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#1
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I'm in the process of vectorizing all the charts in the PA-28-161
Warrior III POH. I am mostly doing it to make it easier on me and my students when reading them. The takeoff roll charts you almost need a microscope to get an accurate reading, the lines are so close together. I plan on doing all the ones in my Warrior III POH, then I'll plan on doing the PA-34-200T manual I have, then hopefully if I can get my hands on one, I'll do a Baron 55. Anyways, is anyone else interested in these charts? Is there any other service out there that does the same thing I'm doing? Here are a couple examples of what I have so far: http://isodrosotherm.info/5-19.pdf http://isodrosotherm.info/6-13.pdf If anyone has a POH with hard to read charts, and they'd like me to vectorize them, fell free to contact me with some scans. |
#2
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The charts look very nice. Do you reenter them? They are too good to
have been scanned in. I'm always interested in the Warrior II and C-172. W&B charts are most important. Thanks. buttman wrote: I'm in the process of vectorizing all the charts in the PA-28-161 Warrior III POH. I am mostly doing it to make it easier on me and my students when reading them. The takeoff roll charts you almost need a microscope to get an accurate reading, the lines are so close together. I plan on doing all the ones in my Warrior III POH, then I'll plan on doing the PA-34-200T manual I have, then hopefully if I can get my hands on one, I'll do a Baron 55. Anyways, is anyone else interested in these charts? Is there any other service out there that does the same thing I'm doing? Here are a couple examples of what I have so far: http://isodrosotherm.info/5-19.pdf http://isodrosotherm.info/6-13.pdf If anyone has a POH with hard to read charts, and they'd like me to vectorize them, fell free to contact me with some scans. |
#3
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"Stubby" wrote in message
... The charts look very nice. Do you reenter them? They are too good to have been scanned in. I'm always interested in the Warrior II and C-172. W&B charts are most important. Thanks. "Vectorizing" means that he is taking the original charts and essentially redrawing them, using a vector-based description (that is, rather than drawing the charts in a manner similar to painting or printing, the charts are described as lines from one point to another). Google "raster versus vector" for more info. The bottom line is that the resolution of the displayed chart is matched to whatever medium they are being displayed on. Only the endpoints of each line used to describe the chart are stored (ie vector data), and during display the actual raster data required to show the charts on the chosen medium (computer screen, printed page, etc) is derived from that vector data to match the resolution of the raster device being used. So, yes...they are necessarily "reentered" and not scanned (that is, they may have been scanned as part of the vectorization process, but the end result you're seeing is not the scan itself). Pete |
#4
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You can work from FAA data, it is public. But you can't
legally copy a manufacturers pages, that is copyrighted. Also be sure you put make/model and serial number ranges on the product. Remember you to can be sued if somebody uses your product and is injured. Talk to your lawyer and insurance man. That said, those charts are for speed and convenience, they are created from mathematical data points by teams of engineers. That's why you see terms such as "straight line variation between point" on so many charts. Even more than that said; as the end user you can scan at 1200 dpi, the charts from you own airplane and they will print out very big and easy to read. Good luck, BTW, when I use a performance chart, I always take the least favorable number if it is too close to call. "Peter Duniho" wrote in message ... | "Stubby" wrote in message | ... | The charts look very nice. Do you reenter them? They are too good to | have been scanned in. I'm always interested in the Warrior II and C-172. | W&B charts are most important. Thanks. | | "Vectorizing" means that he is taking the original charts and essentially | redrawing them, using a vector-based description (that is, rather than | drawing the charts in a manner similar to painting or printing, the charts | are described as lines from one point to another). | | Google "raster versus vector" for more info. The bottom line is that the | resolution of the displayed chart is matched to whatever medium they are | being displayed on. Only the endpoints of each line used to describe the | chart are stored (ie vector data), and during display the actual raster data | required to show the charts on the chosen medium (computer screen, printed | page, etc) is derived from that vector data to match the resolution of the | raster device being used. | | So, yes...they are necessarily "reentered" and not scanned (that is, they | may have been scanned as part of the vectorization process, but the end | result you're seeing is not the scan itself). | | Pete | | |
#5
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![]() Jim Macklin wrote: You can work from FAA data, it is public. But you can't legally copy a manufacturers pages, that is copyrighted. Also be sure you put make/model and serial number ranges on the product. Remember you to can be sued if somebody uses your product and is injured. Talk to your lawyer and insurance man. That said, those charts are for speed and convenience, they are created from mathematical data points by teams of engineers. That's why you see terms such as "straight line variation between point" on so many charts. Even more than that said; as the end user you can scan at 1200 dpi, the charts from you own airplane and they will print out very big and easy to read. Good luck, BTW, when I use a performance chart, I always take the least favorable number if it is too close to call. Oh, I'm not planning on selling these. They take maybe 1 hour each to do. I was just planning on putting them up on my website for all to use. |
#6
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Still you'll be advise to have a prominent disclaimer, even
if your rendition is perfect, you could be sued. "buttman" wrote in message oups.com... | | Jim Macklin wrote: | You can work from FAA data, it is public. But you can't | legally copy a manufacturers pages, that is copyrighted. | Also be sure you put make/model and serial number ranges on | the product. Remember you to can be sued if somebody uses | your product and is injured. Talk to your lawyer and | insurance man. | | That said, those charts are for speed and convenience, they | are created from mathematical data points by teams of | engineers. That's why you see terms such as "straight line | variation between point" on so many charts. | | Even more than that said; as the end user you can scan at | 1200 dpi, the charts from you own airplane and they will | print out very big and easy to read. | | Good luck, BTW, when I use a performance chart, I always | take the least favorable number if it is too close to call. | | Oh, I'm not planning on selling these. They take maybe 1 hour each to | do. I was just planning on putting them up on my website for all to use. | |
#7
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Oh, I'm not planning on selling these. They take maybe 1 hour each to
do. I was just planning on putting them up on my website for all to use. What software/hardware do you use to vectorize the images? |
#8
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![]() john smith wrote: Oh, I'm not planning on selling these. They take maybe 1 hour each to do. I was just planning on putting them up on my website for all to use. What software/hardware do you use to vectorize the images? First, I scan the charts with my scanner from the POH. Then I open the charts in an image editing program (I use Adobe Photoshop), and rotate the image so the axes are straight. Then I open the file in Adobe Illustrator and just use the pen tool to trace over the lines. The hardest part is making the grid, since the lines aren't perfectly parallel with each other (I have to do each one individually). All in all, it takes anywhere from 1 to 2 hours to make a single chart. It's something I do while I'm at my computer listening to music. Unfortunately, Illustrator costs like 500$, so unless you have money to burn, or have other uses for the program, it's not cost effective. There may be free alternatives to Illustrator, but Illustrator is the industry standard. |
#9
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"buttman" wrote in message
ps.com... [...] Unfortunately, Illustrator costs like 500$, so unless you have money to burn, or have other uses for the program, it's not cost effective. There may be free alternatives to Illustrator, but Illustrator is the industry standard. Well, Photoshop has a line/pen tool as well, as does its little sibling Photoshop Elements. You can get Elements for under $100 (assuming it wasn't included in some other bundle one has already purchased...that happens a fair amount). Illustrator has lots of great, fancy vector-type tools, but for something like this they probably aren't needed. Of course, if you already happen to have Illustrator, I guess that's the way to go. ![]() Pete |
#10
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buttman wrote:
Oh, I'm not planning on selling these. They take maybe 1 hour each to do. I was just planning on putting them up on my website for all to use. Selling isn't an issue. Copying is. |
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