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#1
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![]() The panel in my glider is the ultimate in sunlight readability, low power consumption, ease of use, low maintenance, low clutter and low cost. http://www.gfbyars.com/SGU1-20/final/P1010425.JPG If you want to see terrain features, look out the window. If you want to know where you are, look at your map. If you want to know how far you are from the turnpoint, put your ruler on the map and measure. If you want to mess with computers, USB input devices and VGA displays, why not just stay at the office. Guy Byars |
#2
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On Sep 12, 9:32*pm, Guy Byars wrote:
The panel in my glider is the ultimate in sunlight readability, low power consumption, ease of use, low maintenance, low clutter and low cost. http://www.gfbyars.com/SGU1-20/final/P1010425.JPG If you want to see terrain features, look out the window. *If you want to know where you are, look at your map. *If you want to know how far you are from the turnpoint, put your ruler on the map and measure. If you want to mess with computers, USB input devices and VGA displays, why not just stay at the office. Guy Byars I see you have the Cosmiboy 5000 in there. AKA the pellet vario. Al |
#3
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Guy Byars wrote:
The panel in my glider is the ultimate in sunlight readability, low power consumption, ease of use, low maintenance, low clutter and low cost. http://www.gfbyars.com/SGU1-20/final/P1010425.JPG If you want to see terrain features, look out the window. If you want to know where you are, look at your map. If you want to know how far you are from the turnpoint, put your ruler on the map and measure. If you want to mess with computers, USB input devices and VGA displays, why not just stay at the office. Guy Byars I must admit that you have a point with that way of reasoning. Sometimes you wander why you have so many things in the cockpit that almost require a masters degree to operate. When our club switched the old paper barographs and cameras to GPS loggers everything was said to be much easier and therefore promote more people flying XC-tasks. Instead we have a situation with constant upgrades, modifications, "enhancements" and what not. A lot of talk about flying XC is now revolving around how to handle all the gizmos we bring with us in order to "help". I have a Cambrige 302 and HP Ipaq with See You Mobile in my LS6-b and even this pretty basic (nowadays) setup is driving me crazy sometimes. /Anders |
#4
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Ah, the good old days! Wondering where I was, wondering how far it
was to the nearest landable field, wondering how much altitude it would take to get there?................Now days all I have to do is 'wonder' where the lift is? Can some computer wiz please solve this final remaining problem? JJ |
#5
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On Sep 13, 8:25*am, JJ Sinclair wrote:
Ah, the good old days! * Wondering where I was, Look out the window, then look at your map. wondering how far it was to the nearest landable field, Again, look out the window... wondering how much altitude it would take to get there? Again look out the window, though at an L/D of 20:1, the altiude estimate is pretty easy. Now days all I have to do is 'wonder' where the lift is? * Looking out the window should give you a clue. Collision avoidance system? Look out the window. I like the simplicity of the pellet variometer, though I do confess I miss total energy. Guy Byars |
#6
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I have to agree with this philosophy to a large degree...the only
instruments that are always reliable (nearly always) and the only ones that don't take massive amounts of time, effort, and usual frustrations are the mechanical devices...they've been working pretty reliable since Glen Curtis and the Wright Brothers were in competition. Though everyone who's designing and promoting glass displays is trying to add the features already reliably covered by the mechanical instruments....there is something about the way mechanical instruments display that is more the way we perceptively feel what the aircraft is doing. tim Please visit the Wings & Wheels website at www.wingsandwheels.com "Guy Byars" wrote in message ... The panel in my glider is the ultimate in sunlight readability, low power consumption, ease of use, low maintenance, low clutter and low cost. http://www.gfbyars.com/SGU1-20/final/P1010425.JPG If you want to see terrain features, look out the window. If you want to know where you are, look at your map. If you want to know how far you are from the turnpoint, put your ruler on the map and measure. If you want to mess with computers, USB input devices and VGA displays, why not just stay at the office. Guy Byars |
