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#1
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Hi,
I'm looking for folks that might have a similar experience. Recently upgraded the panel to include a GNS 430 and replace one of those old NARCO all in one VOR instruments plus an old NARCO radio. Anyway great upgrade. The GPS function works wonderfully. Filing /g is the best. The NAV function works great. Dual glide slope indicators(the other is slaved to a KX-155) really makes IFR manageable. The problem is the COM function of the GNS 430. We're only getting about 40 miles of range on the receive side of the COM. I'll call for flight following on COM1(the GNS) and never get an RX indication. When I flip over to COM2 (the KX-155) it works just fine. The KX has a range of at least 80 miles. The GNS seems uneven. We can xmit and be heard over distances but the receive side is really only useful in and about the terminal area. This is less than optimal. When we did the upgrade we kept the original antennas that were on the plane(PA28-180). Our avionics guy is baffled, maybe useless at this point. He swapped out the GNS plus ran a myriad of other tests. He says everything is checking out just fine. But that is surely not our experiences. So I turn it over to the collective wisdom of the net. Has anyone else ever experienced anything similar? Thanks. |
#2
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![]() Sounds like the antenna or the coax. |
#3
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The avionics shop should be able to test COM receive sensitivity through the
plane's antenna with the unit installed in the plane, very simply using a suitable signal generator (that every shop should have.) The signal generator is set up to transmit a very low level signal, modulated with a tone, through a whip antenna located some distance (maybe 100 feet or so) from the plane, in line-of-sight to its COM antenna. Signal level is adjusted to the point that the tone is just heard through the COM receiver. Calculating free-space loss for the distance (a standard calculation), one can determine within a few dB the signal strength incident to the COM antenna. This is not as precise as doing it on the bench with the signal generator connected directly to the receiver, but it is sufficient to find a gross problem and to troubleshoot it. This method CAN accurately measure the difference in sensitivity between a plane's two COM receivers. If your avionics guy doesn't understand this test you need a new avionics guy. -Elliott Drucker |
#4
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![]() Clay wrote: Sounds like the antenna or the coax. Good point. An overy bent or kinked and pinched coax mould be a problem. |
#5
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The Visitor wrote:
Clay wrote: Sounds like the antenna or the coax. Good point. An overy bent or kinked and pinched coax mould be a problem. An easy way to test this would be to swap the coax between the two radios and see if the 430 improves and/or the 155 degrades. |
#6
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ktbr wrote:
Sounds like the antenna or the coax. Good point. An overy bent or kinked and pinched coax mould be a problem. An easy way to test this would be to swap the coax between the two radios and see if the 430 improves and/or the 155 degrades. Just as another data point, we had the same problem with our GNS480. The comm section may be the same as the 430, I'm not sure about that. Anyway, we swapped the antenna cables between the 480 and the KX155 to see whether the problem stayed with the radio, or moved with the antenna. Oddly, the problem just went away, or at least became less pronounced. Maybe something got unkinked, I don't know. The KX155 is still the more sensitive receiver. DGB |
#7
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You may find the coax cables are joined by bnc connectors under the panel
near the pilot's left knee. This may be an easy(er) place to swap com antennas before trying to access the back of the radio trays to swap the coax. The hardest swap is laying on your back in the tail cone checking the connectors at the base of the antennas. I have heard that com antennas come with a special coating to suppress static buildup. Static charges can interfere with the radios. This coating will eventually deteriorate and could also degrade radio performance. I suspect such a buildup probably produces 'static' or popping in the receiver. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel "Kevin Clarke" wrote in message nk.net... Hi, I'm looking for folks that might have a similar experience. Recently upgraded the panel to include a GNS 430 and replace one of those old NARCO all in one VOR instruments plus an old NARCO radio. Anyway great upgrade. The GPS function works wonderfully. Filing /g is the best. The NAV function works great. Dual glide slope indicators(the other is slaved to a KX-155) really makes IFR manageable. The problem is the COM function of the GNS 430. We're only getting about 40 miles of range on the receive side of the COM. I'll call for flight following on COM1(the GNS) and never get an RX indication. When I flip over to COM2 (the KX-155) it works just fine. The KX has a range of at least 80 miles. The GNS seems uneven. We can xmit and be heard over distances but the receive side is really only useful in and about the terminal area. This is less than optimal. When we did the upgrade we kept the original antennas that were on the plane(PA28-180). Our avionics guy is baffled, maybe useless at this point. He swapped out the GNS plus ran a myriad of other tests. He says everything is checking out just fine. But that is surely not our experiences. So I turn it over to the collective wisdom of the net. Has anyone else ever experienced anything similar? Thanks. |
#8
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I had a similar problem with two KX-170's.
Solution, corrosion, under the antenna at the BNC connectors....we replaced coax, and antenna's. Problem fixed, radios AOK! |
#9
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Dave Butler wrote:
Interesting that is the first time someone else has reported a similar problem. We also (allegedly) did the swap the antenna test. I say allegedly because I'm not convinced it ever occurred. But because you had a similar issue with the KX155 could there be some interaction there? I know that is a long shot but interference is a funny thing. Do other folks have a GNS4x0 and KX155? I've got to believe that is a very very common config. KC ktbr wrote: Sounds like the antenna or the coax. Good point. An overy bent or kinked and pinched coax mould be a problem. An easy way to test this would be to swap the coax between the two radios and see if the 430 improves and/or the 155 degrades. Just as another data point, we had the same problem with our GNS480. The comm section may be the same as the 430, I'm not sure about that. Anyway, we swapped the antenna cables between the 480 and the KX155 to see whether the problem stayed with the radio, or moved with the antenna. Oddly, the problem just went away, or at least became less pronounced. Maybe something got unkinked, I don't know. The KX155 is still the more sensitive receiver. DGB |
#10
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I have a Garmin SL30 nav/com and a King com. Using the 'both' button on the
audio panel, the audio output level from the King drops precipitously. Until I discovered this it appeared the King radio was no longer working correctly after the SL30 was installed. In order to hear the outputs from both of the radios at the same time the volume of the King must be increased. When the radios are listened to by themselves, the King's audio level is normal. -- Best Regards, Mike http://photoshow.comcast.net/mikenoel "Kevin Clarke" wrote in message ink.net... Dave Butler wrote: Interesting that is the first time someone else has reported a similar problem. We also (allegedly) did the swap the antenna test. I say allegedly because I'm not convinced it ever occurred. But because you had a similar issue with the KX155 could there be some interaction there? I know that is a long shot but interference is a funny thing. Do other folks have a GNS4x0 and KX155? I've got to believe that is a very very common config. KC ktbr wrote: Sounds like the antenna or the coax. Good point. An overy bent or kinked and pinched coax mould be a problem. An easy way to test this would be to swap the coax between the two radios and see if the 430 improves and/or the 155 degrades. Just as another data point, we had the same problem with our GNS480. The comm section may be the same as the 430, I'm not sure about that. Anyway, we swapped the antenna cables between the 480 and the KX155 to see whether the problem stayed with the radio, or moved with the antenna. Oddly, the problem just went away, or at least became less pronounced. Maybe something got unkinked, I don't know. The KX155 is still the more sensitive receiver. DGB |
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