View Full Version : Cambridge computers
Solo
January 6th 07, 01:12 AM
What are the diffrences betwenn the L/NAV an S/NAV?
John Galloway[_1_]
January 6th 07, 12:18 PM
At 04:18 06 January 2007, Solo wrote:
>
>What are the diffrences betwenn the L/NAV an S/NAV?
>
>Solo
You will find the answers on the Cambridge FAQ page
below:
http://www.cambridge-aero.com/FAQlnav.htm#snav%20lnav%20dif
The S-NAV was the original (and IMHO better) instrument
and the less fully featured L-NAV was added to the
range a few years later.
John Galloway
Paul Remde
January 6th 07, 02:30 PM
Hi,
The L-NAV does everything an S-NAV does, except that the S-NAV has a
waypoint database and you can create tasks. There may be a few other
features, but that was the main thing. When the GPS-NAV is connected to
either of them, you use the waypoints and tasks in the GPS-NAV, so there is
no need for them in the S-NAV. So at the end of the production they didn't
sell many S-NAVs - only L-NAVs. But there is nothing wrong with using an
S-NAV with a GPS-NAV.
Paul Remde
"Solo" > wrote in message
...
>
> What are the diffrences betwenn the L/NAV an S/NAV?
>
>
>
>
> --
> Solo
The real trick there is finding the GPS-NAV. I couldn't find one and
ended up with a Colibri I got from Paul. It seems it will work quite
well with my S-NAV, at least on my desk. I have yet to fly with all
this. If I run across a GPS-NAV for a good price I might pick it up
but without the GPS-NAV all that seems to be missing is the goal
altitude and you also don't have the final glide around a turnpoint.
How often is the goal altitude really needed? Here, unless you're on
your way to the last turnpoint or home you want to stay in the best
lift which is usually above a certain altitude. It often has little to
do with the ground elevation of the goal and more to do with the
airmass. So you'd have to manually enter your "floor" altitude anyway.
If you have something like GNII on a PDA you have the final glide
around a turnpoint based on the GPS data and air and GPS speed-to-fly
info on the S-NAV.
The bottom line is all this stuff can only tell you what's been going
on behind you and not what's going on with the airmass ahead. It still
comes down to the pilot.
I seem to have gotten off track but I didn't see anything in the S-NAV
or manual about a waypoint database. Mine is the current version 7.9.
Maybe that was dropped from earlier versions since it is available in
the GPS-NAV.
Bob
On Jan 6, 7:30 am, "Paul Remde" > wrote:
> Hi,
>
> The L-NAV does everything an S-NAV does, except that the S-NAV has a
> waypoint database and you can create tasks. There may be a few other
> features, but that was the main thing. When the GPS-NAV is connected to
> either of them, you use the waypoints and tasks in the GPS-NAV, so there is
> no need for them in the S-NAV. So at the end of the production they didn't
> sell many S-NAVs - only L-NAVs. But there is nothing wrong with using an
> S-NAV with a GPS-NAV.
>
> Paul Remde
>
> "Solo" > wrote in ...
>
>
>
>
>
> > What are the diffrences betwenn the L/NAV an S/NAV?
>
> > --
> > Solo- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -
One more thing. The S-NAV is black around the screen and the L-NAV is
more of a silver. The S-NAV looks better in the panel, at least my
panel.
On Jan 6, 9:28 am, wrote:
> The real trick there is finding the GPS-NAV. I couldn't find one and
> ended up with a Colibri I got from Paul. It seems it will work quite
> well with my S-NAV, at least on my desk. I have yet to fly with all
> this. If I run across a GPS-NAV for a good price I might pick it up
> but without the GPS-NAV all that seems to be missing is the goal
> altitude and you also don't have the final glide around a turnpoint.
>
> How often is the goal altitude really needed? Here, unless you're on
> your way to the last turnpoint or home you want to stay in the best
> lift which is usually above a certain altitude. It often has little to
> do with the ground elevation of the goal and more to do with the
> airmass. So you'd have to manually enter your "floor" altitude anyway.
