Marine In marine navigation a "dead" reckoning plot generally does not take into account the effect of
currents or
wind. Aboard ship a dead reckoning plot is considered important in evaluating position information and planning the movement of the vessel. Dead reckoning begins with a known position, or
fix, which is then advanced, mathematically or directly on the chart, by means of recorded heading, speed, and time. Speed can be determined by many methods. Before modern instrumentation, it was determined aboard ship using a
chip log. More modern methods include
pit log referencing engine speed (
e.g. in
rpm) against a table of total displacement (for ships) or referencing one's indicated airspeed fed by the pressure from a
pitot tube. This measurement is converted to an
equivalent airspeed based upon known atmospheric conditions and measured errors in the indicated airspeed system. A naval vessel uses a device called a
pit sword (rodmeter), which uses two sensors on a metal rod to measure the electromagnetic variance caused by the ship moving through water. This change is then converted to ship's speed. Distance is determined by multiplying the speed and the time. This initial position can then be adjusted resulting in an estimated position by taking into account the current (known as
set and drift in marine navigation). If there is no positional information available, a new dead reckoning plot may start from an estimated position. In this case subsequent dead reckoning positions will have taken into account estimated set and drift. Dead reckoning positions are calculated at predetermined intervals, and are maintained between fixes. The duration of the interval varies. Factors including one's speed made good and the nature of heading and other course changes, and the navigator's judgment determine when dead reckoning positions are calculated. Before the 18th-century development of the
marine chronometer by
John Harrison and the
lunar distance method, dead reckoning was the primary method of determining
longitude available to mariners such as
Christopher Columbus and
John Cabot on their trans-Atlantic voyages. Tools such as the
traverse board were developed to enable even illiterate crew members to collect the data needed for dead reckoning.
Polynesian navigation, however, uses different
wayfinding techniques.
Air On 14 June, 1919,
John Alcock and Arthur Brown took off from Lester's Field in
St. John's,
Newfoundland in a
Vickers Vimy. They navigated across the
Atlantic Ocean by dead reckoning and landed in
County Galway,
Ireland at 8:40 a.m. on 15 June completing the first non-stop
transatlantic flight. On 21 May 1927
Charles Lindbergh landed in
Paris, France after a successful non-stop flight from the United States in the single-engined
Spirit of St. Louis. As the aircraft was equipped with very basic instruments, Lindbergh used dead reckoning to navigate. Dead reckoning in the air is similar to dead reckoning on the sea, but slightly more complicated. The density of the air the aircraft moves through affects its performance as well as winds, weight, and power settings. The basic formula for DR is Distance = Speed x Time. An aircraft flying at 250 knots airspeed for 2 hours has flown 500 nautical miles through the air. The
wind triangle is used to calculate the effects of wind on heading and airspeed to obtain a magnetic heading to steer and the speed over the ground (groundspeed). Printed tables, formulae, or an
E6B flight computer are used to calculate the effects of air density on aircraft rate of climb, rate of fuel burn, and airspeed. A course line is drawn on the aeronautical chart along with estimated positions at fixed intervals (say every half hour). Visual observations of ground features are used to obtain fixes. By comparing the fix and the estimated position corrections are made to the aircraft's heading and groundspeed. Dead reckoning is on the curriculum for VFR (visual flight rules – or basic level) pilots worldwide. It is taught regardless of whether the aircraft has navigation aids such as GPS,
ADF and
VOR and is an
ICAO Requirement. Many flying training schools will prevent a student from using electronic aids until they have mastered dead reckoning.
Inertial navigation systems (INSes), which are nearly universal on more advanced aircraft, use dead reckoning internally. The INS provides reliable navigation capability under virtually any conditions, without the need for external navigation references, although it is still prone to slight errors.
Automotive The first
automotive navigation systems pre-dated the availability of GPS and relied instead on dead reckoning-based systems. Honda's
Electro Gyrocator, launched in 1981, was the first commercially available car navigation system. It used inertial navigation systems, which tracked the distance traveled, the start point, and direction headed. Dead reckoning is today implemented in some high-end
automotive navigation systems in order to overcome the limitations of GPS/
GNSS technology alone. Satellite microwave signals are unavailable in
parking garages and tunnels, and often severely degraded in
urban canyons and near trees due to blocked lines of sight to the satellites or
multipath propagation. In a dead-reckoning navigation system, the car is equipped with sensors that know the wheel circumference and record wheel rotations and steering direction. These sensors are often already present in cars for other purposes (
anti-lock braking system,
electronic stability control) and can be read by the navigation system from the
controller-area network bus. The navigation system then uses a
Kalman filter to integrate the always-available sensor data with the accurate but occasionally unavailable position information from the satellite data into a combined position fix. ==Autonomous navigation in robotics==