gahorn wrote:(On at least one occasion, I had visual contact with the ground and knew exactly where I was, but the DUAL GARMIN 530's in the Citation I was flying showed us almost 80 miles west of our actual position! Predictive RAIM was simply not available at that time/place. The KLN-88 onboard that airplane (which was actually not current on it's database) still showed us exactly where we were actually located.
I'm not ragging on loran (my Apollo 604 will be in my panel 'till its dying day), but I had the opposite experience on the way to Alaska in 2000. On a long leg from Dease Lake, BC, my first GPS (a $119 Magellan handheld hiking unit requiring manual way point entry and thrown up on top of the glareshield) put me on the centerline of the runway at Whitehorse while my panel mount Apollo 604 loran showed me 50 miles to the west WITHOUT a warning light.
BTW, I especially like the ADF-style display in the little Magellan unit. (A friend of my Dad's once said while going to school for the second time to learn the B-757/767 glass cockpit, "Just give me a needle pointing at something.")
gahorn wrote:(Lindbergh found Paris within 10 minutes of when he predicted, at night, before airfields and airfield lighting was common, with nothing more than a compass and a clock. Spatial orientation is still important.)
One of my proudest moments flying was navigating my little BC-12D T-craft with only a compass and a map from Tullahoma, TN to Lexington, TN and back and centering the destinations both ways. True, 105NM is a long way from 3300, and it was daytime over terra firma, but it still made me feel good. (The roads in Tennessee are so crooked, I actually heard a pilot from Ohio once comment that anyone who could navigate a straight line over Tennessee could do so over open water.)
I've gotten lazy in my old age and use GPS, Loran, VOR, and even ADF when there's a station within range, but I still keep the map open and my thumb on it. (Hey, gotta do something to keep all the brain cells firing!).
Miles