

gravitational effect of the Sun and the Moon on the speed of rotation of the

Earth

59 A Lamberts Conical conformal chart has standard parallels at 63N and 41N. What is
the constant of the cone?
a

60

61

pole

.891

.788

.656

.707

On a chart, 49 nautical miles is represented by 7.0 centimetres. What is the scale?


a

1/700,000

1 / 1,296,400

1/2,015,396
d

1/1,156,600

On a Direct Mercator chart, great circles are shown as:


a

Curves convex to the nearer pole

Rhumb lines

Straight lines
d

Curves concave to the nearer

62

63

The scale on a Lamberts conformal conic chart


a

is constant along a meridian of longitude

is constant along a parallel of latitude

varies slightly as a function of latitude and longitude

is constant across the whole map

Heading is 156T, TAS is 320 knots, W/V is 130/45. What is your true track?
a

160

152

104

222

64 You are heading 345M, the variation is 20E, and you take a radar bearing of 30 left
of the nose from an island. What bearing do you plot?
a

160T

155T

140T

180T

65 Your pressure altitude is FL55, the QNH is 998, and the SAT is + 30C. What is Density
Altitude?
a

6980 feet

7750 feet

8620 feet

10020 feet

66 On a particular take-off, you can accept up to 10 knots tailwind. The runway QDM is
047, the variation is l7E and the A TIS gives the wind direction as 210. What is the
maximum wind strength you can accept?
a

18 knots

11 knots

8 knots

4 knots

67

The agonic line:


a

is midway between the magnetic North and South poles

follows the geographic equator

c
is the shorter distance between the respective True and Magnetic North and
South poles
d
Follows separate paths out of the North polar regions, one currently running through
Western Europe and the other through the USA

68

On a 12% glide slope, your groundspeed is 540 knots. What is your rate of descent?
a

6550 feet/min

4820 feet/min

8740 feet/min

3120 feet/min

69 At 65 nm from a VOR you commence a descent from FL330 in order to arrive over
the VOR at FL 100. Your mean groundspeed in the descent is 240 knots. What rate of
descent is required?

70

1420 feet/min

1630 feet/mm

1270 feet/min

1830 feet/min

July

In which month does aphelion occur?


a

71

January

March

November

The term drift refers to the wander of the axis of a gyro in?
a

any plane

the vertical plane

the horizontal plane


d

the vertical and horizontal plane

72 What is the highest latitude listed below at which the sun will rise above the horizon
and set every day?
a

73

68N

66N

62N

72N

The pressure alt is 29000 feet and the SAT is -55C. What is density altitude?
a

27500 feet

26000 feet

30000 feet

31000 feet

74 The distance from A to B is 2368 nautical miles. If outbound groundspeed in 365 knots
and homebound groundspeed is 480 knots and safe endurance is 8 hours 30 minutes, what
is the time to the PNR?
a

290 minutes

209 minutes

219 minutes

190 minutes

75 What is the UTC time of sunrise in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada (49N 123
30W) on the 6th December? (In the exam, tables were supplied. The answers given below
are based on the tables in your Gen Nav notes).

76

2324 UTC

1552 UTC

b
d

0724 UTC
0738 UTC

How does scale change on a normal Mercator chart?


a

Expands as the secant 2 (2 co-latitude)

Expands directly with the secant of the latitude

Correct on the standard parallels, expands outside them, contracts within them

Expands as the secant of the EIW great circle distance

77 You are on ILS 3-degree glideslope which passes over the runway threshold at 50 feet.
Your DME range is 25 nm from the threshold. What is your height above the runway
threshold elevation? (Use the I in 60 rule and 6000feet = 1 nautical mile)
a

8010 feet

7450 feet

6450 feet

7550 feet

78 At 1200 Standard Time on the 10th July in Queensland, Australia, what is the
Standard Time in Hawaii, USA?
a

1200 ST 10 July

1000 ST 10 July

1600 ST 09 July

0200 ST 10 July

79 You are flying at a True Mach No of .82 in a SAT of -45C. At 1000 hours you are 100
nm from the POL DME and your ETA at POL is 1012. ATC ask you to slow down to be at
POL at 1016. What should your new TMN be if you reduce speed at 100 nm distances to
go?
a

M.76

M.72

M 68

M 61

80 The relative bearing to a beacon is 270(R). Three minutes later, at a groundspeed of


180 knots, it has changed to 225R. What was the distance of the closest point of approach
of the aircraft to the beacon?
a

81

45 nm

18 nm

9 nm

3 nm

Groundspeed is 540 knots. 72 nm to go. What is time to go?


a

8 mins

9 mins

18 mins

12 mins

82 An aircraft at position 2700N 17000W travels 3000 km on a track of 180T, then 3000
km on a track of 090T, then 3000 km on a track of 000T, then 3000 km on a track of
270T. What is its final position?
a

2700N 17000W

0000N/S 17000W

2700N 17318W

2700N 14300W

83 An aircraft at FL370 is required to commence descent at 120 NM from a VOR and to


cross the facility at FL130. If the mean GS for the descent is 288 kt, the minimum rate of
descent required is:
a

920 ft/min

890 ft/min

860 ft/min

960 ft/min

84 You are homing to overhead a VORTAC and will descend from 7500 QNH to be 1000
AMSL by 6 nm DME. Your groundspeed is 156 knots and the ROD will be 800 feet/min. At
what range from the VORTAC do you commence the descent?
a

85

27.1 nm

15.8 nm

11.7 nm

30.2 nm

A Rhumb line is:


a

the vertex of a conformal polyformic projection

a straight line on a Lamberts conformal chart

a line on the Earth which cuts all meridians at the same angle

the shortest distance between two points on the Earths surface

86 You fly from 49N to 58N along the 180 E/W meridian. What is the distance in
kilometres?

540 km

804 km

1222 km

1000 km

87 On a particular Direct Mercator wall chart, the 180W to 180E parallel of latitude at
53N is 133 cm long. What is the scale of the chart at 30S?

88

1: 3,000,000

1: 21,000,000

1: 18,000,000

1: 27,000,000

What is the highest latitude on the Earth at which the Sun can be vertically overhead?
a

89

23

Track = 090 (T),

66

T AS = 460 knots,

Variation = 10 E,

45

90

W /V = 360 (T) /100,

Deviation = -2.

What is compass heading and groundspeed?

90

91
is:

079

470 knots

069

450 knots

068

460 knots

070

455 knots

The angle between True North and Magnetic north is known as:
a

deviation

alignment error

variation
d

dip

An aircraft is at 10 N and is flying South at 444 km/hour. After 3 hours the latitude

10 S

02N

92

02 S

00N/S

Given that:
A is N55 E/W 000
B is N54 E 010,
If the true great circle track from A to B is 100 T, what is the true Rhumb Line track

at A?

93

94

096

107

104

100

The circumference of the Earth is approximately:


a

43200 nm

10800 nm

21600 nm

5400 nm

The angle between the plane of the Equator and the plane of the Ecliptic is:
a

66.5

23.5

25.3

65.6

95 Position A is at 70S 030W, position B is 70S 060E. What is the Great Circle track of B
from A measured at A?
a

132 T

048 T

090 T

228 T

96

The value of magnetic variation on a chart changes with time. This is due to:
a

Movement of the magnetic poles, causing an increase

Increase in the magnetic field, causing an increase

Reduction in the magnetic field, causing a decrease

d
decrease

97

Movement of the magnetic poles, which can cause either an increase or a

Isogonal lines converge as follows:


a

At the North Magnetic Pole

At the North and South Magnetic and Geographical Poles

At the North and South Magnetic Poles

At the Magnetic equator.

98 Position A is 55N 30W. Position B is 54N 20W. The Great Circle track from A to B,
measured at A, is 100T. What is the Rhumb line bearing from A to B?
a
284T

104T

090T

100T

99 An aircraft departs a point 0400N 17000W and flies 600 nm South, followed by 600
nm East, then 600 nm North, then 600 nm West. What is its final position?
a

0400N 17000W

0400N 169 58.1 W

b
d

0600S 17000W

0400N 170 01.8W

100 Why are the detector units of slaved gyro compasses usually located in the aircraft
wingtips?

With one detector unit in each wingtip, compass deviations are cancelled out.

To isolate the detector unit from the aircraft deviation sources.

To isolate the detector unit from the Earths magnetic field.

To reduce turning and acceleration errors.

NAVIGATION QUESTIONS

101 At 1000 hours an aircraft is on the 310 radial from a VOR/DME, at 10 nautical miles
range. At 1010 the radial and range are 040/10 nm. What is the aircrafts track and
groundspeed?
a

0800 / 85 knots

0850 / 85 knots

0800 / 80 knots

0850 / 90 knots

102 A straight line is drawn on a North Polar Stereographic chart joining Point A (7000N
06000W) to Point B (7000N 06000E). What is the initial track direction (going eastwards) of
the line at A ?
a

090 T

030 T

120 T

330 T

103 What is the maximum possible value of Dip Angle?


a

66

180

104 Given:
Magnetic heading 311
Drift is 10 left
Relative bearing of NDB 270

90

45

What is the magnetic bearing of the NDB measured from the aircraft?
a

221

208

211

180 .

105 What is the Standard Time in Hawaii when it is 0600 ST on the 16th July in
Queensland, Australia?
a

1100 ST on the 15th

2000 ST on the 15th

1100 ST on the 16th

1000 ST on the 17th

106 What is the weight in kilogrammes of 380 US Gallons at a Specific Gravity of 0.78?
a

1123

2470

5434

543

107 You leave A to fly to B, 475 nm away, at 1000 hours. Your ETA at B is 1130. At 1040,
you are 190 nm from A. What groundspeed is required to arrive on time at B?
a

317 knots

330 knots

342 knots d

360 knots

108 Which of the following differences in latitude will give the biggest difference in the
initial Great Circle track and the mean Great Circle track between two points separated by
10 change of longitude?
a

60N and 60S

60N and 55N

30S and 30N

30S and 25S

109 An aircraft is at 5530N 03613W, where the variation is 15W. It is tuned to a VOR
located at 5330N 03613W, where the variation is 12W. What VOR radial is the aircraft on?
a

348

012

165

015

110 The wind velocity is 359/25. An aircraft is heading 180 at a TAS of 198 knots. (All
directions are True). What is its track and groundspeed?
a

180 223

179 220

180 220

179 223

111 An aircrafts compass must be swung:


a
If the aircraft has been in the hangar for a long time and has been moved
several times.
b

If the aircraft has been subjected to hammering.

Every maintenance inspection

After a change of theatre of operations at the same magnetic latitude.

