How do you account for consistent flight times and fuel use for eastward and westward navigation.
On a flat Earth model, eastward and westward circumnavigations should have drastically different flight times and distances. However, real-world data shows consistency regardless of direction. Anyone can measure this buy taking their own flight and measuring speed/time to calculate distance.
12 Replies
there is no flat earth model
:RIP:
No earth based coriolis effect
Davey
The Globe Terminator
Coriolis - The Globe Terminator
The complete absence of Earth-Based-Coriolis is a Screaming Testimony that the Earth is stationary confirming what everyone already knows - We Ain't MOVIN !
This is for questions, not for you to build strawman fallacies about things that should happen based on the strawman fallacy you're building.
WTF lol. why would they be drastically different on a flat earth? explain.
also this "However, real-world data shows consistency regardless of direction." is nonsense.
Simple Flying
Why It's Quicker To Fly East Than West
Airlines plan their routes to take advantage of geophysical phenomena.
Medium
Flying East Is Faster Than Flying West: Here’s Why
If you’ve ever flown from east to west and back, you’ll find that the flight flying east is considerably shorter than flying the same route…
it's well known eastward flights are generally faster than westwards. and why
i'm afraid you're just showing your own ignorance with this question lol
East and West are flat earth directions to begin with. Azimuths are horizontal angles. Circumnavigate.. Circum.. Circle, a plane shape. Navigating using FE directions. Nice. And?
"However, real-world data shows consistency regardless of direction."
Where's the real world data again?