Should I set Track up or North up?

Tell you friend that my friend says it’s personal preference and that my friend doesn’t gaf how your friend does it.
 
Most folks set track up and the deranged who set north up. Then there are the folk who don't know how to change the display and just adapt to chance.
 
Yer friend is a curious little bastid isn’t he?
 
I use both...the EFIS is track up, and the iFly GPS is north up. I set the EFIS' range to 35 nm or so for the big picture, and set the other tighter in...helps with the position reports near an airport.
 
That's like asking if high wings or low wings are better
 
Sometimes North really is up and it just doesn't matter.
 
I always use North up my co-pilot uses track up. Go figure.
 
On the 430, North Up only. On the iPad/Foreflight, I've come around to track up during at least the enroute portions of flight.
 
I am one half of a married two-pilot (but one plane) household, on which this is a point of staunch disagreement.
It has led to some interesting....... discussions.



(North up)
 
Track up

Joshamee Gibbs from Pirates of the Caribbean said:
Aye, the compass doesn't point North. But we're not trying to find North, are we?
 
Hi.
You can answer your own question, with a question, do you want to be able to read what is on the charts?
Only amateur navigators set Track up, no good logical reason in aviation / navigation.
 
Hi.
You can answer your own question, with a question, do you want to be able to read what is on the charts?
Only amateur navigators set Track up, no good logical reason in aviation / navigation.

Ah...I like that argument. Whoever doesn't agree with what I do is an amateur. Got it. You win. :rolleyes:
 
Most times I keep the sectional right side up. Once in a while I turn it so it matches the ground.
 
North up on the tablet, track up on the MFD.
Crosswind/headwind on the PFD, vector on the MFD.
High wing in the morning, low wing in the evening.
 
Since approach uses north up on their scopes, it’s really best to keep north up in the aircraft. Helps with vectoring.
 
It seems to me that pilots with a grasp of how things work use North Up. I have noticed that a lot of younger pilots who grew up on tech will use Track Up.
Personally, I use Track Up on the 430W and North Up on the iPad moving map.
 
Hi.
You can answer your own question, with a question, do you want to be able to read what is on the charts?
Only amateur navigators set Track up, no good logical reason in aviation / navigation.
Whatever do you do when the data on screen is properly oriented for reading regardless of map orientation.
 
It seems to me that pilots with a grasp of how things work use North Up. I have noticed that a lot of younger pilots who grew up on tech will use Track Up.
Personally, I use Track Up on the 430W and North Up on the iPad moving map.
I stopped noticing what other guys do a long time ago. Stopped worrying about what other people thought long before that... I use track up for flying and North up for planning... on this airplane. It varies for me depending on which avionics I’m parked behind.
 
Here's what I do (in my car too):

If heading to a specific destination - track up.
If I'm just practicing or sightseeing with no particular destination - North up.
 
North up, the earth is not moving, you are, track up is backwards.

The Earth isn't moving? Who keeps spewing the crap about the Earth spinning once per 24 hours, tilting (seasons), and orbiting the moon once per year?

I suppose it's flat too.
 
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