112 Civil Twilight occurs between:


a

Sunset and 6 below the horizon

6 and 12 below the horizon

12 and 18 below the horizon

Sunrise and sunset

113 What is the dip angle at the South Magnetic Pole?


a

90

180

114 What is a line of equal magnetic variation?


a

An isocline

An isogonal

An isogriv

An isovar

64

115 What is the reason for seasonal changes in climate?


a

Because the Earths spin axis is inclined to the plane of its orbit round the Sun

Because the distance between the Earth and the Sun varies over a year

c
the year
d

Because the Earths orbital speed round the Sun varies according to the time of

Because of the difference between the Tropical Year and the Calendar Year

116 What is the Rhumb Line track from A (4500N 01000W) to B (4830N 01500W)?
a

315 T

330 T

215 T

150 T

117 What is the effect on the Mach number and T AS in an aircraft that is climbing with
constant CAS?
a

Mach number decreases; TAS decreases

Mach number increases; TAS remains constant

Mach number increases; TAS increases

Mach number remains constant; TAS increases

118 The direct reading magnetic compass is made aperiodic (dead beat) by:
a

using long magnets

b
keeping the magnetic assembly mass close to the compass point and using
damping wires
c

pendulous suspension of the magnetic assembly

using the lowest acceptable viscosity compass liquid

119 An island is observed to be 15 to the left.


The aircraft heading is 120 (M), variation 17 (W).
The bearing ( T) from the aircraft to the island is:
a

268

302

088

122

120 An aircraft is flying around the Earth eastwards along the 60N parallel of latitude at a
groundspeed of 240 knots. At what groundspeed would another aircraft have to fly
eastwards along the Equator to fly once round the Earth in the same journey time?
a

600 knots

240 knots

480 knots

120 knots

121 If it is 0700 hours Standard Time in Kuwait, what is the Standard Time in Algeria?
a

0500 hours

0900 hours

1200 hours

0300 hours

122 If variation is West; then:


a

True North is West of Magnetic North

Compass North is West of Magnetic North

True North is East of Magnetic North

Magnetic North is West of Compass North

123 At what latitude does the maximum difference between geodetic and geocentric
latitude occur?
a

45

60

90

124 At what times of the year does the length of the hours of daylight change most
rapidly?
a
Solstice

Spring Equinox and Autumn Equinox b

Summer Solstice and Winter

c
Solstice

Spring Equinox and Summer Solstice d

Autumn Equinox and Winter

125 Given: Aircraft height = 2500 feet, ILS GP angle = 3, at what approximate distance
from the threshold can you expect to intercept the glide-path?
a

8.0 nm

14.5 nm

13.1 nm

7.0 nm

126 Convert 70 metres/see into knots.


a

136 knots b

36 knots

146 knots

54 knots

127 In which of the following projections does a plane surface touch the Reduced Earth at
one of the Poles?
a

Gnomic

Stereo graphic c

Lamberts

Direct Mercator

128 Which of the following conversions from True to Compass is the correct one?
T

130

2W

132

-1

131

130

2E

132

-1

133

130

2W

132

-1

133

130

2E

132

-1

133

129 Your position is 5833N 17400W. You fly exactly 6 nm eastwards. What is your new
position?
a

5833N 17411.5W

5833N 17355W

5833N 17340W

5833N 17348.5W

130 TAS = 240 knots. Track is 180T. The relative bearing from an NDB is 315R at 1410.
At 1420 the bearing has changed to 270R. What is your distance from the NDB at 1420?
a

40 nm

50 nm

True Track

352

Variation

11W

Deviation

-5

Drift

10 R

60 nm

70 nm

131 Given:

What is Heading (C?


a

078 C

346 C

358 C

025 C

132 What is the definition of EAT?


a Estimated on-blocks arrival time
airfield

b Estimated time overhead the destination

c Estimated initial approach fix time d Estimated final approach fix time

133 Given that the value of ellipticity of the Earth is 1/297 and that the semi-major axis of
the Earth, measured at the axis of the Equator is 6378.4 Km, what is the semi-major axis of
the Earth measured at the axis of the Poles?
a

6399.9 Km

6356.9 Km

6378.4 Km

6367.0 Km

134 On a chart, meridians at 43N are shown every 10 degrees apart. This is shown on the
chart by a distance of 14 cm. What is the scale?
a

1: 2,000,000

1: 4,000,000

1: 5,000,000

1: 6,000,000

135 On a Transverse Mercator chart, scale is exactly correct along the?


a Equator, parallel of origin and prime vertical

meridian of tangency

c datum meridian and meridian perpendicular to it.


equator.

prime meridian and the

136 How do Rhumb lines (with the exception of meridians) appear on a Polar
Stereographic chart?
a

concave to the nearer pole

convex to the nearer pole

an ellipse round the pole

straight lines

137 What is the value of convergence on a polar stereographic chart?


a

1.0

0.866

0.5

138 At 0422 you are 185 nm from a VOR at FL 370. You need to descend at a mean
descent rate of 1800/min to be at FL 80 overhead the VOR. Your groundspeed in the level
cruise is currently 320 knots. In the descent your mean G/S will be 232 knots. What is the
latest time to commence descent?
a

0437

0441

0444

0451

139 Given: Heading 165(M), Variation 25W, Drift 10 R, G/S 360 knots. At A your
relative bearing to an NDB is 325R. Five minutes later, at B, the relative bearing is 280R.
What is the True Bearing and Distance from B to the NDB?
a

060T 40nm

105T 30nm

060T 30nm

105T 40nm

140 What is the diameter of the Earth?


a

40000 km

12732 km

21600 km

6366 km.

141 An aircraft on the Equator accelerates whilst traveling westwards. What will be the
effect on a direct reading compass?
a

Indicates an increase in heading

No change

c
North

Indicates a decrease in heading

Indicates an apparent turn to the

142 An aircraft flies 100 st mile in 20 minutes. How long does it take to fly 215 nm?
a

50 mins

37 mins

57 mins

42 mins

143 What is the duration of civil twilight?


a
From the moment when the centre of the sun is on the sensible horizon until the
centre reaches a depression angle of 6 from the sensible horizon.
b
From the moment when the tip of the sun disappears below the sensible horizon until
the centre reaches a depression angle of 6 from the sensible horizon.
c
From the moment when the centre of the sun is on the visual horizon until the centre
reaches a depression angle of 6 from the sensible horizon.
d
From the moment when the tip of the sun disappears below the visual horizon until
the centre reaches a depression angle of 6 from the sensible horizon.

144 What is the shortest distance between Point A (3543N 00841E) arid Point B (5417N
17119W)?
a

5400 nm

6318 nm

6557 nm

6000 nm

145 Scale on a Lambert conformal chart is:


a

constant along a line of latitude

constant everywhere

146 Given: TAS = 375

Trk = 335T

constant along a line of longitude


d

correct at the parallel of origin

W/V=340T/50

What is heading and Groundspeed?


a

335T

322

335T

318

336T

326

333T

326

147 Lines of latitude on a chart are always:

Great Circles

Small Circles except for the Equator

Vertices

Meridians

148 On a Lambert chart, the constant of the cone is .78585. What is the parallel of
tangency?
a

5102

5136

5115

5148

149 On which chart projection is it not possible to show the North Pole?
a

Direct Mercator

Transverse Mercator

Lamberts
Polar Stereographic

150 You are at FL 150 and the SAT is -5C. You are over an airport with an elevation of
720 feet.
The QNH is 1003.

Assume 27 feet = 1HPa.

What is your true height?


a

14300 feet

15300 feet

14700 feet

15600 feet

151 What is the formula for Conversion Angle?


a

Change of longitude x Sine latitude

Change of longitude x Sine mean longitude

Change of longitude x Sine mean latitude

Change of longitude x Cosine latitude

152 On the Polar Stereographic projection, a Great Circle appears as:


a

a straight line

a curve which becomes more near to a straight line as the latitude increases

a curve convex to the nearer pole

d
latitude

a curve which can be concave or convex to the nearer pole, depending on the

153 An aircraft departs Guam (13N 145E) at 2300 Standard Time on 30th April. Flight
Time to Los Angeles, California, USA (34N 118W) is 11 hours 15 minutes. What is the
California Standard Time of arrival? Assume Summer Time is being kept.
a

1015 ST

30 Apr

1715 ST

01 May

1015 ST

01 May

1715 ST

30 Apr

(NB the Standard time Difference for Guam is 10 hours not given in our version of the
Air Almanac, but the right page will be available in the exam).

154 What rate of descent is required to maintain a 3.5 glideslope at a groundspeed of 150
knots?
a

850 fpm

800 fpm

600 fpm

155 What is the meaning of the term standard time?


a

It is another term for UTC

It is the time zone system applicable only in the USA.

It is an expression for local mean time.

875 fpm

It is the time set by the legal authorities for a country or part of a country.

156 On 27 Feb at 52S 040E sunrise is a 0243UTC. On the same day at 52S 035W the
time of sunrise is?
a
0743 UTC
0543 UTC.

0243 UTC

2143 UTC

157 A compass swing is performed in order to correct for?


a

acceleration

deviation

variation

158 Isogonals are lines of equal:


a

compass deviation

wind velocity

b
d

magnetic variation
pressure

159 On a Direct Mercator chart, a rhumb line appears as a:


a

small circle concave to the nearer pole

curve convex to the nearer pole

160 Given:
IAS 120 kt
FL 80
OAT +20C
What is the TAS?

b
d

straight line
spiral curve

aperiodicity

141 kt

102 kt

120 kt

132 kt

161 The distance between two waypoints is 200 NM.


To calculate compass heading the pilot used 2E magnetic variation instead of 2W.
Assuming that the forecast W/V applied, what will the off track distance be at the second
waypoint?
a

14 NM

7 NM

0 NM

162 Given:
True Course 300
Drift 8R
Variation 10W
Deviation -4
Calculate the compass heading.

322

306

163 Given:
True track 180
Drift 8R
Compass Heading 195
Deviation -2

278

294

21 NM

Calculate the variation.

21W

25W

5W

9W

164 Given the following:


Magnetic heading: 060
Magnetic variation: 8W
Drift angle: 4 right
What is the true track?

064

056

072

048

165 An aircraft was over Q at 1320 hours flying direct to R.


Given:
Distance Q to R

016 NM

True air speed

480 knots

Mean wind component out

-90 kt

Mean wind component back

+75 kt

Safe endurance

10:00 HR

The distance from Q to the Point of Safe Return (PSR) is:

2370 NM

2290 NM c

1510 NM

1310 NM

166 Given:
Half way between two reporting points the navigation log gives the following
information:
TAS 360 kt
W/V 330/80 kt
Compass heading 237
Deviation on this heading -5
Variation 19W
What is the average ground speed for this leg?

403 kt

354 kt

373 kt

360 kt

167 When visually navigating, you cross 2 parallel roads approximately at right angles to
track, about 1 nm apart. The time difference between crossing these roads can be used to
derive:
a

track

drift

groundspeed

heading

168 The angle between the true great-circle track and the true rhumb-line track joining
the following points: A (60S 165W) and B (60S 177E) at the place of departure A, is?
a

15.6

5.2

7.8

169 Given: Runway direction 083 (M), Surface W/V 035/35kt. Calculate the effective
headwind component.
a

24 kt

27 kt

31 kt

34 kt

170 Given: For take-off an aircraft requires a headwind component of at least 10 kt and
has a cross-wind limit of 35 kt. The angle between the wind direction and the runway is 60.
Calculate the maximum and minimum allowable wind speeds.
a

20 kt and 40 kt

15 kt and 43 kt

12 kt and 38 kt

18 kt and 50 kt

171 From the departure point, the distance to the point of equal time is:
a

proportional to the sum of ground speed out and ground speed back

inversely proportional to the total distance to go

inversely proportional to ground speed back

inversely proportional to the sum of ground speed out and ground speed back

Appendix C to Gen Nav Feedback

Course
/

Line

No

Time

Track
(T)

HDG
W/V

(T)

HDG
VAR

(M)

