My partner and I are very confused because we dont know which map to bring.
Can you please tell us what an AAA map is, where to get it, and which ones to bring?
Links would be appreciated.

Oh, you might be mistaken. The maps will be provided for at the event (or else you could just study them before). You don't nee to bring any. An AAA map is a highway map printed by the AAA road service provider (it's just a large-scale state highway map).bdarji wrote:Hello everyone,
My partner and I are very confused because we dont know which map to bring.
Can you please tell us what an AAA map is, where to get it, and which ones to bring?
Links would be appreciated.
Ohhh, thank you very much. Last year i had to borrow a map from someone who had an "extra" and i assumed that we had to have our own... Thanks for clearing up the confusionsilentsage wrote:Oh, you might be mistaken. The maps will be provided for at the event (or else you could just study them before). You don't nee to bring any. An AAA map is a highway map printed by the AAA road service provider (it's just a large-scale state highway map).bdarji wrote:Hello everyone,
My partner and I are very confused because we dont know which map to bring.
Can you please tell us what an AAA map is, where to get it, and which ones to bring?
Links would be appreciated.
You hold your protractor on the first point so that the 0 faces north (there will be a compass on any quadrangle). Then, you take a ruler/string, etc. and find the straight-line distance from your protractor to the point you're measuring to. Then, read the protractor to find the number of degrees. Always go in a clockwise circle when reading a 360 degree protractor and finding azimuths; you might end up with an answer such as 200 or 341 degrees.SpartanOlympians wrote:Hey guys!
I'm new to Road Scholar this year, and I've already participated in Invitationals. It seemed really easy and fun, so I'm doing it again for Regionals. I have a question about measuring azimuths though. On the Road Scholar Wiki page (scioly.org/wiki/Road_Scholar), you know how there's a map drawing practice? Well, I got to step 6. And I'm confused about that. How do I know which way to hold my protractor? Like do I hold it using the 0 on the outer ring of numbers, or do I hold it with the 0 that's on the inner ring of numbers? And how do I know when to use the outer ring and vice versa?
Any help would be appreciated greatly! Thanks!!
Good luck to all Olympians!!!![]()
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fishman100 wrote:You hold your protractor on the first point so that the 0 faces north (there will be a compass on any quadrangle). Then, you take a ruler/string, etc. and find the straight-line distance from your protractor to the point you're measuring to. Then, read the protractor to find the number of degrees. Always go in a clockwise circle when reading a 360 degree protractor and finding azimuths; you might end up with an answer such as 200 or 341 degrees.SpartanOlympians wrote:Hey guys!
I'm new to Road Scholar this year, and I've already participated in Invitationals. It seemed really easy and fun, so I'm doing it again for Regionals. I have a question about measuring azimuths though. On the Road Scholar Wiki page (scioly.org/wiki/Road_Scholar), you know how there's a map drawing practice? Well, I got to step 6. And I'm confused about that. How do I know which way to hold my protractor? Like do I hold it using the 0 on the outer ring of numbers, or do I hold it with the 0 that's on the inner ring of numbers? And how do I know when to use the outer ring and vice versa?
Any help would be appreciated greatly! Thanks!!
Good luck to all Olympians!!!![]()
![]()
I don't think using the outer or inner ring matters much since they're oriented in the same position (31 degrees will always be 31 degrees, whether you measure it from the inner or outer ring).
zyzzyva98 wrote:If I recall correctly from my days in the event, you would start from that spot west of the corner and just go around to 213 degrees, which I believe would be NE to SW. It's been awhile, but I'm pretty sure you assume North is 0 degrees.