In 1984 (still pre-GPS) my IFR check ride was an ILS, a VOR, and an NDB approach. My examiner loved NDB approaches. In fact, soon after take off, he asked me to use the ADF to navigate to an airport 40 nm away. When I got my CFII, 6 years later, I found out why. If you watched a pilot navigating with an ADF, you very quickly figured out if this guy "got it", or didn't. (ADF/NDB navigation required the pilot to figure out wind correction angles, appropriate corrections, reverse sensing, etc. A good ADF pilot could figure it all out in his head.). By the 1970's all the "direction finders" were "automatic" (the A in ADF) meaning an electric motor hooked up to the receiver was used to (electronically) rotate the antenna. Earlier radios (just DF, direction finders) the pilot had to rotate a crank (!) to rotate the antenna! ADFs were basically just AM radios (most could even bring in the AM radio stations, so you could listen to a ball game, or track to the local AM station at the destination. Shoot, we had an AM station that was right on the edge of SFO class B airspace (different name back then) and the ADF was very useful to make sure I didn't stray in where I didn't belong.) And they were very inexpensive, so almost all general aviation planes (except maybe 152 trainers) had one. They were terrible radios for actual IMC (if there was nearby lightning, they tended to point to it. In the rental plane I used, the examiner noted that the needle moved about 10 deg when he switched off the alternator! I peaked out from under the hood at him, and he just said, "You know, in the old days, that's all they had!"). NDB approaches were the very definition of "non-precision"!! GPS is light years ahead in accuracy, but, unfortunately, also light years ahead in cost (for this, I blame the FAA for letting their engineers go wild with the TSO requirements. I've seen one estimate that Garmin paid well over a million dollars in engineering costs to get their first TSO 129 on their pre-WAAS G430. And even then, the first two pages of the installation manual were full of leagalese about TSO tests they couldn't figure out how to do, and the alternative tests the FAA had allowed them to substitute, etc. BTW, did you know that GRT has an available option to display GPS approaches on some of its EFIS options? I think it's about $2K, plus their $500 GPS receiver designed for ADSB use. Unfortunately it is not TSO'd, and so is not legal to use under IFR. At least not yet.Bob, out of curiosity, how would one have done an IFR checkride back in the days prior to GPS, say the late 70's in a late 50's - mid 70's C152 equipped like the one at the flight school ? Perhaps the approach procedure was different then than now ?
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