POSITIO
CAS/
N

FROM TO

FL/

MACH OAT

TAS GS DIST TIME ETA

180/

101
270
5

050/4
0

7E

210

105
180
0

320/5
0

5W

175

-20

300

160/

-10

480

360/

112
090
5

140/6
0

121
360
0

315/7
0

10E

M 0.78

124
330
5

240/3
0

17W

150

135
070
5

020/6
0

11W

M 0.84

10W

M 0.82

-40

300

310/

-35

600

100/

-10

275

390/

55

495

ANSWERS

1=C

31=C

61=A

91=C

121=A

151=C

2=C

32=D

62=B

92=C

122=C

152=B

3=B

33=C

63=A

93=C

123=B

153=D

4=D

34=C

64=B

94=B

124=A

154=D

5=C

35=D

65=C

95=A

125=A

155=D

6=A

36=C

66=B

96=D

126=A

156=A

7=A

37=A

67=D

97=B

127=B

157=B

8=B

38=B

68=A

98=A

128=C

158=B

9=C

39=C

69=A

99=C

129=D

159=B

10=C

40=C

70=C

100=B

130=A

160=A

11=A

41=A

71=B

101=B

131=C

161=A

12=A

42=B

72=B

102=B

132=C

162=B

13=A

43=A

73=A

103=C

133=B

163=A

14=B

44=C

74=A

104=A

134=D

164=B

15=A

45=D

75=C

105=A

135=B

165=B

16=C

46=B

76=B

106=A

136=A

166=A

17=A

47=A

77=D

107=C

137=B

167=C

18=B

48=D

78=C

108=B

138=C

168=D

19=C

49=B

79=D

109=B

139=C

169=A

20=D

50=C

80=C

110=A

140=B

170=A

21=C

51=C

81=A

111=B

141=B

171=D

22=B

52=B

82=C

112=A

142=A

23=C

53=D

83=D

113=B

143=D

24=B

54=C

84=A

114=B

144=A

25=D

55=C

85=C

115=A

145=A

26=B

56=A

86=D

116=A

146=C

27=A

57=D

87=D

117=C

147=B

28=C

58=C

88=A

118=B

148=D

29=D

59=B

89=B

119=C

149=A

30=B

60=C

90=B

120=C

150=C

Arunaksha Nandy

Share this:

Facebook2

LinkedIn

Twitter

Tumblr

Pinterest1

Reddit

Pocket

Google

More

Like this:
Related
Units of Distance, Speeds (Air Speeds) for navigationJuly 20, 2015In "DGCA"
Communications (Questions) in RadiotelephonySeptember 29, 2015In "Radio Telephony"
ATPL/ CPL Navigation Questions(3)November 12, 2015In "Airlines Exam"
Leave a comment
Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *
Comment

Name *

Email *

Website

Post Comment

Notify me of follow-up comments by email.

Notify me of new posts by email.

Post navigation

Aviation Phraseology for last Question in RTR Paper

Flight Director Systems & EFIS

ATPL/ CPL Navigation Questions(3)

THE EARTH

1. Which of the following statements is true of a great circle?

a) It is the path radio waves that travel over the Earth


b) The smaller arc of it represents the shortest distance between two points on the Earth
c) Its plane passes through the center of the Earth
d) All of these

2. Which of the following statements is false of a small circle?

a) A radio wave never follows a small circle path


b) The smaller arc of it does not represent the shortest distance between two points on the Earth
c) Its plane does not pass through the center of the Earth
d) All lines of latitude are small circles

3. The latitude of a place is its angular distance:

a) N/S of the Equator to a maximum of 180 N/S


b) E/W of the Equator to a maximum of 90 E/W
c) N/S of the Equator to a maximum of 90 N/S
d) E/W of the Equator to a maximum of 180 E/W

4. The dlat and dlong between A (6433S 12036W) and B (1027N 11324E)
is:

dlat

dlong

a)

7500

12600

b)

5406

0712

c)

7500

0712

d)

5406

12600

5. Which of the following statements is false about a rhumb line?


1. a) It is a line of constant direction on the Earths surface
2. b) All lines of latitude Rhumb lines but not great circles

3. c) All meridians are Rhumb lines and semi great circles


4. d) If the Rhumb line bearing of A from B is 090(T), the Rhumb line bearing of
B from A is 270(T)

6. Which of the following statements about Earth convergency is false?

a) It is the angle that any two meridians converge on the Earth


b) It is the angle that a great circle bearing changes as it passes across two meridians
c) The angle of Earth convergency between meridians at the Equator is dlong
d) The angle between two meridians at the pole is dlong

7. The formula for Earth conversion angle is:


a) 2 x Earth Convergency
b) dlong x sine Mean Latitude
c) dlong x sine Mean Latitude
d) dlong x cosine Mean Latitude

8. Which of the following statements about departure is false?

a) It is measured in nautical miles


b) It is the distance E/W between two meridians
c) Its formula is dlong x sine lat
d) Its value at the Equator is dlong converted to minutes of arc

9. C is in the same hemisphere as D. The Great Circle bearing of D from C is


044(T) and of C from D is 220(T). The hemisphere of C and D, and the
Rhumb line track from C to D are:

Hemisphere
a) Northern
b) Southern

Rhumb Line C to D
040
042

c) Southern

044

d) Northern

046

10.The Great Circle track from A (2000N 1000W) to B (4000N 17500E)


is 060(T). The Great Circle track from A to B is:

a) 240(T)
b) 245(T)
c) 250(T)
d) 230(T)

11.Calculate the convergency of meridians between 30North 175East and


30North 165West to the nearest whole degree

a) 5
b) 10
c) 17
d) 9

12.A is at 5500N 15100W and B at 5500N 16253W. what is departure?

a) 584 NM

b) 397 NM
c) 567 NM
d) 409 NM

13.Consider the following statement on the shape of the Earth:

a) The diameter of the Earth is the same at all latitudes


b) The longest diameter is between the poles
c) It is slightly flattened at the poles
d) The diameter at the Equator is about 60 NM longer than the diameter between poles

14.Consider the following statement on the longitude:

a) Longitude is stated in degrees upto 360


b) The value of longitude will never exceed 90
c) The largest value of longitude is 180
d) The largest value of change of longitude is 90

ATPL/ CPL Navigation Questions


DIRECTIONS, MAGNETISM AND SPEED
1. Directions are stated:

a) As a reference direction and a number of degrees


b) In degrees with reference to True North when plotted with reference to the latitude/longitude
grid on a chart
c) In degrees in a 360 system, starting out clockwise from the reference direction
d) All 3 answers are correct

2. The angular difference between Compass North and Magnetic North is:

a) Variation
b) Deviation
c) Inclination
d) Magnetic Correction

3. The angular difference between the geographical meridian and magnetic


meridian running through the same position is:

a) Variation
b) Deviation
c) Inclination
d) Magnetic Correction

4. Given Variation 6E, Deviation 4W, Heading 136True. What is the


compass heading?

a) 130
b) 138
c) 134
d) 126

5. Variation in a position is 13W, and True track is 136. Consider the


following statements:

a) The compass track is 149


b) The magnetic track is 149

c) Looking North from this position, ther Magnetic North pole seems to be locatedto the east of
the true north pole
d) The position most likely is located at northern latitudes and on eastern latitudes

6. In the areas close to the magnetic poles, magnetic compasses are not to any
use in air navigation, mainly because:

a) The field strength of the Earths magnetic field is at its weakest in this area
b) The distance from the Magnetic Equator is too long
c) The horizontal component of the Earths magnetic field is too weak
d) The inclination is insufficient in these areas

7. The red end of a direct reading compass needle will point:

a) North and upwards in the northern hemisphere


b) North and upwards in the southern hemisphere
c) South and downwards in the southern hemisphere
d) South and upwards in the southern hemisphere

8. Dip is the angle between:

a) The H and Z components measured from the vertical


b) The Z component and the earths magnetic field measured upwards
c) The H and Z components measured from the horizontal
d) The H component and the earths magnetic field measured from the horizontal

9. True Heading is 355(T), Variation is 12W, Compass Heading is 002(C). The


magnetic heading of the aircraft is - and the deviation is

a) 343(M)

7W

b) 343(M)

19E

c) 007(M)

5W

d) 007(M) 5E

10.Compass Heading is 237(C), magnetic heading is 241(M) with the variation


12W:

a) Deviation is 4W and True North is east of Compass North


b) Deviation is 4E and Compass North is west of True North
c) Deviation is 4W and Magnetic North is east of Compass North
d) Deviation is 4E and True North is west of Compass North

THE TRIANGLE OF VELOCITIES

1. Consider the following statements:

a) The exact length of a 1 of arc is longer at high altitude than at sea level, when the arc is
observed from the centre of the Earth
b) In any position on the surface of the Earth, the length of 1 of arc East/West is equal to the
length of 1 of arc North/South in the same position on a perfect sphere
c) The exact length of a 1 of arc varies a little from position to position because the Earth radius
vary
d) All 3 statements are correct

2. Given True course 300, Drift 8R, Variation 10W, Deviation -4. Calculate
compass heading?

a) 306
b) 322
c) 294
d) 278

3. 1 Nautical Mile equals:

a) 1855 metres
b) 6076 feet
c) 0.869 Statute Mile
d) 3281 Yards

4. Given Drift angle 4R, Magnetic Variation 8W, Magnetic Heading 060. What
is the true track?

a) 072
b) 064
c) 048
d) 056

5. 265 US-GAL equals: (Specific gravity 0.80)

a) 862 kg
b) 895 kg
c) 940 kg

d) 803 kg

6. Kilometre is defined as:

a) The mean length of a 1/40000 part of the Equator


b) A 1/10000 part of the meridian length from Equator to the pole
c) 0.621 Statute Mile
d) 0.454 Nautical Mile
1. Construct the triangle of velocities showing the following data: TH 305, TAS
135 kt W/V 230/40, Period of time from 1130 to 1145. What is the track in this
period of time?

a) 310
b) 290
c) 322
d) 316

8. Given TAS 110 kt, True heading 020, Actual wind 330(T)/36 kt. Calculate
the drift angle and GS.

a) 15 Left 97 kt
b) 15 Right 97 kt
c) 17 Right 91 kt
d) 17 Left 91 kt

9. Construct the triangle of velocities showing the following data: TH 305, TAS
135 kt W/V 230/40, Period of time from 1130 to 1145. What is the GS in this
period of time?

a) 130 kt

b) 135 kt
c) 145 kt
d) 97 kt

10.Flying on a true heading of 207, TAS is 158 kt, W/V is 310/25. Calculate true
track.

a) 190
b) 215
c) 207
d) 198

11.Given TAS 290 kt, True heading 070, Actual wind 010(T)/40 kt. Calculate
the drift angle and GS.

a) Drift angle 8 Left, GS 273 kt


b) Drift angle 7 Right, GS 260 kt
c) Drift angle 7 Right, GS 273 kt
d) Drift angle 7 Left, GS 273 kt
ATPL/ CPL Navigation Questions
CHARTS

1. If an earth distance of 100NM is represented on a chart by a line 7.9 inches


long, the length of a line in inches representing 50 km is:

a) 2.00
b) 2.13
c) 2.18

d) 2.20

2. A what distance in mm would 2 fixes taken 20 minutes apart appear on a 1:1


000 000 Scale chart if the GS was 180 kt.

a) 108
b) 96
c) 111
d) 103

3. A Mercator has a scale of 1:6 000 000 at the Equator. How many statute
miles are represented by 5 inches at 60S?

a) 948
b) 474
c) 237
d) 711

4. A straight line drawn on a chart measures 5.827 inches and represents 148
km. The chart scale is:

a) 1:500 000
b) 1:1 000 000
c) 1:1 500 000
d) 1:2 000 000

5. On a constant scale chart 1.28 inches represents 88 NM. The scale is:

a) 1:2 000 000


b) 1:5 000 000
c) 1:100 000
d) 1:1 500 000

6. On a Mercator chart the distance between 60N 017W and 60N 019W is 8
inches. The chart distance between 00N/S 017W and 00N/S 019W would
be:

a) 4 inches
b) 8 inches
c) 16 inches
d) 9.24 inches
1. The scale of a chart is 1:730 000. How many cm on the chart are equivalent
to 37 NM on the Earth?

a) 3.2
b) 0.3
c) 9.4
d)10.6

8. The scale of a chart is 1:500 000. How many inches on the chart are
equivalent to 127 km on the Earth?

a) 100
b) 10
c) 18.5
d)24.5

9. A straight line on a chart of 9 inches is equivalent to 432 NM on the


Earth. The chart scale is:

a) 1:2 000 000


b) 1:2 500 000
c) 1:5 000 000
d) 1:3 500 000

10.A straight line on a chart of 25.4 cm is equivalent to 137 NM. What is the
scale?

a) 1:1 000 000


b) 1:500 000
c) 1:1 500 000
d) 1:2 000 000

11.The scale of a chart is 1:185 320. A straight line drawn on this chart is 15
cm. What is the equivalent length of this line on the Earth in NM?

a) 25
b) 30
c) 15
d) 45

12.The scale of a chart is 1:729 600. A straight line drawn on this chart is 8.9
cm. What is the equivalent length of this line on the Earth in NM?

a) 29

b) 35
c) 45
d) 60
1. Chart convergency on a Mercator chart is:

a) dlong x Sin Lat


b) dlong x Cos Lat
c) zero
d) dlong x Cos parallel of origin

14.On a Mercator chart, chart convergency equals earth convergency:

a) At the parallel of origin


b) At the Equator
c) At the parallel of tangency
d) All of these

15.On a Mercator chart the scale at 60 south compared with the scale at 30
south is:

a) Greater
b) The same
c) Smaller
d) 1/3 smaller

16.On a Mercator chart a rhumb line is:

a) A curve concave to the Pole


b) A curve concave to the Equator
c) A straight line
d) A curve concave to the central meridian

17.On a Mercator chart a great circle between two points is:

a) A straight line
b) A curve convex to the nearer pole
c) A curve convex to the Equator
d) Always on the equatorial side of the rhumb line between them

18.The scale of a Mercator chart is 1:5 000 000 at its parallel of origin. What is
the scale at 60 North?

a) 1:10 000 000


b) 1:7 500 000
c) 1:5 000 000
d) 1:2 500 000

19.The scale of a Mercator chart is 1:4000 000 at 30 North. What is the scale at
60 North?

a) 1:200 000
b) 1:230 000
c) 1:695 000
d) 1:800 000

20.The scale of a Mercator chart is 1:730 000 at the Equator. What is the chart
length to the nearest inch between meridians 3 degrees apart at 481/2
North?

a) 2
b) 18
c) 180
d) 20

21.On a Mercator chart the rhumb line track from A (20S 20W) to B (40S
40W) is 220(T). What is the great circle bearing of A from B?

a) 035(T)
b) 215(T)
c) 045(T)
d) 225(T)

22.On a Lamberts chart, chart convergency equals earth convergency:

a) At the Equator
b) The Poles
c) At the standard parallels
d) At the parallel of origin

23.On a Lamberts chart, the true appearance of a great circle (other than a
meridian) is:

a) A straight line

b) A curve convex to the nearer pole


c) A curve convex to the parallel of origin
d) A curve concave to the parallel of origin

24.On a Lamberts chart, the published scale is correct:

a) At the Equator
b) The Poles
c) At the standard parallels
d) At the parallel of origin

25.On a Lamberts chart, scale is least:

a) At the Equator
b) The Poles
c) At the standard parallels
d) At the parallel of origin

26.The chart convergency on a Lamberts conical conformal chart is stated as


being equal to the change of longitude x 0.5. A straight line track drawn on
this chart from A (30S 107W) to B (4250S 125W) measures 224(T) at A.
Calculate:

The approximate rhumb line track from A to B is:


a) 233 (T)
b) 228 (T)

c) 219 (T)
d) 215(T)

27.The Great Circle bearing of A from B is:

a) 054(T)
b) 045(T)
c) 036(T)
d) 049.5(T)

28.The constant of the cone of a Lamberts conical conformal chart is given as


0.75. A straight line drawn from C (45N 60W) to E in 10W passes through
D in 28W. The direction of the track is 055(T) at C. Calculate:

The direction of the straight line track C to E, measured at D, is:


a) 067(T)
b) 079(T)
c) 055(T)
d) 031(T)

29.The approximate rhumb line track from C to D is:

a) 067(T)
b) 079(T)
c) 055(T)
d) 043(T)

30.The approximate rhumb line track from C to E is:

a) 098(T)
b) 036(T)
c) 093(T)
d) 074(T)
1. The approximate rhumb line track from D to E is:

a) 062(T)
b) 086(T)
c) 074(T)
d) 072(T)

32.A straight line track is drawn on a polar stereographic chart from A (85N
80W) to B (85N 130E). Calculate:

The track angle (T) A to B measured at A is:


a) 345
b) 015
c) 165
d) 195

33.The track angle (T) B to A measured at B is:

a) 345
b) 015
c) 165

d) 195

34.The track angle (T) A to B measured at 180E/W is:

a) 065
b) 085
c) 245
d) 155

35.The longitude at which the track angle A to B measures 270(T) is:

a) 035E
b)155E
c) 035W
d) 155W

36.For gyro steering purposes a polar stereographic chart is overlaid with


a rectangle grid aligned with the Greenwich (prime) meridian. The Track
angle, expressed in degrees grid, when the aircraft is at position 82N 113W
on a track of 205(T) is:

a) 318
b) 113
c) 092
d) 138
1. For gyro steering purposes a polar stereographic chart is overlaid with
a rectangle grid aligned with the Greenwich (prime) meridian. The Track
angle, expressed in degrees grid, when the aircraft is at position 70N 60E
on a track of 090(T) is:

a) 150
b) 030
c) 330
d) 210

38.An aircraft at DR position 66N 29W obtains an ADF bearing of 141


(relative) from an NDB at position 64N 22W. The aircraft heading is
352(M), the variation at the NDB is 15W and at the aircraft 12W.
Calculate:

The bearing to plot, on a Mercator chart, from the meridian passing through the NDB:
a) 124
b) 298
c) 304
d) 308

39.The bearing to plot, on a polar stereographic chart, from the meridian passing
through the NDB:

a) 121
b) 294
c) 301
d) 308

40.The bearing to plot, on a Lamberts conformal conic chart having standard


parallels at 37N and 65N, from the meridian passing through the NDB is:

a) 126

b) 306
c) 295
d) 304

41.An aircraft at DR position 63S 47E obtains an RMI reading of 228 from a
VOR at position 67S 39E. The aircraft heading is 025(M), the variation at
the VOR is 15E and at the aircraft 11E. Calculate:

The position line to plot, on a Mercator chart from the meridian passing through the VOR is:
a) 055
b) 056
c) 059
d) 066

42.The position line to plot, on a polar stereographic chart from the meridian
passing through the VOR is:

a) 048
b) 059
c) 063
d) 033

43.The position line to plot, on a Lamberts conformal conic chart having a


parallel of origin at 55S, from the meridian passing through he VOR is:

a) 048
b) 059
c) 063

d) 033

44.A Lamberts conformal conic chart and a transverse Mercator chart covering
the same area of the Earths surface both have nominal scale of 1:3 000 000.
The standard parallels of the Lamberts chart are at 25N and 45N and the
central meridian of the transverse Mercator chart is 40E. Using this
information, answer the following:

At position 50N 40E:


a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale
b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

45.At position 25N 50E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

46.At position 30N 30E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

47.At position 45N 40E:

a) The Lambert chart has the larger scale


b) The transverse Mercator has the larger scale
c) Both charts have the same scale
d) Insufficient information is given to answer this question

48.On a polar stereographic chart, Earth convergency is correctly represented:

a) At all points on the chart


b) At the Equator
c) At the pole
d) At the meridian of tangency

49.On a polar stereographic chart, a straight line is drawn from 70S 115W
to 70S 125E. Using this information, answer the following:

The initial direction (T) of this straight line track is:


a) 330
b) 060
c) 130
d) 210

50.The final direction (T) of this straight line track is:

a) 210
b) 330

c) 060
d) 130

51.The longitude of the most southerly point on the straight line track is:

a) 175W
b) 180E/W
c) 175E
d) 165W

52.On the chart, the most southerly point on this straight line track will appear
to be:

a) At a lower latitude than 80S


b) At 80S
c) At a higher latitude than 80S
d) At a higher latitude than 85S

53.For gyro steering purposes a polar stereographic chart is overlaid with


a rectangle grid so that 000(G) coincides with 000(T) along the 060E
meridian.The track angle expressed in (G), at position 80N 10W with the
aircraft making good a track of 300(M), local magnetic variation 25E, is:

a) 255
b) 335
c) 345
d) 035

1. With an aircraft on a heading of 125(T) the relative bearing of an NDB is


determined as 310. Given that the difference in longitude between the
aircraft and the NDB is 6 and that the mean latitude between the aircraft
and NDB is 68S, answer:

The bearing to plot, on a Mercator chart, from the meridian passing through the NDB is:
a) 252
b) 255
c) 258
d) 261

55.The bearing to plot, on a polar stereographic chart, from the meridian passing
through the NDB is:

a) 255
b) 261
c) 252
d) 249

56.The bearing to plot, on a Lamberts conformal conic chart (parallel of origin


48S), from the meridian passing through the NDB is:

a) 249
b) 255
c) 250
d) 259

SOLAR SYSTEM and TIME

1. What is the UTC/GMT of sunset in Hong Kong (2219N 114 12E) on 24 th


July?

a) 0221 25th July


b) 1044 24th July
c) 1107 24th July
d) 0244 25th July

2. Given the ST of the beginning of Evening Civil Twilight at Port Stanley


(Falkland Islands) (5142S 57 51W) on 23rd July?

a) 1613 23rd July


b) 1713 23rd July
c) 1539 23rd July
d) 1629 23rd July

3. The times of sunrise, sunset as given in the Air Almanac are with reference
to:

a) LMT for the observers meridian


b) ST for the observers meridian
c) GMT for the observers meridian
d) UTC for the observers meridian

4. In the Air Almanac twilight tables, the symbol //// means that:

a) Twilight lasts all day

b) The sun remains continuously above the horizon


c) The sun remains continuously below the horizon
d) Twilight lasts all night or day

5. The LMT of sunrise at Lat 0030S Long 4720W on 4 th December is:

a) 0451 LMT
b) 0640 LMT
c) 0256 LMT
d) 0545 LMT

6. The LMT of the beginning of evening civil twilight at Lat 5000S Long
12015E on 25th December is:

a) 1641 LMT 25th December


b) 2055 LMT 25th December
c) 0412 LMT 26th December
d) 2011 LMT 25th December
1. The LMT of sunrise at 3500S 2800E on 4 th December is:

a) 0410
b) 0439
c) 0621
d) 0652

8. The GMT of Evening Civil Twilight at 4619N 03534E on 26 th July is:

a) 1751
b) 2238
c) 1754
d) 2016

9. The duration of Morning Civil Twilight at 6648N 09526W on 2 nd December


is:

a) 94 min
b) 90 min
c) 84 min
d) 80 min
1. The Standard Time of sunset at Hong Kong (2220N 114 10E) on 31 st Dec
is:

a) 0126 1st Jan


b) 1726 31st Dec
c) 1749 31st Dec
d) 1759 31st Dec

11.The LMT of the end of Evening Civil Twilight in latitude 7100N on 19 th Dec is:

a) 1330
b) 1301
c) 1350
d) 1400

12.For an observer in the Norfolk Island (2900S 16755E) the LMT of sunset
on 16th July is:

a) 1900
b) 1720
c) 1742
d) 1927
1. For an observer in the Lord Howe Island (3131S 15904E) the LMT of
sunrise and the duration of morning civil twilight on the 6 th August are:

