![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jim,
How much did the new board in the volkslogger cost you, and what was turn around time like? I have been flying with one for several years having to turn my squelch all the way up to keep from going nuts. I would love to get that one from you, but the timing is not quite wright. Kevin R. Anderson Soar 192 SGS 1-26B |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Board replacement was USD 120, labor USD25, shipping USD48 - total USD193.
Turn around time not bad except I got caught in the middle of the European holiday season, so no activity for a month, which is perfectly normal and expected. The new EMI filters fixes the problem - just like night and day, but keep in mind that they don't calibrate, so if your unit is close to, or needs calibration, expect to send it to the local cal lab. Nice to see Craggy Aero is now a cal lab, I was afraid Carl Herold would give up the business and us in the US would be without a cal lab for the VL's. Another clever marketing move by Craggy. How someone can manufacture an "aircraft part" that is installed in type certificated products that doesn't meet HIRF/EMI requirements is beyond me... good thing the Friendly Aviation Association doesn't know or care about these "carry on" or so-called "portable" devices that we wire into our gliders and interfere with our sometimes TSO'd VHF communication equipment. ;-) Jim "Keivn Anderson" wrote in message ... Jim, How much did the new board in the volkslogger cost you, and what was turn around time like? I have been flying with one for several years having to turn my squelch all the way up to keep from going nuts. I would love to get that one from you, but the timing is not quite wright. Kevin R. Anderson Soar 192 SGS 1-26B |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
"Jim Phoenix" wrote:
How someone can manufacture an "aircraft part" that is installed in type certificated products that doesn't meet HIRF/EMI requirements is beyond me... good thing the Friendly Aviation Association doesn't know or care about these "carry on" or so-called "portable" devices that we wire into our gliders and interfere with our sometimes TSO'd VHF communication equipment. It's not just that they don't "meet HIRF/EMI requirements" and it's not just loggers and GPS units. We've got non-TSO'd flight computers, varios and other flight instruments being widely sold and installed in the panels of gliders with U.S. Standard Type Certificates. You don't find products like this being sold for installation in airplanes, except to homebuilders. This has always been the "elephant in the room" that everyone in U.S. soaring familiar with the FARs pretends not to notice. Sometimes its nice to have that experimental certificate. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You're right, definitely an elephant in the room and it's my opinion that
the feds have much bigger fish to fry - we're not much of a nuisance to anyone but ourselves. Occasionally it torques me that a manufacturer sells a product that has design flaws and then charges to fix the flaw - but then I remember that Boeing and Airbus do this as well, so at least it's equal treatment across the aviation spectrum. Jim "Bob" wrote in message ... "Jim Phoenix" wrote: How someone can manufacture an "aircraft part" that is installed in type certificated products that doesn't meet HIRF/EMI requirements is beyond me... good thing the Friendly Aviation Association doesn't know or care about these "carry on" or so-called "portable" devices that we wire into our gliders and interfere with our sometimes TSO'd VHF communication equipment. It's not just that they don't "meet HIRF/EMI requirements" and it's not just loggers and GPS units. We've got non-TSO'd flight computers, varios and other flight instruments being widely sold and installed in the panels of gliders with U.S. Standard Type Certificates. You don't find products like this being sold for installation in airplanes, except to homebuilders. This has always been the "elephant in the room" that everyone in U.S. soaring familiar with the FARs pretends not to notice. Sometimes its nice to have that experimental certificate. |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
EAA Board Of Directors (Here We Go Again) | RST Engineering | Home Built | 32 | January 21st 05 09:46 PM |
EAA Board Of Directors (Here We Go Again) | RST Engineering | Piloting | 32 | January 21st 05 09:46 PM |
Bush's Attempt to Usurp the Constitution | WalterM140 | Military Aviation | 20 | July 2nd 04 04:09 PM |
Air Force board game debuts Dec. 1 | Otis Willie | Military Aviation | 0 | November 19th 03 11:17 PM |
Cause of Columbia Shuttle Disaster. | Mike Spera | Owning | 2 | August 31st 03 03:11 PM |