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#1
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No longer need this excellent and small PCAS as its functions are
included in the PowerFlarm I've just installed. IMO, no question the PF is the best answer for practical collision avoidance in gliders. But if for whatever reason you won't be buying one, then this Zaon MRX is the next best thing for a whole lot less money. The MRX sells new for $450 - $499. Mine is line new, less than 20 hours, with all original packaging and manual for only $300 plus $12 shipping in US. bumperm frontier (insert the usual at and dot com stuff) |
#2
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On Jan 23, 11:12*am, bumper wrote:
No longer need this excellent and small PCAS as its functions are included in the PowerFlarm I've just installed. IMO, no question the PF is the best answer for practical collision avoidance in gliders. But if for whatever reason you won't be buying one, then this Zaon MRX is the next best thing for a whole lot less money. The MRX sells new for $450 - $499. Mine is line new, less than 20 hours, with all original packaging and manual for only $300 plus $12 shipping in US. bumperm frontier *(insert the usual at and dot com stuff) Bumper, Have you flown with both units at the same time? If so, do you have any comments on the relative performance for proximate traffic and alerting? I've been flying with the MRX for several years and hope that PF brick will replace it but have not seen any (PCAS function) performance reports yet. Andy |
#3
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On Jan 23, 5:28*pm, Andy wrote:
On Jan 23, 11:12*am, bumper wrote: No longer need this excellent and small PCAS as its functions are included in the PowerFlarm I've just installed. IMO, no question the PF is the best answer for practical collision avoidance in gliders. But if for whatever reason you won't be buying one, then this Zaon MRX is the next best thing for a whole lot less money. The MRX sells new for $450 - $499. Mine is line new, less than 20 hours, with all original packaging and manual for only $300 plus $12 shipping in US. bumperm frontier *(insert the usual at and dot com stuff) Bumper, Have you flown with both units at the same time? *If so, do you have any comments on the relative performance for proximate traffic and alerting? *I've been flying with the MRX for several years and hope that PF brick will replace it but have not seen any (PCAS function) performance reports yet. Andy I have been flying with MRX for a long time and I am not willing to part with it until I see PF is as good as MRX. |
#4
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To all, the MRX is sold, thanks.
The weather has been a little dicey for flying, but tomorrow looks better. I'm really looking forward to a close encounter with another PF equipped aircraft . . . though that'll have to wait as PF density is low to non existant. SoaringNV has one, though not installed yet, so I may be able to arrange an air-to-air PF to PF test soon I guess. I agree the MRX is good. I've flown with it alongside my older, and much larger Proxalert R-5 a number of times. Their performance is essentially similar in terms of sensitivity, though range of threat aircraft displayed varies back and forth between the two as one might expect. The R-5 gets the nod for providing more info, as it displays up to three threats at a time along with their squawk code. Squawk is nice as you can tell if it's a glider (0440-here), descreet code - IFR - and probably looking for me, or VFR (1200) not talking to ATC - thus likely not informed of my presence. So I mostly flew with the R-5 in my power planes and only used the smaller MRX in the glider. Since the MRK is sold, I won't do the comparison to the PF directly. However, I'll compare the PF to the R-5 and report back. Given the PF's ground performance, showing ADS-B airliners as far out as the 32 nm range scale and Mode-C around 16 nm or so, it should do fine as a PCAS - I hope. bumper |
#5
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I flew the Husky with ProxAlert R5 (PCAS) and the PowerFlarm on the
glareshield about 3 inches apart. Shortly after takeoff I realized the R5 was interfering with the PowerFlarm, causing it to display a threat aircraft at my exact position and altitude. At first I though the PF was not blanking or ignoring my own transponder, but turning off the R5 eliminated the false traffic. The PF did not appear to affect the R5. For the balance of the flight I was turning one off, then the other in an attempt to get a semi-valid comparison. The PowerFlarm reports ADS-B traffic long before that traffic will show up on the PCAS. Sensitivity of the R5 has always been good, the PowerFlarm appears to be every bit as good in PCAS mode. Unable to test Flarm to Flarm. bumper |
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