Aren’t you the every ounce counts guy?
Sitting and charging isn’t an option for everyone.
I no longer do winter heli work in the northern Rockies (thank god). But when I did it was pre tablet for the company I was with, and I kept double AA’s against my base layer close to my pits or crotch as the pockets allowed. It’s a bit different when you are taking and naming lots of waypoints, tracks, checking boundary on unflagging blocks than when you simply put the cursor where you want to go and get the bearing to be fair.
To be fair the confusion seems to be more related to UTMs vs lat long than following the direction of an arrow that isnt mounted to the helicopter
Maybe I’m just getting old and don’t want to give up my 64s. Damn kids these days can’t even draw a map with a compass. Rabble rabble rabble
Maybe I just have a grudge against heli pilots. The guys from Canadian gave me a hat so I could pull chicks by talking loudly about auto rotating in bars and it didn’t work even once
Sitting and charging isn’t an option for everyone.
I no longer do winter heli work in the northern Rockies (thank god). But when I did it was pre tablet for the company I was with, and I kept double AA’s against my base layer close to my pits or crotch as the pockets allowed. It’s a bit different when you are taking and naming lots of waypoints, tracks, checking boundary on unflagging blocks than when you simply put the cursor where you want to go and get the bearing to be fair.
To be fair the confusion seems to be more related to UTMs vs lat long than following the direction of an arrow that isnt mounted to the helicopter
Maybe I’m just getting old and don’t want to give up my 64s. Damn kids these days can’t even draw a map with a compass. Rabble rabble rabble
Maybe I just have a grudge against heli pilots. The guys from Canadian gave me a hat so I could pull chicks by talking loudly about auto rotating in bars and it didn’t work even once
Last edited: