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#1
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I've searched the threads on Google, but given the emerging technologies
involved, I'd be interested in any thoughts or recent experience that anyone can provide regarding the in-flight satellite weather in particular. We have a Cherokee with StrikeFinder (which works to avoid the big stuff) and a handheld Garmin GPSMAP 195 (which is a fine GPS), but we've been considering the added benefit of in-flight weather uplink. I see that the AnywhereMap folks have an iPaq 4700-based system that uses Bluetooth for connectivity between the receivers (both XM and GPS) and the iPaq, but I am unsure about whether the iPaq will be adequately sized (though it is yoke-mountable). I am also concerned about the practicality of this system due to the small size of the PDA and the battery life of the units involved. The other option that we were considering is WxWorx on a Tablet PC. This route would be more expensive because of the Tablet PC, but the advantage would be that we could use the Tablet PC for other things, and it would provide a much larger screen and easier targets to hit with the pen in flight. I am not sure if the AnywhereMap folks have software that will work on a Tablet PC, but they only appear to sell the PocketPC bundles. I'm unclear on what WxWorx can provide other than the weather, and how the GPS mapping functionality compares to AnywhereMap. Or, we could just bag the whole thing right now and land when we encounter questionable conditions, and continue to rely on the GPSMAP 195 for situational awareness. I'm not sure how much improved the GPS functions of a PDA-based system would be, or whether in-flight weather is worth the investment at this point. Thanks, JKG |
#2
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#3
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I have the AWmap system. It's great when it works, and the screen is
plenty large for flight (though too small IMO for approach plates), but I wouldn't bet my life on its reliability. Right now I'm trying to fiddle my way through a software upgrade which has caused my weather to disappear. They do have an XP version that you can run on their Raven system or a Windows display unit, but that's a lot of bulk in a cockpit. Once you get it running, it stays stable for the flight, though the pressure-fit 12VDC connections are not entirely robust with all the vibration inherent in light plane design. Some people semi-permanently install the wiring, but that means you either have to have duplicate wires at home or do all your trouble-shooting in the airplane. |
#4
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On Mon, 11 Apr 2005 19:41:11 -0400, Jonathan Goodish
wrote: The other option that we were considering is WxWorx on a Tablet PC. This route would be more expensive because of the Tablet PC, but the advantage would be that we could use the Tablet PC for other things, and it would provide a much larger screen and easier targets to hit with the pen in flight. I am not sure if the AnywhereMap folks have software that will work on a Tablet PC, but they only appear to sell the PocketPC bundles. I'm unclear on what WxWorx can provide other than the weather, and how the GPS mapping functionality compares to AnywhereMap. I run WxWorx with the XMWeather Aviator-Lite package on a Fujitsu ST4121 (daylight viewable) tablet PC. It is an awesome setup. The ST4121 has a large HDD, so it also acts as an MP3 player for the plane. WxWorx software is not a good moving map tool, you would need to put separate moving map SW on the tablet PC. I use my Garmin 295 for moving map guidance, and limit the Tablet PC to displaying radar and metars. -Nathan |
#5
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Nathan Young wrote:
I run WxWorx with the XMWeather Aviator-Lite package on a Fujitsu ST4121 (daylight viewable) tablet PC. It is an awesome setup. The ST4121 has a large HDD, so it also acts as an MP3 player for the plane. How much high altitude flying do you do? I've been told by some folks who ought to know that most consumer level hard disk drives have a shorter life when used at over 10,000 feet in a higher vibration environment (i.e. an unpressurized plane). The rational is that the disk heads float on a cushion of air and that at high density altitude the cushion is much reduced. This causes head crashes and asorted other problems. Does this mean that your 10,000 MTBF disk drive gets shortened to 5,000 MTBF? Dunno. How many flight hours do you have on your Fujitsu? -- Frank Stutzman Bonanza N494B "Hula Girl" Hood River, OR |
#6
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paul kgyy wrote:
RightÂ*nowÂ*I'mÂ*tryingÂ*to fiddle my way through a software upgrade which has caused my weather to disappear. How much help are you getting from the vendor? I'm also considering this product, and the quality of support is a major factor. Another concern that I have is data entry. A turbulant IMC flight is not the time to be struggling with a stylis. How does the Anywhere product get around this? Another product I'm considering considering (there's no price on the web site, which scares me {8^) is the Cheetah product. I like that one can display both EFIS-like content with weather and the solid-state AI concurrently. - Andrew |
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On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 16:34:29 +0000 (UTC), Frank Stutzman
wrote: How much high altitude flying do you do? Depends on what is 'high altitude' I usually fly above 5k and below 12k. I've been told by some folks who ought to know that most consumer level hard disk drives have a shorter life when used at over 10,000 feet in a higher vibration environment (i.e. an unpressurized plane). Interesting, I had not heard this. I have a friend that works in the HDD industry and is a pilot. I will ask him. The rational is that the disk heads float on a cushion of air and that at high density altitude the cushion is much reduced. This causes head crashes and asorted other problems. Does this mean that your 10,000 MTBF disk drive gets shortened to 5,000 MTBF? Dunno. How many flight hours do you have on your Fujitsu? Flight hours on the ST4121 = ~100. Still going strong. Of course, HDD crashes tend to be 1 time catastrophic events rather than a degradation over time. -Nathan |
#8
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![]() "Nathan Young" wrote: I run WxWorx with the XMWeather Aviator-Lite package on a Fujitsu ST4121 (daylight viewable) tablet PC. Seen this announcement? http://www.wxworx.com/news_pdf/wxworx_bluetooth.pdf I'm thinking of getting the upgrade (I already have the Aviator package), buying one of these: http://semsons.com/holbluetgpsr.html And a Fujiitsu like yours with the big battery and adding one of these: http://www.outpost.com/product/3575074 That would give me a totally wireless, large format WxWorx MMI. The XM receiver and battery could ride on the hat shelf in the back of the baggage compartment and I could rig a little platform for the XM antenna and the GPS under the rear windows. Much cleaner than the Sony notebook with USB GPS and XM receiver I'm using now. -- Dan C-172RG at BFM |
#9
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On Tue, 12 Apr 2005 14:05:47 -0500, "Dan Luke" wrote:
"Nathan Young" wrote: I run WxWorx with the XMWeather Aviator-Lite package on a Fujitsu ST4121 (daylight viewable) tablet PC. Seen this announcement? http://www.wxworx.com/news_pdf/wxworx_bluetooth.pdf Cool - I had not seen this. -Nathan |
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