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I'm sure folks here have run through the various permutations, thought I'd
avoid re-inventing the wheel by asking. My new baby (TB-20, if you missed my other thread--we're very happy together!) has a Garmin GNS-530 w/ a GTX-330 transponder providing TIS traffic, and I have a few questions about it that don't seem to be obvious on Garmin's web site or the instructions.... Questions I marked w/ "***" are those involving upgrades I want, vice just currency & operating questions. - Garmin implies that all work/upgrades/etc. to the unit must be done by a Garmin dealer--true/false? -- Either way, is there any real difference between shops for this sort of thing, or does Garmin control service pricing the same way they apparently do for sales pricing? -- Any opinions on Colorado shops? The two closest to me are Colorado Springs Avionics (COS) and Denver Avionics Inc. (Centennial/APA)--same flight distance, but COS is more convenient based on me needing a ride if I have to leave the plane overnight, or go to work, or whatever. Several others are reasonably close by but will require a bit more planning on my part. - For whatever reason, the unit is showing "basemap not available," and the land db software version is "not available"--bottom line, I get no roads, rivers, towns, etc., just lat/long and aviation points (airports, intersections, etc). Book says "take to dealer" to fix--is it true that a database card update will NOT fix this? What will it take to get this fixed? - The Jepp db is both out of date & for the wrong area*. I plan to update this, but see below for additional considerations. I'm not sure how this works, though--do I need to buy some sort of hardware to connect to a computer to write to the card? Also, I don't see anything on the Garmin site about "areas"--I thought the db was world-wide, but I was proven wrong on my flight home.... Any pointers on this? - ***What does it take to upgrade to the terrain display? Should I hold off on the aviation db update (or at least not get a year-long subscription) until I get this done? (I.E., does adding the terrain necessitate a different db?) - ***What does it take to get the WAAS upgrade? I understand that doing so before 31 August (or at least ordering it?) will be substantially cheaper than after that date? Same question on "holding off" on db updates? - ***I'm considering adding Wx to the package. What does that take? Same question on "holding off" on db updates? -- Alternatively, I'm considering one of the handhelds (496?) that can present weather--I get more or less the same thing, but I also have a handheld backup at my disposal. Thoughts? - Finally, a pure newbie operating question: the green bearing pointer in the default nav view--is that always a GPS bearing pointer toward the next waypoint, or will it act as a VOR bearing pointer? Easy enough to figure out in flight, I suppose, but I didn't check & since I'm asking.... If you look at my tale below*, I have reason to believe that what the box displays--including radial/DME to a tuned VOR--is based solely on GPS. Thanks, as always, for any help/advice/wisdom! Doug *Funny story: So, I'm flying my new purchase home from Connecticut to Colorado, and spent the night w/ some friends in Oklahoma City. Departing the next day, I couldn't get the box to accept CO15 (Kelly Airpark, my eventual parking place). OK, it's a small, private field, not terribly surprised. Then it wouldn't take 00V (Meadowlake Airport, my temp location while the Kelly runway resurfacing finished)--hmm, small airport, but definitely should be showing up. Let's try COS (Colorado Springs)--nope; DEN (Denver)--nope. OK, something's up. A little sleuthing showed me that the aviation db is "EAST US" (which I never even checked, since, as I say, I had thought the db was worldwide). Apparently, the western reaches of the eastern United States is in western Oklahoma/eastern Colorado.... Anyway, I plugged in the lat/long off the sectional, then refined that when I remembered I had the AOPA airport guide with me, so I still had a GPS working for me--and, besides, I had steam gauges and was flying VFR anyway, so it was not a big deal from a "how do I get there" perspective. If anyone's curious, the db items do not appear to all end at the same point. For example, the Lamar, CO, airport (LAA) showed up, but not the associated VORTAC (LAA), 7.6 nm to the north. Also, I had SUA displays all the way home, to include the Alert areas east of Colorado Springs, and the COS Class C & Denver Class B, and various other SUAs; however, the "nearest" of anything on the "nearest" pages is in Nebraska, Oklahoma, or (far eastern) Colorado. I also learned something valuable to know about the way the box works. The identifier, radial, and distance display on the map page apparently *is not* a reading from the VOR receiver, but rather it matches up the tuned frequency to the db, verifies it's receiving a signal (I hope??), then displays that information as a GPS calculation. Bottom line, that info was blank as soon as I got out of range of the westernmost VOR in the db, despite the fact that I tuned up various VORs, verified the idents & the function of the CDI, etc. This may be old news to folks more experienced w/ this box, but it was brand new to me (and I'm glad I discovered it in such a benign environment). This is why I also question how the bearing pointer works--I have to assume it's GPS only, unless I can get some evidence to the contrary. Please, anyone with more smarts on how the 530 handles VOR information (rad/DME and/or bearing pointer), pipe up with details!! -- Doug "Where am I to go/Now that I've gone too far?" -- Golden Earring, "Twilight Zone" (my email is spam-proofed; read the address and make the appropriate change to contact me) |
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For terrain, I think you need the "W" upgrade. there's quite a bit of