> If you have something like GNII on a PDA you have the final glide
> around a turnpoint based on the GPS data and air and GPS speed-to-fly
> info on the S-NAV.
>
> The bottom line is all this stuff can only tell you what's been going
> on behind you and not what's going on with the airmass ahead. It still
> comes down to the pilot.
>
> I seem to have gotten off track but I didn't see anything in the S-NAV
> or manual about a waypoint database. Mine is the current version 7.9.
> Maybe that was dropped from earlier versions since it is available in
> the GPS-NAV.
>
> Bob
>
> On Jan 6, 7:30 am, "Paul Remde" > wrote:
>
>
>
> > Hi,
>
> > The L-NAV does everything an S-NAV does, except that the S-NAV has a
> > waypoint database and you can create tasks. There may be a few other
> > features, but that was the main thing. When the GPS-NAV is connected to
> > either of them, you use the waypoints and tasks in the GPS-NAV, so there is
> > no need for them in the S-NAV. So at the end of the production they didn't
> > sell many S-NAVs - only L-NAVs. But there is nothing wrong with using an
> > S-NAV with a GPS-NAV.
>
> > Paul Remde
>
> > "Solo" > wrote in ...
>
> > > What are the diffrences betwenn the L/NAV an S/NAV?
>
> > > --
> > > Solo- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -
bumper
January 7th 07, 04:37 AM
I noticed that too. But a quick call to Cambridge and they sent me a new
front stick-on panel for my LNAV that was black (meant for an SNAV). A felt
tip marker took care of blacking out the "SNAV" and I was in business.
Charge = $0
bumper
> wrote in message
ups.com...
> One more thing. The S-NAV is black around the screen and the L-NAV is
> more of a silver. The S-NAV looks better in the panel, at least my
> panel.
>
>
>
> On Jan 6, 9:28 am, wrote:
>> The real trick there is finding the GPS-NAV. I couldn't find one and
>> ended up with a Colibri I got from Paul. It seems it will work quite
>> well with my S-NAV, at least on my desk. I have yet to fly with all
>> this. If I run across a GPS-NAV for a good price I might pick it up
>> but without the GPS-NAV all that seems to be missing is the goal
>> altitude and you also don't have the final glide around a turnpoint.
>>
>> How often is the goal altitude really needed? Here, unless you're on
>> your way to the last turnpoint or home you want to stay in the best
>> lift which is usually above a certain altitude. It often has little to
>> do with the ground elevation of the goal and more to do with the
>> airmass. So you'd have to manually enter your "floor" altitude anyway.
>> If you have something like GNII on a PDA you have the final glide
>> around a turnpoint based on the GPS data and air and GPS speed-to-fly
>> info on the S-NAV.
>>
>> The bottom line is all this stuff can only tell you what's been going
>> on behind you and not what's going on with the airmass ahead. It still
>> comes down to the pilot.
>>
>> I seem to have gotten off track but I didn't see anything in the S-NAV
>> or manual about a waypoint database. Mine is the current version 7.9.
>> Maybe that was dropped from earlier versions since it is available in
>> the GPS-NAV.
>>
>> Bob
>>
>> On Jan 6, 7:30 am, "Paul Remde" > wrote:
>>
>>
>>
>> > Hi,
>>
>> > The L-NAV does everything an S-NAV does, except that the S-NAV has a
>> > waypoint database and you can create tasks. There may be a few other
>> > features, but that was the main thing. When the GPS-NAV is connected
>> > to
>> > either of them, you use the waypoints and tasks in the GPS-NAV, so
>> > there is
>> > no need for them in the S-NAV. So at the end of the production they
>> > didn't
>> > sell many S-NAVs - only L-NAVs. But there is nothing wrong with using
>> > an
>> > S-NAV with a GPS-NAV.
>>
>> > Paul Remde
>>
>> > "Solo" > wrote in
>> > ...
>>
>> > > What are the diffrences betwenn the L/NAV an S/NAV?
>>
>> > > --
>> > > Solo- Hide quoted text -- Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text --
>> > > Show quoted text -
>
vBulletin® v3.6.4, Copyright ©2000-2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.