![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
time for me to renew my Jepp service. I usually get the California
Express for $144 per year. Generally the work that I have to do is not that bad. My friend is going to be starting his IFR training soon and I was thinking maybe the two of us can get the Jeppview service that includes California plus some extra bonus states (NV, AZ, UT, NM, not used very often) but more importantly the updates look beyond simple. Attaching a laptop to a GPS antenna gives you a nice moving map which seems like a very nice independent backup if the plane happens go really go south (not the cardinal direction). Anyone have any experience using Jeppview? What are the good points and the bad points? thanks for the feedback. gerald sylvester |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I recently bought a anywhere weather system. the Ipaq screen is large enough
but is a little lacking on viewing in direct sunlight. i got it with the pocket plates. Not sure how practical in real life it will be but it is nice to see my position on the plates while shooting an approach. I have a 430, so its a nice "back up" system. They are coming out with a approach plate sized tablet called the Raven. it will be at sun n fun and I'm sure there will be some reports on it. steve |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "G. Sylvester" wrote: time for me to renew my Jepp service. I usually get the California Express for $144 per year. Generally the work that I have to do is not that bad. My friend is going to be starting his IFR training soon and I was thinking maybe the two of us can get the Jeppview service that includes California plus some extra bonus states (NV, AZ, UT, NM, not used very often) but more importantly the updates look beyond simple. Attaching a laptop to a GPS antenna gives you a nice moving map which seems like a very nice independent backup if the plane happens go really go south (not the cardinal direction). Anyone have any experience using Jeppview? What are the good points and the bad points? thanks for the feedback. Actually, you would use FliteDeck in the airplane. You get both programs with the electronic subscription, JeppView and FliteDeck. If you sit down and take the time to really learn how to use FliteDeck, it is very good. The other issue is the system you will use to display it. A tablet type display is by far the best. |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
What sort of cracks me up is their publicity. If you subscribe to some of the
major aviation magazines you'll see it - "New Technology . . Same Approach" The funny part is that the "old" paper approach plate looks crisp and clear, while the tablet disply is, well . . just sort off fuzzy. You can hardly read the lettering, which jumps off the paper page! G Faris |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]() G Farris wrote: What sort of cracks me up is their publicity. If you subscribe to some of the major aviation magazines you'll see it - "New Technology . . Same Approach" The funny part is that the "old" paper approach plate looks crisp and clear, while the tablet disply is, well . . just sort off fuzzy. You can hardly read the lettering, which jumps off the paper page! G Faris That all depends on the quality of the display. The charts look great on my laptop, but that is not a practical solution for in-flight. Fuzzy charts = lousy display. |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "G Farris" wrote in message ... What sort of cracks me up is their publicity. If you subscribe to some of the major aviation magazines you'll see it - "New Technology . . Same Approach" The funny part is that the "old" paper approach plate looks crisp and clear, while the tablet disply is, well . . just sort off fuzzy. You can hardly read the lettering, which jumps off the paper page! G Faris The electronic charts look at least as good (as paper) in daylight if you have a good display and there is no comparison at night. A feature that I really like is having my position plotted on the airport diagram. Mike MU-2 |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() The electronic charts look at least as good (as paper) in daylight if you have a good display and there is no comparison at night. A feature that I really like is having my position plotted on the airport diagram. Mike MU-2 The airport diagram moving map is nothing short of fantastic. Jet Blue has that set up and will almost certainly never have a runway incursion. |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Sorry but maybe I wasn't clear. The primary purpose of using the Jeppview is for the plates. I'll probably have to print out the plates and not use a digital tablet. Maybe when I get my own plane I'll splurge (doing it electronically sounds a lot cleaner then flipping through tons of paper. But for now, it would be primarily for replacing the paper subscription of the Jepp plates. So for that purpose, how does it compare? Thanks for the replies already. Sounds like I gotta get a tablet....along with a plane. Gerald |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "G. Sylvester" wrote: Sorry but maybe I wasn't clear. The primary purpose of using the Jeppview is for the plates. I'll probably have to print out the plates and not use a digital tablet. Maybe when I get my own plane I'll splurge (doing it electronically sounds a lot cleaner then flipping through tons of paper. But for now, it would be primarily for replacing the paper subscription of the Jepp plates. So for that purpose, how does it compare? A printed chart from JeppView is as good as your printer because they are vector-based. If you print at full page they are much easier to read than a standard Jeppesen paper chart. And, the color charts look great in color, although that isn't essential. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
JeppView/FliteDeck is the best kept secret in GA. Jeppesen market
heavily to airlines, corporate, jet operators & part 135, but did not do enough to market this package to GA. I have only subscribed to their southwest service for 2 months and I am loving it! So far I use it the way you intended - replace my paper charts subscription. However, the potentials of FliteDeck, both at home & in aircraft, are unbelievable. JeppView v. paper Jepp charts. Pro: Easy update, your computer does the work v. What a pain Update through mail & website, available anywhere v. Mail only No more heavy flight bag v. Weight depending on subscribed areas, could be significant Can be installed on 4 PCs (home, office, airport & portable pc) v. One 1 set of charts Limited flight plan function v. None FliteDeck v. None Con: Must print to use, but JeppView makes printing easy to manage v. Already printed Limited flight plan function unless you also get FlightStar v. None What makes JeppView/FliteDeck a good buy is FliteDeck, even if you only use it at home in simulated mode to familiar yourself with the planned flight. I tried to use it in my plane on my portable, but it seems difficult because the size of my portable PC. I have order a sun light readable touch screen monitor designed for car PC, and it should arrive this week. My plan is to use my portable PC connected to the $200 touch screen and my old Precedus GPS. I will mount the monitor within my view, and the portable PC could be kept anywhere within the reach of all cables. To increase reliability, I reformatted my hard drive, and installed only programs that I need for aircraft use. Since I already have the PC & GPS, my hardware investment is only $200 for the monitor. Preliminary testing shows my portable PC not having enough computing power for track up mode, but it is ok on north up mode. If this setup works well, I might upgrade my portable PC to a car PC which could have all computing power & memory my budget could afford. I have very limited experience with AnywhereMap, thus, I am not qualify to compare JeppView/FliteDeck with AnywhereMap. TureFlight seems to be a very good program too, but it also uses government charts. I am so used to Jepp charts and the few times I used government charts, I just did not like them. Overall, JeppView/FliteDeck subscription is the less costly and "legal" solution for my charts, update, & moving map requirement in a format that I am familiar with. Plus, if and when I get FliteDeck to work, I will have the same moving map as those jet pilots. Information on affordable sunlight readable touch screen monitors www.mp3car.com (general info & forums) www.xenarc.com (well known brand) search on ebay for Tview T-700TS (cheap, I mean affordable brand) |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Switching to JeppView | Travis Marlatte | Instrument Flight Rules | 16 | December 19th 04 04:25 PM |
Jep p or NACO Charts? | Judah | Instrument Flight Rules | 66 | December 9th 04 03:34 AM |
Tracking the Elusive Tracing Paper | Veeduber | Home Built | 18 | August 30th 04 12:53 PM |
Jepp no longer in the GA business...? | John Harper | Instrument Flight Rules | 30 | June 17th 04 10:49 PM |
Jepp vs NOS at PRB | Doug Campbell | Instrument Flight Rules | 47 | May 6th 04 05:40 PM |