#7
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On Sep 13, 7:08*am, "Tim Mara" wrote:
I have to agree with this philosophy to a large degree...the only instruments that are always reliable (nearly always) and the only ones that don't take massive amounts of time, effort, and usual frustrations are the mechanical devices...they've been working pretty reliable since Glen Curtis and the Wright Brothers were in competition. Though everyone who's designing and promoting glass displays is trying to add the *features already reliably covered by the mechanical instruments....there is something about the way mechanical instruments display that is more the way we perceptively feel what the aircraft is doing. tim Please visit the Wings & Wheels website atwww.wingsandwheels.com "Guy Byars" wrote in message ... The panel in my glider is the ultimate in sunlight readability, low power consumption, ease of use, low maintenance, low clutter and low cost. http://www.gfbyars.com/SGU1-20/final/P1010425.JPG If you want to see terrain features, look out the window. *If you want to know where you are, look at your map. *If you want to know how far you are from the turnpoint, put your ruler on the map and measure. If you want to mess with computers, USB input devices and VGA displays, why not just stay at the office. Guy Byars- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Tim, the situation is a little different for those of us new to the sport; an audio vario and a PNA set up with a very simple screen can get us farther away, safer, sooner than messing with a chart and a scale while learning how to thermal. The combination of an IPAQ 310 with a simple SYM screen is pretty simple to use, readable 95% of the time, and distracts very little while giving you an accurate idea of what you can make and what you can't. Not that expensive either. |
#8
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sooner than messing with a chart and a scale while learning how to thermal. I submit to you that more "messing" has been done with gps's and PDA hardware/software in flight than has EVER been done with charts and scales. |
#9
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On Sep 13, 8:34*am, Guy Byars wrote:
- *sooner than messing with a chart and a scale while learning how to thermal. I submit to you that more "messing" has been done with gps's and PDA hardware/software in flight than has EVER been done with charts and scales. I never had to re-boot my sectional. That said - I do like being able to dial up alternates when I'm flying over tiger country. 9B |
#10
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On Sep 13, 10:34*am, Guy Byars wrote:
- *sooner than messing with a chart and a scale while learning how to thermal. I submit to you that more "messing" has been done with gps's and PDA hardware/software in flight than has EVER been done with charts and scales. Have to disagree with you there a bit, Guy. A PDA/GPS moving map is fundamentally just a chart that knows where you are - so you don't have to find it in the cockpit, refold it, orient it, then look back and forth from the ground to the chart trying to convince yourself which town you are over. Used correctly (like any tool , including a chart) it shouldn't take much time away from your lookout, and should actually be much faster than a chart, especially over new terrain (as in at a contest on on a safari). Used incorrectly, I do agree that all the cockpit magic and blue smoke can become a terrible distraction. We went through the same learning process when fighters (F-4s in my case) were modernized with reliable, accurate navigation equipment, way back in the 80s - it took a while to learn NOT to use all the magic, but instead to just use what was needed. Always fun to pull up on a guy after an unobserved Fox 2 and see both pilot and WSO heads down trying to figure out what the ones and zeros were telling them! Nowadays, if the magic doesn't work, you don't go (you might drop a smart weapon on the CNN van - the one parked between the orphanage and the nunnery - instead of the bad guy's bomb factory). Same applies to current glider nav computers - just because it can tell you something, doesn't mean you really need to know it in real time. I'm amazed by the amount of (to me, at least) unimportant info most people cram on their little PDA displays! I'm down to just a simple map (no terrain unless on ridges), airports with L/D needed, course line (if on a task), track line, and winds on my primary SYM map - all that I need to navigate at a glance and spend more time "looking out the window"! I will admit to the guilty pleasure of taking up a nice K-13 or sports canopy 1-26 with nothing really working but the airspeed indicator and flying by the seat of the pants, to coin a phrase... Cheers! Kirk 66 |
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