ContestID67
June 11th 07, 10:47 PM
I take as a fact that all flight loggers use a pressure transducer to
record altitude versus GPS altitude(true?). We all get a calibration
document with the recorder which spells out how accurate that
transducer is.
So why do some loggers (i.e. Cambridge 302 - a flight computer) ask
you to set the barometric pressure much as we do with an altimeter?
Others (i.e. Cambridge 302A, EW Microrecorder - both flight loggers)
do not require this. NOTE: I have flown with both a 302 and a 302A at
the same time ... and the overlapped log files in SeeYou were
identical. Therefore I the pre-flight barometer setting is not
incorporated into the FAI flight log.
I can only assume that the pre-flight barometric settings is to
enhance the accuracy of a flight computer, not a simple flight
logger. Is this increase accuracy important? Some flight software
also has the capability of setting "Altitude" (i.e. Glide Navigator
II). Why is that?
Thanks, John "67" DeRosa
record altitude versus GPS altitude(true?). We all get a calibration
document with the recorder which spells out how accurate that
transducer is.
So why do some loggers (i.e. Cambridge 302 - a flight computer) ask
you to set the barometric pressure much as we do with an altimeter?
Others (i.e. Cambridge 302A, EW Microrecorder - both flight loggers)
do not require this. NOTE: I have flown with both a 302 and a 302A at
the same time ... and the overlapped log files in SeeYou were
identical. Therefore I the pre-flight barometer setting is not
incorporated into the FAI flight log.
I can only assume that the pre-flight barometric settings is to
enhance the accuracy of a flight computer, not a simple flight
logger. Is this increase accuracy important? Some flight software
also has the capability of setting "Altitude" (i.e. Glide Navigator
II). Why is that?
Thanks, John "67" DeRosa