SUNRISE

DURATION

a) 0519

34 min

b) 0647

25 min

c) 0503

34 min

d) 0644

25 min

14.The duration of Evening Civil Twilight at Moscow (5600N 03723E) on the


14th December was:

a) 13
b) 37
c) 47
d) 42
1. A flight departed Boston (Massachusetts, USA, 4222N 07100W), two
hours after sunset on 16th September. The flight time to Brussels (Belgium,
5055N 00431E) was 6 hours 30 minutes. The UTC time and date of
departure was:

a) 16th 2023
b) 17th 0053

c) 17th 0823
d) 16th 1224

16.The UTC of sunrise at 5400N 01000E on 10 th July is:

a) 0308
b) 0224
c) 0300
d) 0344

17.In Hong Kong (2219N 11412E), the UTC of sunset on 24 th July is:

a) 0221 25th July


b) 1044 24th July
c) 1107 24h July
d) 0244 25th July

18.For an observer at 6250N 04857W on the 7 th July, the local time of sunrise
is:

a) 0208
b) 0524
c) 2252
d) does not rise

19.An observer in Korea (3800N 13300E) watches the sunset on 13 th August


local date. The duration of evening civil twilight would be:

a) 25 min
b) 38 min
c) 27 min
d) 20 min
1. An observer in Korea (3800N 13300E) watches the sunset on 13 th August
local date. The time of sunset expressed as GMT would be:

a) 0350 14th
b) 0350 13th
c) 1006 13th
d) 1006 14th

21.An observer in Korea (3800N 13300E) watches the sunset on 13 th August


local date. The time of sunset expressed as Standard Time would be:

a) 1906 14th
b) 1858 14th
c) 1858 13th
d) 1906 13th

22.In its path around the Sun, the axis of the Earth has an inclination:
23.a) Varying between zero and 2327 with the plane of the path
24.b) Of 6633 with the plane
25.c) Varying with the season of the year
26.d) Of 2327 with the plane of Equator

23.The Suns declination is on a particular day 12.00 S. Midnight Sun may this
day be observed:

a) North of 7800S
b) South of 7800S
c) At 7800S only
d) North of 7800N

24.The term sidereal is used:

a) To describe how two positions of heavenly bodies are located sideways on the sky
b) To describe conditions with reference to the moon
c) To describe a situation or relationship concerning the stars
d) To describe the time interval between two successive transits of the real apparent Sun at the
same meridian

25.The mean Sun:

a) Is the middle position of the Sun


b) Has a declination equal to the apparent Sun
c) Moves with constant speed along the celestial Equator
d) Is only of interest to users of astronomical navigation

26.A day at a place as measured in local mean time starts:

a) When the mean sun transits the meridian of the place in question
b) When the mean sun transits the Greenwich meridian

c) When the mean sun transits the anti meridian of the place in question
d) When the mean sun transits the 180E/W meridian

27.The inclination of the Earths axis of rotation with the plane of the ecliptic:

a) Is causing the variation of length of the day during a year


b) Is stable throughout the year
c) Is causing the seasons, summer and winter
d) All 3 answers are correct

28.As seen from an observer on the surface of the Earth:

a) The sun is in a fixed position relative to the stars


b) The stars will seem to move from west to east during a year
c) The suns position relative to the stars is fixed throughout the year
d) The apparent sun is always in the plane of the ecliptic

29.If the Mean Sun moves 121 30 along the Equator, that equals:

a) 20 hours 10 minutes
b) 9 hours 15 minutes
c) 6 hours 20 minutes
d) 8 hours 06 minutes

30.The direction of the Earths rotation on its axis is such that:

a) Observed from the point above the North Pole, the rotation is counterclockwise

b) An observer on the surface of the Earth always will face west when observing sunrise
c) Any point on the surface of the Earth will move eastward
d) Any point on the surface of the Earth will move westward

31.When the Suns declination is northerly:

a) It is winter on the Northern Hemisphere


b) The sunrise occurs earlier at southern latitudes than northern latitudes
c) The daylight period is shorter on the Southern Hemisphere
d) Midnight sun may be observed at the South Pole

32.The length of an apparent solar day is not constant because:

a) The Earths speed in its orbit varies continuous, due to the orbit being elliptical
b) The Earths speed of rotation is not the same at all latitudes
c) The Suns declination is not constant
d) The Earth is moving with constant speed around the Sun

33.By the term transit of a heavenly body it is understood that:

a) The body is moving


b) The body is passing the meridian of the observer or another specified meridian
c) The body is passing the anti meridian of the observer
d) The body is at the same celestial meridian as another body

34.Atmospheric refraction:

a) Causes the sunrise and the sunset to occur earlier


b) Causes the sunrise and the sunset to occur later
c) Causes the sunrise to occur later and the sunset to occur earlier
d) Causes the sunrise to occur earlier and the sunset to occur later

35.When approaching the International Date Line from East longitude, you:

a) Should be prepared to increase your date by 1


b) Should increase your date by an extra date at the first midnight you experience
c) Should be prepared to decrease your date by 1
d) Should not change date at the first midnight you experience

36.The duration of twilight:

a) Will in the period around the Equinoxes increase as you approach the Equator from North or
South
b) Is generally longer in positions at high latitudes than in positions at lower positions
c) Is independent of the suns declination and only depends on the observers latitude and
longitude
d) Is longer in the morning than in the evening because of the refraction in the atmosphere
ATPL/ CPL Navigation Questions

PRACTICAL NAVIGATION

1. A ground feature is observed in line with the wing tip whilst flying at 300 kt
GS. After 5 minutes the same feature is 7 behind the wing tip. What is the
aircraft distance from the ground feature? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 230 NM

b) 214 NM
c) 150 NM
d) 164 NM

2. A fix indicates you are 70 NM from a ground feature that is in line with the
wing tip. After 2 minutes the same feature is 3 behind the wing tip. What is
your Ground Speed? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 125 kt
b) 154 kt
c) 105 kt
d) 251 kt

3. A fix indicates you are 52 NM from a ground feature that is in line with the
wing tip Whilst flying at 210 knots. After 1 minute how many degrees behind
the wing will You see the ground feature? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 4
b) 7
c) 8
d) 3

4. A ground feature is observed in line with the wing tip whilst flying at 180 kt
GS. After 4 minutes the same feature is 5 behind the wing tip. What is the
aircraft distance from the ground feature? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 155 NM
b) 166 NM
c) 144 NM

d) 170 NM

5. A fix indicates you are120NM from a ground feature that is in line with the
wing tip. After 2 minutes the same feature is 2 behind the wing tip. What is
your Ground Speed? (Use 1:6 rule)

a) 100 kt
b) 110 kt
c) 130 kt
d) 120 kt
1. Kerry (5210.9N 00932.0W) is 41 NM DME. Galway (5318.1N 00856.5W) is 50
NM DME. What is your position? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 5242N 00827W
b) 5255N 00819W
c) 5219N 00809W
d) 5230N 00834W

7. What is the mean true track and distance from the BAL VOR (5318N 00627W)
to CRN VOR/DME (5318N 00856W)? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 272 89
b) 272 88
c) 270 89
d) 270 88

8. You are on the 239 radial 36 NM from SHA VOR (5243N 00853W). What is
your position? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 5212N 00915W

b) 5212N 00930W
c) 5215N 00930W
d) 5220N 00939W

9. What is the radial and DME distance from SHA VOR (5243N 00853W) to
Birr Airport (5304N 00754W)? (Use chart E(LO)1)

a) 068M 40NM
b) 068M 42NM
c) 060M 40NM
d) 060M 42NM

10.What is the average track (T) and distance between WTD NDB (N5211.3
W00705.0) and FOY NDB (N5234.0 W00911.7)? Refer to E(LO)1

a) 277 83 NM
b) 286 81 NM
c) 294 80 NM
d) 075 81 NM

RELATIVE VELOCITY

1. Aircraft A is at FL350, TAS 440 kt with an equivalent wind component (EWC)


of -50 kt and estimating TLA NDB at 0815. Aircraft B is on the same track at
FL310, TAS 480 kt with a wind component of -30 kt and estimating TLA at
0820. The time at which aircraft B will overtake A is:

a) 0848

b) 0844
c) 0852
d) 0856

2. Aircraft A is at FL350, M0.82, OAT -55C with an EWC of +25 kt and


estimating POL NDB at 1020. Aircraft B is on the same track at FL310, M0.82,
OAT -46C with a wind component of +40 kt and estimating POL at 1022.
The two aircraft will pass at:

a) 244 NM from POL


b) 232 NM from POL
c) 343 NM from POL
d) 299 NM from POL

3. Aircraft A passes over VOR A at 1110 enroute to VOR B 1232 NM away at


a Groundspeed of 490 kt. Aircraft B reports VOR B at 1123 on a reciprocal
track with a Ground speed of 380 kt. The aircraft will pass at:

a) 1243
b) 1246
c) 1237
d) 1241

4. The distance from A the aircraft in Question 140 will pass is:

a) 637 NM
b) 743 NM
c) 595 NM

d) 768 NM

5. An aircraft is cruising at M0.84, FL330, OAT -43C with a wind component of 30 kt and reports waypoint G at 2230. ATC instructs the pilot to reduce
speed to M0.76 at his discretion to be at waypoint H, 350 NM away, not
before 2320.

The latest time at which the speed reduction can be made is:
a) 2230
b) 2237
c) 2233
d) 2241

6. Aircraft J is overhead YQT NDB at 0800 with a groundspeed of 300 kt.


Aircraft K is following on the same track with a groundspeed of 360 kt and is
overhead YQT at 0825. The time at which the aircraft will be 100 NM apart is:

a) 0832
b) 0825
c) 0850
d) 0856

7. The aircraft in Question 143 are routing to VBI VOR 196 NM from YQT.
The minimum groundspeed reduction that aircraft K must make at YQT to be
120 NM behind J when J passes VBI is:

a) 115 kt
b) 21 kt
c) 63 kt
d) 39 kt

8. Use the following information to answer Questions 145, 146, 147: Aircraft A is
overhead waypoint 1 at 2330 enroute to waypoint 2, 750 NM away at
a groundspeed of 490 kt. Aircraft B checks waypoint 1 on the same track but
4000 ft lower at 2335 with a groundspeed of 535 kt. If no speed changes are
made the distance from waypoint 1 that the aircraft will pass is:

a) 487 NM
b) 505 NM
c) 525 NM
d) 543 NM

9. Aircraft B is instructed to reduce speed to 490 kt to cross waypoint 2, 2


minutes after aircraft A. The latest time for speed reduction is:

a) 0003
b) 0008
c) 0013
d) 0018

10.At the point of speed reduction the separation of the two aircraft is:

a) 20 NM
b) 14 NM
c) 18 NM
d) 16 NM

11.Aircraft A, FL330, TAS 400 kt, EWC -30 kt, estimates point X at 1620.
Aircraft B, FL 370, TAS 515 kt, EWC -40 kt, estimates point X at 1625. Both
aircraft are on the same track. The time aircraft B will pass aircraft A is:

a) 1637
b) 1642
c) 1647
d) 1629

12.An aircraft with a GS of 300 kt is overhead J at 1100. This aircraft is followed


by another at the same FL, GS 360 kt, which arrives overhead J at 1125. Both
aircraft are following the same route to K, 220 NM from J. The first time the
aircraft will be 120 NM apart is:

a) 1130
b) 1125
c) 1144
d) 1151

13.Aircraft X, GS 315 kt is over point C at 1200 on the direct track to D, 300 NM


from At 1224 aircraft Y, flying the same route at the same FL, but with GS 405
kt passes over point C. At what time will the separation between the aircraft
be 90 NM?

