I was wondering if there is a nice way to see that $\mathbb{RP}^{3}$ is orientable without using tools of algebraic topology, like homology.
The only think I could think of was to argue that $\mathbb{RP}^{3}=\mathbb{R}^3 \cup \mathbb{RP}^{2}$ and perhaps you could argue that to get back to any starting position you have to cross the $\mathbb{RP}^{2}$ boundary but I'm pretty sure that what I'm thinking is nonsense.
This was a question on the homework for one of my topics courses and I plan on asking the professor about it tomorrow, but I was curious to see if anyone had any interesting ways of thinking about or picturing this space.
The orientation on the universal cover, $S^3$, descends. It takes some checking of details, but you can do it for $\mathbb{R}P^n$ in exactly the same way for $n$ odd. Actually, much more generally if you have a covering $\pi: X\to B$, and $Aut_\pi (X)$ is cyclic and generated by some orientation preserving diffeo $f: X\to X$, then if $X$ is orientable, the orientation will descend to $B$. In this case the diffeo is the antipodal map which is orientation preserving on $S^n$ if and only if $n$ is odd.