Some comments say that the north line must be on the letter after ‘from’... that sounds right but then I also seem to remember that ‘of’ can also indicate the starting point. I’m confused now
Thank you I have been through some videos but did not understand but your videos are easy small and clear to understand. Very good explanations....Please make videos on OL maps? Thank you
I agree, his demonstration is incorrect. The point that follows the word 'from' is where you are standing and where you will place the North line and calculate the angle moving in a.clockwise direction from North
What a fantastic description of how to take protractor bearings! I used with my students todasy just before their IGCSE Geography skills exams tomorrow!
anyone else here a german uboat captain? why they would put a 15 ton very horny T-Rex in charge of a military diesel submarine with zero experience and almost no training is BEYOND me.. but those trade ships aren't going to sink themselves. this is also a very good video! thanks! this was the reason my torpedos would miss and now they wont
You're lying ......the question says the bearing of A FROM B not B From A ......sir .....cause im a grade 10 learner and we were taught you look at your key words TO and From
Your interpretation of *bearing* is not correct. What you are describing is called the _azimuth_ angle. It is basically the direction of travel marked as an angle according to the compass markings to the cardinal directions each degree is associated. *Bearing* is a _four_ character explained direction beginning with either North or South, and the amount of degrees turned in the direction marked by the last character. A to B is then *S45°E* as the *bearing* first discussed. It’s _back azimuth_ is 315°, as well as stated in its *bearing* format *N45°W*