a) 1225
b) 1248
c) 1245
d) 1224

14.An aircraft with a GS of 285 kt is overhead P at 0630. Another aircraft follows


this aircraft, GS 318 kt, and reports overhead P 15 minutes later. Both aircraft
are following the same track.
Using the above information, answer the
following question and Question 152. The time at which the distance between
the aircraft has reduced to 40 NM is:

a) 0727
b) 0742
c) 0651
d) 0636

15.How far from P will the slower aircraft be at this time?

a) 270 NM
b) 342 NM
c) 160 NM
d) 28 NM
1. On a flight from A to B, distance 720 NM, an aircraft whose GS is 360 kt
is instructed to delay arrival by nine minutes. It is decided that this will
be accomplished by reducing the GS by 60 kt. The minimum distance from B
that this reduction can be carried out is:

a) 54 NM
b) 45 NM
c) 270 NM
d) 324 NM

17.On a flight from E to F, distance 720 NM, an aircraft, GS 250 kt is instructed


to delay arrival by six minutes. This is to be accomplished by reducing the GS
to 200 kt. The minimum distance from F that this reduction can be carried out
is:

a) 130 NM
b) 25 NM
c) 100 NM
d) 125 NM

18.Aircraft A, TAS 402 kt, EWC -30 kt, estimates point Q at 2348. Aircraft B, TAS
455 kt, EWC -40 kt, estimates point Q at 2333. Both aircraft are on the same
track. Using the above information, answer the following question and
Question 156. What is the latest time aircraft A must reduce TAS to 366 kt so
as to arrive overhead Q, 20 minutes after aircraft B?

a) 2241
b) 2301
c) 2313
d) 2257

19.How far from Q is aircraft B at the time calculated above:

a) 248 NM
b) 138 NM
c) 1,473 NM
d) 218 NM

20.An aircraft TAS 500 kt, HWC 78 kt, is requested not to cross position X, 630
NM away, before 1754. The request is made at 1612. What is the latest time
at which the aircraft TAS can be reduced to 400 kt, in order to cross position X
at 1754:

a) 1703
b) 1624

c) 1701
d) 1654

POINT OF SAFE RETURN AND POINT OF EQUAL TIME

1. Calculate the distance to the PSR from origin, point A, given:

Safe endurance

2.5 hours

TAS

200 kt

W/V

200/25 kt

Track A B

047

1. a) 200 NM
2. b) 212 NM
3. c) 224 NM
4. d) 246 NM

2. Calculate the distance to the PSR from origin, point A, given:

Safe endurance

3 hours 54 minutes

Ground speed out

180 kt

Ground speed home

200 kt

1. a) 370 km

2. b) 390 NM
3. c) 370 NM
4. d) 390 km

3. Calculate the time to the PSR, given:

Safe endurance

3 hours

Ground speed out

170 kt

Ground speed home

185 kt

1. a) 1 hour 36 min
2. b) 1 hour 34 min
3. c) 1 hour 32 min
4. d) 1 hour

4. Calculate the distance to PSR, given:

Safe endurance

11 hours

Ground speed out

478 kt

Ground speed home

575 kt

1. a) 3871 NM
2. b) 2781 NM

3. c) 2500 NM
4. d) 2871 NM

5. Calculate the time and distance to the PSR given a turbojet aircraft requiring

statutory reserve of 30 minutes given:


COAT

-47C

Mach

0.78

W/C Out

+ 140 kt

Trip distance

5100 NM

Total endurance 11 hours 30 minutes

3. a) 2625 NM 8 hours
4. b) 2225 NM 2 hours
5. c) 2265 NM 8 hours
6. d) 2100 NM 2 hours

6. How does the wind component affect the PSR? An increase or decrease in
wind component will - the distance to the PSR?

1. a) Increase
2. b) Decrease
3. c) Not change
4. d) Increase or decrease

7. Calculate the distance to PSR, given:

TAS

450 kt

EWC Out

-100 kt

Safe endurance 6 hours

1. a) 1283 NM
2. b) 1085 NM
3. c) 1283 NM
4. d) 1085 NM

8. Calculate the time to the PSR, given:

Safe endurance

6 hours 30 minutes

Ground speed out

225 kt

Ground speed home

145 kt

2. a) 2.54 hours
3. b) 2 hours 54 min
4. c) 30 hours
5. d) 2 hours 10 minutes

9. Calculate the distance to the PSR, given:

Safe endurance

10 hours

TAS

454 kt

W/V at 25 000ft

270/100 kt

Heading Out

090

Flight Level

250

1. a) 2100 NM
2. b) 2160 NM
3. c) 2200 NM
4. d) 2222 NM

10.What is the distance to PSR, given:

Safe endurance

4 hours

Ground speed out

140 kt

Ground speed home

90 kt

1. a) 193 NM
2. b) 219 NM
3. c) 229 NM
4. d) 232 NM

11.An aircraft departs point A to route via points B and C to get to D. Given the
data below, where does the PSR lie in relation to A?

Sector

Distance

TAS

W/C

A-B

1000 NM

500 kt

+50

B-C

1500 NM

500 kt

-200

C-D

50 NM

500 kt

Zero

Total (ATC) Endurance 8 hours


Required Reserves

30 minutes

1. a) 1635 NM
2. b) 1729 NM
3. c) 1808 NM
4. d) 1812 NM

12.As far as the critical point is concerned, the PET always moves wind.

1. a) Into
2. b) Out of
3. c) Because of
4. d) Around

13.An aircraft is in the cruise having departed point A at 1200 hours UTC.
Aircraft systems are functioning properly. A passenger, however, has suffered
from a major heart attack, and has not responded well to onboard treatment.
The pilot has the option to use an (on-track) en-route alternate, and must
decide whether to return to base or continue to the alternate. The pilot must
therefore decide where he is in relation to PET for this type of emergency, in
order to expedite a landing as soon as possible. Fuel is sufficient for any
reasonable course of action. At what time will he calculate the PET should
be / should have been reached?

Cruise speed (TAS) outbound

400 kt

Highest available safe cruise speed

430 kt

Distance from base to en-route alternate 2000 NM


Equivalent Wind Speed (out / in)
(home)

+90 kt
-90 kt

1. a) 1259 UTC
2. b) 1435 UTC
3. c) 1400 UTC
4. d) 1337 UTC

14.Given the following information, calculate the time taken to reach the PET:

A to B is 500 NM
TAS is 300 kt
EWC out / on -25 kt, back +30 kt

1. a) 30 minutes
2. b) 45 minutes
3. c) 59 minutes
4. d) 61 minutes

MAGNETISM AND COMPASSES

Magnetic Compass

1. Deviation due to vertical soft iron varies:

1. a) Directly with the tangent of the dip angle


2. b) Directly with H, the horizontal component of the Earths magnetic field
3. c) Directly with Z, the vertical component of the Earths magnetic field
4. d) Inversely with the tangent of the dip angle

2. Coefficient B is the sum of:

1. a) P and cZ
2. b) P and fZ
3. c) Q and cZ
4. d) Q and fZ

3. Coefficient C is the sum of:

a) P and fZ
b) P and cZ
c) Q and cZ
d) Q and fZ

4. A change in the deviation of the magnetic compass will occur with an


increase of magnetic latitude because:

a) Residual dip increase with an increase in latitude

b) The Z component of the Earths magnetic field increase with an increase in latitude
c) Horizontal hard iron increases with an increase in latitude
d) Horizontal hard iron decreases with an increase in latitude

5. When carrying out a compass swing, you must align:

a) True North and magnetic North


b) Magnetic North and compass North
c) True North and compass North
d) Compass lubber line and compass North

6. In a turn from 045 to 315 through North, in the Southern hemisphere,


the movement of the magnet system of a direct reading compass when
viewed from above, and the effect of liquid swirl caused by the movement,
are:

Magnet System

Liquid Swirl

a) Clockwise Reduce
b) Anti-clockwise Reduce
c) Clockwise Increase
d) Anti-clockwise Increase
1. During deceleration after a landing on a northerly runway in the
Northern Hemisphere, the magnetic compass will indicate:

1. a) An apparent turn to the North

2. b) No apparent turn
3. c) An apparent turn to the South
4. d) A heading fluctuation about 360

8. What are the primary methods of achieving Horizontality, Sensitivity,


and Aperiodicity in a Direct Reading Compass?

Horizontality

Sensitivity

Aperiodicity

1. a) Low CG Jeweled pivot Wires in the fluid


2. b) Low CG Large magnets Immerse in fluid
3. c) Strong magnets Immerse in fluid Damping filaments
4. d) High CG Jeweled pivot Damping filaments

9. If a turn is made from 130 to 230 with reference to a DGI, what will the DRC
read on initial roll out?

1. a) 230 in the Northern hemisphere


2. b) 210 in the Southern hemisphere
3. c) 210 in the Northern hemisphere
4. d) 250 in the Southern hemisphere

PRESSURE INSTRUMENTS AND RADIO ALTIMETERS

1. With reference to an altimeter, what will be the effect if the static source
becomes blocked during the climb:

1. a) It will indicate a large increase


2. b) It will progressively under read
3. c) It will indicate zero
4. d) It will progressively over read

2. If a servo altimeter has a quoted accuracy of 1 hPa, what is the accuracy at


FL 300 and FL390:

1. a) 70 ft and 105 ft
2. b) 70 ft and 83 ft
3. c) 47 ft and 83 ft
4. d) 47 ft and 105 ft

3. When flying an aircraft from an area of warm air to an area of cold air, the
altimeter will:

1. a) Under reads
2. b) Stays the same
3. c) Over reads
4. d) The instrument will act as a VSI

4. A vibrator may be fitted to an altimeter to overcome:

1. a) Aperiodicity

2. b) Frictional lag
3. c) Hysteresis
4. d) Horizontality

5. Lag in an IVSI is virtually eliminated by means of:

1. a) An accelerometer system
2. b) A vibrator
3. c) A bimetallic strip
4. d) A ceramic choke unit

6. A blockage occurs in the ram air source and drain hole, with the static source
open. The airspeed indicator in a non-pressurised aircraft will:

1. a) Read a little high


2. b) Act like an altimeter
3. c) Read a little low
4. d) Freeze at zero
5. An airspeed indicator has a leak in the circuit supplying pitot air, what will
be seen on the indicator:

1. a) Act as an altimeter
2. b) Over read
3. c) Under read
4. d) Remain affected

8. An ASI circuit consist of pressure sensors, the Pitot Probe measures:

1. a) Dynamic pressure
2. b) Total pressure
3. c) Total pressure and Static pressure
4. d) Static pressure

9. The CAS is obtained by applying to the IAS:

1. a) An instrument and position/pressure error correction


2. b) An instrument and density correction
3. c) A compressibility correction
4. d) A compressibility and density correction

10.The white arc on an ASI indicates:

1. a) Vso at the lower end and Vfe at the upper end


2. b) Vsi at the lower end and Vfe at the upper end
3. c) Vso at the lower end and Vno at the upper end
4. d) Vsi at the lower end and Vne at the upper end

11.Mach number is defined as the ratio of:

1. a) TAS to LSS
2. b) IAS to LSS
3. c) CAS to LSS
4. d) EAS to LSS

12.Which of the following instruments have a feed of pitot pressure:

I Altimeter
II ASI
III VSI
IV Mach meter
V ADC

1. a) All
2. b) II, III, IV and V
3. c) II, IV and V
4. d) II and IV
5. If the static vent becomes blocked during a descent:

I Altimeter will under read/Mach meter will under read


II VSI will indicate a climb/ASI will over read
III Mach meter will over read/VSI reduces to zero
IV ASI over reads/Altimeter over reads
V VSI indicates descent/Altimeter does not change

1. a) III and IV
2. b) I and V
3. c) III and V
4. d) II and I

14.A conventional Mach meter consists of:

1. a) An ASI with an altitude capsule


2. b) An ASI with a mach scale
3. c) An altimeter corrected for density
4. d) A VSI and altimeter combined

15.What does a Mach meter measure?