discussion of this below, but the basic info is about 3 AMUs, change software, change GPS antenna, change antenna cable, new 16mb data card, new Jepp Jsum software for USB downloads, terrain download from Garmin, new USB device from Garmin. I believe that the CDI on the nav page is GPS only. You can use the GPS/CDI switch to control the mechanical CDI. |
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You have lots of good questions and it sounds like you would get a lot out
of one of the advanced courses offered by various places on the operation of the GNS 530. Some more info below. "Douglas Paterson" wrote in message news: I'm sure folks here have run through the various permutations, thought I'd avoid re-inventing the wheel by asking. My new baby (TB-20, if you missed my other thread--we're very happy together!) has a Garmin GNS-530 w/ a GTX-330 transponder providing TIS traffic, and I have a few questions about it that don't seem to be obvious on Garmin's web site or the instructions.... Questions I marked w/ "***" are those involving upgrades I want, vice just currency & operating questions. - Garmin implies that all work/upgrades/etc. to the unit must be done by a Garmin dealer--true/false? True. There are many out there so it shouldn't be a problem. They key there is access to parts. -- Either way, is there any real difference between shops for this sort of thing, or does Garmin control service pricing the same way they apparently do for sales pricing? Pricing for Garmin's end is pretty standard. The difference comes in the labor costs which is shop-driven. -- Any opinions on Colorado shops? The two closest to me are Colorado Springs Avionics (COS) and Denver Avionics Inc. (Centennial/APA)--same flight distance, but COS is more convenient based on me needing a ride if I have to leave the plane overnight, or go to work, or whatever. Several others are reasonably close by but will require a bit more planning on my part. - For whatever reason, the unit is showing "basemap not available," and the land db software version is "not available"--bottom line, I get no roads, rivers, towns, etc., just lat/long and aviation points (airports, intersections, etc). Book says "take to dealer" to fix--is it true that a database card update will NOT fix this? What will it take to get this fixed? The basemap is part of the unit and is not in the Jepp DB. You will need to get a software upgrade from the shop. - The Jepp db is both out of date & for the wrong area*. I plan to update this, but see below for additional considerations. I'm not sure how this works, though--do I need to buy some sort of hardware to connect to a computer to write to the card? Also, I don't see anything on the Garmin site about "areas"--I thought the db was world-wide, but I was proven wrong on my flight home.... Any pointers on this? You will need a card updater. See http://www.jeppesen.com/navdata - ***What does it take to upgrade to the terrain display? Should I hold off on the aviation db update (or at least not get a year-long subscription) until I get this done? (I.E., does adding the terrain necessitate a different db?) Terrain is a $500 upgrade done at Garmin through a qualified shop. It requires some internal changes. If you opt for the WAAS upgrade, this is included in the price. As for the aviation DB update, they're only good for 28 days for use in IFR operation so the decision to hold-off depends on how you're planning to use it. - ***What does it take to get the WAAS upgrade? I understand that doing so before 31 August (or at least ordering it?) will be substantially cheaper than after that date? Same question on "holding off" on db updates? For the 430 it's only $1,500 but I'm not sure when it will go up. Apparently it will be much higher after that so holding off on this will hurt the wallet more than holding off on the aviation update. - ***I'm considering adding Wx to the package. What does that take? Same question on "holding off" on db updates? -- Alternatively, I'm considering one of the handhelds (496?) that can present weather--I get more or less the same thing, but I also have a handheld backup at my disposal. Thoughts? Weather on the 530 will run you 2X-3X the cost of the 496 but will save you yoke space.Plus, the 530 won't show as much as the 496. You will also have the battery back-up GPS-driven "panel" which may save your ass one day. - Finally, a pure newbie operating question: the green bearing pointer in the default nav view--is that always a GPS bearing pointer toward the next waypoint, or will it act as a VOR bearing pointer? Easy enough to figure out in flight, I suppose, but I didn't check & since I'm asking.... If you look at my tale below*, I have reason to believe that what the box displays--including radial/DME to a tuned VOR--is based solely on GPS. Not sure about the 530 as I have a 430 but I believe if you set it to OBS mode with a VOR as the reference waypoint it will act like the bearing pointer. Here's some more interesting 530 stuff: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Garmin/ Thanks, as always, for any help/advice/wisdom! Doug |
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"Paul kgyy" wrote in message
oups.com... For terrain, I think you need the "W" upgrade. there's quite a bit of discussion of this below, but the basic info is about 3 AMUs, change software, change GPS antenna, change antenna cable, new 16mb data card, new Jepp Jsum software for USB downloads, terrain download from Garmin, new USB device from Garmin. I believe that the CDI on the nav page is GPS only. You can use the GPS/CDI switch to control the mechanical CDI. Thanks, Paul. From additional things I've discovered from the avionics shops I've contacted, you're correct that the WAAS upgrade includes the terrain, BUT the terrain is available as a separate upgrade, for ~.5 AMU. Makes sense NOT to do the terrain if you know you're going to get the WAAS, but if WAAS doesn't interest you (or is further down the road), terrain is still an option.... Yes, the CDI on the nav page appears to be GPS only, as is the bearing pointer (the BP is what I'd wondered about). Too bad, it would be nice if the system would provide radio navigation capability on the main screen as well.... -- Doug "Where am I to go/Now that I've gone too far?" -- Golden Earring, "Twilight Zone" (my email is spam-proofed; read the address and make the appropriate change to contact me) |