T = Total pressure, S = Static pressure, D = Dynamic pressure

1. a) T S/S
2. b) D S/S
3. c) D + S/T
4. d) D/T S

16.What are the inputs of the Air Data Computer:

I TAT
II SAT
III Angle of attack

IV Static pressure
V Dynamic pressure
VI Pitot pressure
VII Electric power

1. a) I, III, IV, VI and VII


2. b) I, II, III, V and VII
3. c) I, III, V and VI
4. d) II, IV and V

17.A modern radio altimeter uses the frequency band:

1. a) HF
2. b) VHF
3. c) SHF
4. d) UHF
5. Which is the operation frequency for a radio altimeter?

1. a) 430,000MHz
2. b) 4,300 MHz
3. c) 430 MHz
4. d) 4.3 MHz

19.A radio altimeter is:

1. a) Ground based and measures true height


2. b) Aircraft based and measures true altitude
3. c) Aircraft based and measures true height
4. d) Ground based and measures true altitude

20.The radio altimeter is used for accurate height indication on modern


transport aircraft between:

1. a) 50 ft and 2450 ft
2. b) 0 ft and 5000 ft
3. c) 50 ft and 5000 ft
4. d) 0 ft and 2500 ft

GYROS

1. An air driven DGI will have:

1. a) One degree of freedom and a horizontal axis


2. b) Two degrees of freedom and a vertical axis
3. c) One degree of freedom and a vertical axis
4. d) Two degrees of freedom and a horizontal axis

2. The properties of a gyroscopic flight instrument are:

I Rigidity
II Precession
III Inertia
IV Instability

1. a) I, II, III and IV


2. b) I and II
3. c) II and IV
4. d) I, II and III

3. The sources of error in a DGI are:

I Earth rate
II Transport wander
III Manufacture
IV Gimbal lock
V Rigidity
VI Precession

1. a) I, II, and III


2. b) I, II, III, IV, V, VI
3. c) I, II, III and IV
4. d) II, III, IV, V and VI

4. What will the drift rate of a frictionless gyro at a mean latitude of 30N
traveling from 30W to 36W in two hours if the latitude nut is set for 50N?

2. a) +2.5/hour
3. b) +5.5/hour
4. c) -5.5/hour
5. d) +11.0/hour

5. A Gyro used in a Rate of turn and bank indicator will have:

a) Two degrees of freedom and a horizontal spin axis


b) One degree of freedom and a horizontal spin axis
c) Two degrees of freedom and a vertical spin axis
d) One degree of freedom and a vertical
1. The needle and ball of a TBI are both displaced to the right, what condition
is shown:

1. a) A left turn with too much bank


2. b) A right turn with too little bank
3. c) A right turn with too much bank
4. d) A left turn with too little bank

7. What angle of bank is required for a Rate 1 turn for an aircraft traveling at
180 kt?

1. a) 10
2. b) 18
3. c) 25
4. d) 30

8. A Gyro used in an instrument which, provides roll and pitch information, has:

1. a) One degree of freedom and a horizontal spin axis


2. b) Two degrees of freedom and a horizontal spin axis
3. c) Two degrees of freedom and a vertical spin axis
4. d) One degree of freedom and a vertical spin axis

9. If an Aircraft carries out a 270 turn to the left, what will a classic AH
indicate?

1. a) Nose up, bank left


2. b) Nose down, bank left
3. c) Nose up, bank right
4. d) Nose down, bank right

10.A gravity erector system is used to correct the errors on:

1. a) An artificial horizon

2. b) A directional compass
3. c) A gyromagnetic compass
4. d) A turn indicator

BASIC RADIO PRINCIPLES

HF Transmission

1. The distance traveled by a radio wave in the direction of propagation during


one cycle is:

1. a) Frequency
2. b) Polarisation
3. c) Cyclic range
4. d) Wavelength

2. The speed of radio waves in free space is:

1. a) 30 million m/s
2. b) 161 800 m/s
3. c) 300 million m/s
4. d) 1860 NM/s

3. The frequency corresponding to a wavelength of 1.4 km is:

1. a) 214 MHz
2. b) 214 kHz
3. c) 116 Hz

4. d) 4.7 kHz

4. A wavelength of 3 cm is equivalent to a frequency of:

1. a) 3 GHz
2. b) 300 GHz
3. c) 100 MHz
4. d) 10 GHz

5. A radio aid operating on a frequency of 114.95 MHz would be in the:

1. a) VHF band
2. b) UHF band
3. c) MF band
4. d) SHF band

6. Radio work is confined to a spectrum of frequencies between 3 kHz and 300


GHz mainly because:

a) Very high power inputs are necessary at extremely long wavelengths


b) Large aerials are required at extremely high frequencies, coupled with problems of static and
attenuation of very long wavelengths
c) Atmospheric static affects very low frequencies also radio waves of extremely
short wavelengths are severely attenuated
d) Both a) and c)

1. Attenuation of radio waves is usually caused by:

1. a) Absorption
2. b) Scattering
3. c) Geometrical dispersion
4. d) Any or all of these

8. The process by which the amplitude of a radio carrier wave is varied in


sympathy with the amplitude & frequency of as audio wave is known as:

1. a) Frequency modulation
2. b) Pulse modulation
3. c) Phase modulation
4. d) Amplitude modulation

9. The bandwidth of a transmission is:

1. a) Twice the maximum frequency of the modulating audio wave


2. b) The width of one sideband
3. c) The difference between carrier and audio frequencies
4. d) Half the modulating frequency

10.The emission code for a VOR is:

1. a) A9W
2. b) F
3. c) A1A
4. d) A8W

11.The range at which ground waves can be received depends upon:

1. a) The frequency & power of transmission


2. b) Height of aerials and interference
3. c) Nature of terrain
4. d) All of the above

12.The principal source of attenuation in the ionosphere and of the refraction of


VLF waves during daylight is:

1. a) The D layer
2. b) The E layer
3. c) The F layer
4. d) All of these

13.Regarding HF communications, frequencies used by night are usually:

1. a) The same as daytime frequencies


2. b) Lower than daytime frequencies
3. c) Higher than daytime frequencies
4. d) Higher or lower depending on the strength of the ionosphere

14.Which of the following is attributed to VHF/UHF propagation?

1. a) Direct waves super-refraction


2. b) Direct waves ionosphere ducting
3. c) Ground waves ionosphere ducting
4. d) Sky waves D layer attenuation

15.If the power of a transmitter is quadrupled, the range effectively would:

1. a) Increase 1.4 times


2. b) Double
3. c) Quadruple
4. d) Remain the same

16.What is the wavelength of a VOR?

1. a) Metric
2. b) Decimetric
3. c) Heximetric

4. d) Centimetric

17.If the strength of a radio signal decreases away from the transmitter, this
effect is called:

1. a) Attenuation
2. b) Ducting
3. c) Refraction
4. d) Fading

18.What wavelength are used for NDB?

1. a) Hectometric
2. b) Metric
3. c) Centimetric
4. d) Decimetric

VHF DIRECTION FINDING

1. VDF for aeronautical use provides service in the frequency band:

1. a) 108 136 MHz


2. b) 118 137 MHz
3. c) 130 300 MHz

4. d) 108 118 MHz

2. The indicator of the ground VDF equipment responds to:

1. a) The carrier wave received


2. b) The identification transmitted from the aircraft
3. c) The voice modulated signal transmitted by the aircraft
4. d) The signal being reflected from the aircraft

3. If, when you are requesting a QDM from an airfield, you are offered a QGH, it
means?

a) The VDF unit is prepared to give you assistance during an approach to the airfield,
based on VDF bearings
b) The VDF service will be handled by a different VDF unit, operating on the same frequency
c) The bearing will only be accurate when the aircraft is flying above the QGH level
d) The service will be limited to bearings, no positions will be given by the DF station

4. A ground DF (VDF) station will normally provide the following bearings to


an aircraft in flight:

1. a) QTE/QDM
2. b) QUJ/QNH
3. c) QNE/QNH
4. d) QDR/QFE

NDB AND ADF

1. The basic information given by the ADF is:

1. a) The magnetic bearing from the aircraft to the NDB


2. b) The relative bearing from the aircraft to the NDB
3. c) The true great circle track from the NDB to the aircraft
4. d) The magnetic direction of the loop aerial with reference to the sense aerial

2. Which of the following statements regarding an aeronautical NDB is correct?

a) It operates in the MF/HF band


b) To overcome the limitations caused by line of sight propagation, high power transmitters
must be used
c) It is very simple, transmitter being required to transmit only a carrier wave
and identification
d) In Europe, most NDBs operate in the frequency band 455 1750 kHz

3. Which of the following is the ICAO allocated frequency band for ADF
receivers?

a) 108.0 MHz 117.9 MHz


b) 200 1750 MHz

c) 200 1750 Hz
d) 190 1750 kHz

4. Homing on an NDB:

a) Calls for an assessment of the drift


b) Is most effective in strong winds
c) Will in most situations result in frequent heading changes when approaching the NDB
d) Will result in passing the NDB along the planned track

5. Flying in the vicinity of CB clouds and using ADF:

a) The ANT position of the function switch can be used to listen for NDB ID
b) Strong static emitted from the CB may cause the ADF needle to deflect towards the CB
c) The static emitted from the CB during daytime will fade soon after you have passed it
d) All 3 answers are correct

6. An aircraft is flying on heading 330 and relative bearing to an NDB is 190. Calculate
QDR:

1. a) 360
2. b) 160
3. c) 340
4. d) 140

7. An aircraft is flying on heading 300, variation in the area 13W and the
realative bearing is 350. Calculate QDM:

1. a) 110
2. b) 290
3. c) 300
4. d) 150

8. The bearings from NDBs are least accurate at:

1. a) Midnight
2. b) Midday
3. c) Dawn and Dusk
4. d) The accuracy does not change during night or day

9. Fading of an ADF signal, together with a hunting needle, is indication of:

1. a) Quadrantal effect
2. b) Thunderstorm effect
3. c) Night effect
4. d) Mountain effect

VOR AND DOPPLER VOR

DVOR

1. The antenna polar diagram of a conventional VOR:

1. a) Is always directed toward the aircraft


2. b) Is like a figure of 8
3. c) Is a pencil beam
4. d) Rotates at 30 revolutions per second

2. The TO/FROM indicator of a VOR:

a) Tells whether you are now flying towards or from the VOR
b) Tells whether a track equal to the selected bearing will bring you to or away from the
VOR
c) Tells whether the deviation indicator shows that you should manoeuvre the aircraft towards or
from the CDI needle
d) Tells whether you should turn the aircraft towards or away from the CDI indication

3. In order to establish what radial you are on, you could:

a) Read the OBS when the CDI is centred and the TO/FROM is showing TO
b) Rotate the OBS until the CDI is centred and the TO/FROM indicator is showing FROM.
Then read the radial on the OBS
c) Turn the OBS to make the TO/FROM change from TO to FROM. The OBS is now indicating
the radial you are on
d) Turn the aircraft until the CDI is centred. The aircraft magnetic heading is now the reciprocal
of the radial you are on

4. The height of a VOR above MSL is HT(VOR) feet, and the aircraft is flying at
true altitude HT(a/c) feet. Which equation will show maximum range in NM of
reception

of this VOR?

a) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) + 1.25 times square root of HT(VOR)
b) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) + 1.25 times of HT(VOR)
c) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) 1.25 times square root of HT(VOR)
d) Max. range = 1.25 times square root of HT(a/c) 1.25 times of HT(VOR)

5. What degrades the accuracy of a VOR?

1. a) Static interference
2. b) Propagation errors due to uneven terrain
3. c) Night effect
4. d) Coastal effect

6. In a conventional VOR (CVOR), which element of the transmission uses


amplitude modulation and which uses frequency modulation?

1. a) The variable-phase and bearing use AM. The ATIS information is FM


2. b) The variable-phase is AM. The reference is FM
3. c) The reference and ATIS is AM. The variable-phase is FM
4. d) The reference is AM. The variable-phase is FM

7. An aircraft is required to approach a VOR station via the radial 340. Which of
the following indications should be seen on the VOR/ILS deviation indicator,
and what is the position of the TO/FROM indicator?

1. a) 340 with the TO flag showing


2. b) 340 with the FROM flag showing
3. c) 160 with the TO flag showing
4. d) 160 with the FROM flag showing

8. If using VOR bearing information beyond the published protection range,


errors could be caused by:

1. a) Interference from thunderstorms


2. b) Coastal refraction
3. c) Night effect
4. d) Interference from other transmitters

DISTANCE MEASURING EQUIPMENT

1. In the DME system:

1. a) The aircraft equipment is called a transponder


2. b) The receive and transmit frequency is always split by 63 MHz

3. c) The operation is similar to a primary radar system


4. d) The channels are referred to as X channels paired with VORs and Y
channels paired with ILS localisers

2. The airborne DME equipment will transmit pulse pairs at a comparatively high
PRF:

1. a) At all times, except when the panel control LO is operated


2. b) When the distance presented is above 50 NM
3. c) Whenever a stable signal is being received from the selected ground
station
4. d) When first switched on and after a channel selection

3. System, or beacon, saturation of the DME system:

a) Occurs when the aircraft DME set has been in operation for an extended period of time,
without being put into the STAND/BY mode
b) Occurs when many aircraft, being at along distance from the DME, are demanding a reply
c) May occur when more than 100 aircraft are demanding replies from a single ground
station
d) All 3 answers are correct

4. If a VOR station and a DME station, having different locations, are selected
to provide a fix:

1. a) Two sets, with separate frequency control, are required in the aircraft

2. b) Two positions, being ambiguous, will be presented


3. c) Two different IDs will have to be checked
4. d) All 3 answers are correct

5. Using modern DME equipment meant for general navigation use, the
accuracy expected is:

1. a) + 2 NM
2. b) + 5 NM or 0.25% of the slant range, whichever is greater
3. c) + 2 NM + 0.25% of the slant range, whichever is greater
4. d) + 2 NM + 3.0% of the slant range

6. How many aircraft will saturate a DME station?

1. a) 200 aircraft
2. b) 100 aircraft
3. c) 50 aircraft
4. d) 2700 aircraft

7. A DME transceiver does not lock on to its own reflections because:

1. a) The PRF of the pulse pairs is jittered


2. b) It used MTI
3. c) The interrogation and reply frequencies differ

4. d) The reflections will all fall within the flyback period

8. An aircraft is passing overhead a DME station at FL 240. What is the DME


indication?

1. a) 0 DME
2. b) 1 DME
3. c) 4 DME
4. d) 6 DME

INSTRUMENT LANDING SYSTEM

1. Consider the following statements on ILS:

a) An ILS approach may be flown if the localizer, glide path and marker beacons/DME are
operational
b) If the localizer is out of service, an ILS approach with increased decision height (DH) may be
carried out
c) ILS is the primary precision approach facility for civil aviation
d) When the pilot is reaching the decision height (DH) he may only continue the approach if both
localizer and glide path indications are within one dot from the centre positions

2. Which of the following frequencies does ILS use?

a) 112.10 MHz
b) 111.20 MHz
c) 108.45 MHz
d) 109.35 MHz

3. The ILS glidepath transmitter is located:

a) No more than 600 m from the localizer transmitter


b) About 150 m upwind from the threshold and about 300 m from the centre line of the runway
c) About 300 m upwind from the threshold and about 150 m from the centre line of the
runway
d) As close to the runway threshold as possible without causing an obstruction to aircraft

4. The glidepath transmitter operates on:

1. a) 36 VHF frequencies, paired with localizer frequencies


2. b) The frequencies 90 and 150 MHz
3. c) On frequencies found by multiplying the localizer frequency by 2
4. d) 40 frequencies from 329.15 MHz to 335.00 MHz

5. If the ILS monitoring equipment senses a shift or changes outside set limits in
the basic transmission:

1. a) The Tower Control will inform any inbound aircraft about the inaccuracy

2. b) The technicians on duty will switch on the stand/by ILS equipment


3. c) The pilot on ILS approach will be notified by the identification signal
disappearing
4. d) The transmissions on a Cat I ILS will be stopped within 6 seconds

6. The middle marker is identified by:

1. a) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 1300 Hz and an


amber light
2. b) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 800 Hz and an amber light
3. c) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 800 Hz and a white light
4. d) Audible alternate dots and dashes with tone 1300 Hz and a white light

7. What is the width of the localizer from full fly left through centre to full fly
right on the cockpit localizer indicator?

1. a) 10
2. b) 20
3. c) 5
4. d) 2.5

8. When flying outside the ILS published coverage area, you may expect:

1. a) Incorrect/false signals
2. b) Correct signals

3. c) Always fly up signal


4. d) Always fly down signal

MICROWAVE LANDING SYSTEM AND RADAR PRINCIPLES

1. In a primary radar system:

a) The aircraft plays the secondary role, just listening to the radar signals from the ground radar
b) All radio frequency energy is produced by the radar located at the radar site
c) The radar is primarily used for range finding
d) The radar is the primary aid for ATC

2. What governs the theoretical maximum range of primary radar?

1. a) Frequency
2. b) Wavelength
3. c) Pulse repetition frequency
4. d) Pulse width

3. Primary radar operates on the principle of:

1. a) Medium wave technique


2. b) Pulse technique

3. c) Doppler technique
4. d) None of the above

4. When dealing with radar the term PRF is used, PRF is measured in which unit?

1. a) Number of pulses per minute


2. b) Number of oscillations per second
3. c) Number of pulses per second
4. d) Number of oscillations per minute

5. Consider the following statements on primary radar:

a) Precipitation will reduce the range of radars operating on low frequencies to larger extent than
radars operating on higher frequencies
b) Target shape and size has little influence on the radar maximum range
c) Temperature inversions may increase the maximum detection range
d) The most common radar indicator is called an A scope

6. In order to achieve narrow beam width with a radar antenna of a set size:

a) The carrier frequency must be low


b) The PRF must be high
c) The pulse length must be kept short
d) The wave-length must be short

1. In a radar set the purpose of the TR switch is:

1. a) To change the whole set from receive mode to transmit mode


2. b) To protect the receiver while the pulse is transmitted
3. c) To set the time reference of the indicator
4. d) To secure that the Time of Return is registered

8. A radar system has a PRF that is 1200. Calculate the maximum unambiguous
range:

1. a) 125 NM
2. b) 135 NM
3. c) 68 NM
4. d) 250 NM

9. Long range surveillance radar may typically use a frequency of :

1. a) 1000 MHz
2. b) 600 MHz
3. c) 3000 MHz
4. d) 10 GHz

10.Why does the aircraft transponder system not respond to its own
transmissions when reflected from the ground?

a) Different frequencies are used 60 MHz apart


b) Pulse repetition frequency changed
c) The transponder system does not reply to its own reflected signals, but these responses are
rejected by the transponder system at the site
d) The aircraft signal is not reflected

11.Which combination of characteristics gives the best resolution in a primary


search radar?

1. a) Long pulse length and wide beam


2. b) Short pulse and wide beam
3. c) Long pulse and narrow beam
4. d) Short pulse length and narrow beam

12.The purpose of a radio transmitter is:

a) To produce a carrier wave with a constantly changing frequency


b) To produce a radio frequency electric current and deliver this energy to the antenna
c) To produce a carrier wave to the audio frequency output of the transmitter
d) All three answers are correct

GLOBAL NAVIGATION SATELLITE SYSTEMS

1. The most favoured type of GPS receiver for use in civil transport aircraft is:

1. a) The Five Satellite Receiver


2. b) The Multi Channel
3. c) The Multi Satellite Receiver
4. d) The Universal Receiver

2. One task of the control segment of the satellite navigation system


NAVSTAR/GPS is to:

a) Monitor the status of the satellites


b) Manufacture and launch satellites
c) Manipulate the signals of the selected satellites to reduce the precision of the position fix
(Selective availability SA)
d) Grant and monitor user authorisations

3. The clock in the GPS receiver is corrected to the GPS time system:

a) By synchronizing it with the time signal sent by the Master satellite


b) By mathematically adjusting the lines of position from four satellites to a perfect fix
c) Using the average of the time signal received from at least 3 satellites
d) Automatically as soon as signals from 1 satellite is received

4. The GPS satellites will complete an orbit in approximately:

1. a) 6 hours
2. b) 12 hours
3. c) 24 hours
4. d) 21 hours

5. GPS system satellites transmit their signals on two carrier waves 1575 MHz
and 1227 MHz and supply two possible codes accessible according to user
(civil or military). Commercial aviation uses:

1. a) Only the 1575 MHz carrier wave and two codes


2. b) Only the 1227 MHz carrier wave and one code
3. c) The two carrier waves and one public code
4. d) Only the 1575 MHz carrier wave and one code

6. In the NAVSTAR/GPS satellite system, receiver clock error:

1. a) Is negligible small because of the great accuracy of the atomic clocks in


the satellites
2. b) Is the biggest part of the total error and cannot be corrected
3. c) Can be minimized by synchronizing the satellite clock with the receiver
clock
4. d) Is corrected by using signals from four satellites

7. Differential GPS is a system that allows the GPS receiver to correct known
errors in the position calculations. Which errors are corrected?

1. a) Receiver clock error and receiver noise


2. b) Receiver noise
3. c) Receiver clock error, ephemeris satellite clock and ionosphere
delay
4. d) Ephemeris

AIRBORNE WEATHER RADAR

1. How many degrees will an AWR be pitched to establish whether a cloud is


level with the aircraft, assuming a 5 beamwidth?

2. a) + 2.5
3. b) 2.5
4. c) 0
5. d) 5

2. What are the advantages of using a slotted waveguide antenna in AWR?

1. a) More side lobes and concentrates the power in sharper beams


2. b) Less side lobes but the beams tend to be wider
3. c) More side lobes but the power is concentrated in sharper beams
4. d) Less side lobes and concentrates power in sharper beams

3. In AWR that has a colour cathode ray tube, the areas of greatest turbulence
are indicated on the screen by:

1. a) Iso-echo areas which are coloured black


2. b) Iso-echo areas which are coloured magenta
3. c) Blank Iso-echo areas where there is no colour
4. d) Large flashes of flashing red colour

4. The purpose of the contour circuit on a monochrome airborne weather radar


is to:

a) Indicate severe areas of CAT


b) Show areas with heavy precipitation as dark areas on the display surrounded by bright
returns
c) Disable the receiver swept gain function in order to achieve maximum amplification
d) Enable the radar to be used for terrain clearance

5. A frequency of AWR is:

1. a) 9375 MHz
2. b) 9375 kHz
3. c) 9375 GHz
4. d) 93.75 MHz

6. The main task of an AWR is:

1. a) To detect areas of potentially severe turbulence ahead of the


aircraft
2. b) To detect and present a radar picture of clouds with precipitation ahead of
the aircraft
3. c) To detect areas with strong winds ahead of the aircraft
4. d) To detect and relay to meteorological offices information on the weather in
the area ahead of the aircraft

FMS

You might also like