#5
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"Marco Leon" wrote in message
... You have lots of good questions and it sounds like you would get a lot out of one of the advanced courses offered by various places on the operation of the GNS 530. Some more info below. No doubt! That's the sort of thing I'm looking into. Overall, though, the 530 seems pretty intuitive to me. I'm not a fan of having to scroll for each letter/number (is there any option for a keypad, btw?), but otherwise the interface seems almost familiar to me. For the 430 it's only $1,500 but I'm not sure when it will go up. Apparently it will be much higher after that so holding off on this will hurt the wallet more than holding off on the aviation update. From discussions w/ avionics shops, that $1,500 is good for the 530 as well. The *order* has to be placed by 31 Aug; the *installation* has to be completed by 31 May. My understanding is that the price will essentially double after August, to $2,995 (I have not confirmed this, since I intend to get the WAAS upgrade done before the deadline). Great info on the db's and fact that the terrain is included in the WAAS--since I'm doing the WAAS, it'd be a waste of money to do the terrain upgrade. Weather on the 530 will run you 2X-3X the cost of the 496 but will save you yoke space.Plus, the 530 won't show as much as the 496. You will also have the battery back-up GPS-driven "panel" which may save your ass one day. Understood on the cost & the yoke space--but, am I reading you correctly, the display on the 496 is *larger* and/or *more detailed* than the 530?? I didn't know that.... The handheld backup aspect of the 496 already has me leaning that way--but this would cinch the deal, particularly given the cost differences you point out and that I'm not too concerned about yoke space.... - Finally, a pure newbie operating question: the green bearing pointer in the default nav view--is that always a GPS bearing pointer toward the next waypoint, or will it act as a VOR bearing pointer? Not sure about the 530 as I have a 430 but I believe if you set it to OBS mode with a VOR as the reference waypoint it will act like the bearing pointer. I experimented, the bearing pointer always points to the next GPS waypoint--doesn't matter in OBS mode or not. Here's some more interesting 530 stuff: http://www.cs.cmu.edu/~dst/Garmin/ Interesting stuff, thanks--and, thanks for all the pointers!! -- Doug "Where am I to go/Now that I've gone too far?" -- Golden Earring, "Twilight Zone" (my email is spam-proofed; read the address and make the appropriate change to contact me) |
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![]() each letter/number (is there any option for a keypad, btw?), NO For the 430 it's only $1,500 but I'm not sure when it will go up. Don't forget that you may need a different antenna cable, and certainly will need a different antenna, in addition to the cost of the WAAS upgrade. This is not included in the $1,500. You may also need separate annunciators for an additional 800-1,000 if the distance between your primary flight instruments and the Garmin unit exceeds a certain distance. You will lose some functionality, such as display of nexrad data on the main map page, and in the current software version the ability to calculate winds aloft. These are supposed to be addressed with future upgrades. .. From discussions w/ avionics shops, that $1,500 is good for the 530 as well. -see above. If you have a 430/530 combo, you will need to update both units to WAAS in order for them to cross talk flight plans, etc. The upgrade is much more useful in the 530. The weather download requires a GDL-69, which I recall was around $4,000, while Stormscope was around $8,000. Understood on the cost & the yoke space--but, am I reading you correctly, the display on the 496 is *larger* and/or *more detailed* than the 530?? The 496 does show more stuff like winds aloft, etc compared to the 530, but the screen is smaller/ didn't know that.... The handheld backup aspect of the 496 already has me leaning that way--but this would cinch the deal, particularly given the cost I fly a plane with dual electrical systems and separate busses, so do not carry a backup GPS, even though I have one that sits in a drawer. A yoke mount can be great, but tends to block the view of the panel. - Finally, a pure newbie operating question: the green bearing pointer in the default nav view--is that always a GPS bearing pointer toward the next waypoint, or will it act as a VOR bearing pointer? Waypoint, which of course can be a VOR Not sure about the 530 as I have a 430 but I believe if you set it to OBS mode with a VOR as the reference waypoint it will act like the bearing pointer. If you have an HSI you can dial in the bearing to the VOR in OBS mode, to intercept an airway, for example. I experimented, the bearing pointer always points to the next GPS waypoint--doesn't matter in OBS mode or not. Again, you can dial in a bearing if you have some sort of heading/nav function. Try turning the OBS on your VOR head to the right radial, and see if the magenta line changes on the map page With a 530, the WAAS/nexrad?stormscope is really worth the improved situational awareness. With a single 430, the smaller screen with lower resolution may not justify the added cost. The combination of 530/430 is great. Depending on the situation you can get a lot of info- Taking off I might use the 530 in NAV, with the 430 in Traffic mode, enroute it would be NAV/NEXRAD, terminal area NAV/TRAFFIC, and landing it would be NAV/TERRAIN. Both units are independent, with separate nav heads on the panel. It has been a great asset to flying those long cross countries, in addition to listening to XM satellite radio along the way. |
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