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#1
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Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination
of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. |
#2
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I predict the consensus will be "whatever I have in my ship". Having
said that, I have a SN-10B, a Volkslogger, and an iPAQ 3950 running Glide Navigator II. The Volkslogger because its utterly reliable and interfaces with the SN-10B (although the VL does have some quirks). GNII because it's really simple to use and tells me only what I need to know about where I am, what my options are and what's coming up. The SN-10B because it's dead nuts accurate with wind and final glide (although it does have a rather steep learning curve). -John On Sep 12, 1:30 pm, ryanglover1969 wrote: Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. |
#3
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On Sep 12, 11:46*am, jcarlyle wrote:
I predict the consensus will be "whatever I have in my ship". Having said that, I have a SN-10B, a Volkslogger, and an iPAQ 3950 running Glide Navigator II. The Volkslogger because its utterly reliable and interfaces with the SN-10B (although the VL does have some quirks). GNII because it's really simple to use and tells me only what I need to know about where I am, what my options are and what's coming up. The SN-10B because it's dead nuts accurate with wind and final glide (although it does have a rather steep learning curve). -John On Sep 12, 1:30 pm, ryanglover1969 wrote: Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. Thanks John! That's exactly the kind of information I'm looking for. Anybody else want to weigh in? |
#4
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I run two different setups in the two gliders I own. My ASW-20 has an
old Zander SR 820. No GPS, but decent speed-to-fly and netto vario calculations. For navigation I have a PNA with XCSoar. Slightly more workload since I've got two instruments to set Macready on if I'm trying to keep them in sync. I generally don't worry too much about that though. Leave the PNA at MC2.0 or so depending on the day and it gives me enough info about what is reachable that I can always fly faster/slower on a final glide and watch my arrival height. Word of caution on the PNA though, the GPS altitude is not terribly accurate, though it seems fairly linear in how much it is off. So while it may be off by 1000ft at 17500, down low it is usually off by less. It's just something to be aware of since if you've got a marginal final glide it might be overly optimistic with your actual height. In our Duo, we've got a Cambridge L-nav and GPS-nav model 20. In general the wind calculations from circling are pretty comparable with the XCSoar. While I think it is supposed to calculate wind while on glide, I don't trust it much. I think the SN10 does a better job. Final glide and speed-to-fly are good with clear push-pull visual and audio indications. Final glide is total-energy compensated so if you're on a fast final glide, the height of finish includes a pull-up at the end. Just something to keep in mind, but this can also be useful when dolphin flying as it will tell you if you're really being more efficient by pulling up in lift since a poorly timed pull-up will usually result in more height, but less energy as far as the flight computer is concerned. I still fly with XCSoar in the Duo as a backup and moving map for reachable airfields as the interface is so much more intuitive at a glance. Another nice aspect of XCSoar (probably other PDA/PNA tools as well) are the thermal statistics available. On my thermalling screen I keep the "thermal climb" and "thermal climb all" fields available. At a glance you can see what your achieved climb in the current thermal including centering. Nice for having a less subjective view on your thermal rather than a 30 sec average or your mental average. I only have about 3 flights in a Duo with an SN-10, but I liked it. Not your cheapest option for sure. On Sep 12, 11:49*am, ryanglover1969 wrote: On Sep 12, 11:46*am, jcarlyle wrote: I predict the consensus will be "whatever I have in my ship". Having said that, I have a SN-10B, a Volkslogger, and an iPAQ 3950 running Glide Navigator II. The Volkslogger because its utterly reliable and interfaces with the SN-10B (although the VL does have some quirks). GNII because it's really simple to use and tells me only what I need to know about where I am, what my options are and what's coming up. The SN-10B because it's dead nuts accurate with wind and final glide (although it does have a rather steep learning curve). -John On Sep 12, 1:30 pm, ryanglover1969 wrote: Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. Thanks John! That's exactly the kind of information I'm looking for. Anybody else want to weigh in? |
#5
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I love the Cambridge 302. Good flight computer, audio variometer*,
speed to fly, averager, recorder, GPS, airbrake warning, and supplies 5VDC to my PDA. All in 2-1/2". I believe that most would believe that a moving map is a MUST have. I would love to have the new Clearnav but cost and panel real estate holds me back. Anyway, I have a standard PDA with Glide Nav II which seems fine for what I do. But take that with a large grain of salt as I haven't flown much with anything else. So, two pieces of equipment and I think that you are set to go. * What I find really interesting about the 302's audio variometer are the tones that it emits. Obviously, it has the standard lift/sink stuff. But beyond that if you are in sink and flying the correct speed the sink tone will go away to say that you are doing the right thing. If you are in lift and nearing stall speed, the tone modulates in a more "urgent" way. Cool. My $0.02. - John |
#6
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On Sun, 12 Sep 2010 11:49:49 -0700 (PDT), ryanglover1969
wrote: Thanks John! That's exactly the kind of information I'm looking for. Anybody else want to weigh in? I'm with John - SN-10, Ipaq 3970 running SeeYou, and a Volkslogger. Andreas |
#7
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On Sep 12, 1:30*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. ASW-27: LNav, CAI Model 20 connected to 1520 running Glide NavII. Easy to use, excellent audio and TE. Takes about 10 minutes to know enouigh to use effectively. ASW-28: 302 connected to 1520/GlideNavll. Touchier TE tuning. Speed to fly communication not as good as LNav. ASK-21: LNav with ClearNav. Don't laugh! This is the glider that really needs the glide amoeba. Most time to learn and not as quich to use as Glide Nav, but display and information presentation is excellent. Eventually the 27 and 28 will get ClearNav. FWIW UH/OH/K21 |
#8
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On Sep 12, 12:30*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote:
Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. 1) My current favorite: Clearnav, NK vario (hopefully coming soon!), flarm as backup logger. The clearnav works great, and presents the information you need, quickly, with a minimum of fussing and fiddling. Until the NK vario / flarm are available a 302 is a great vario and backup GPS. 2) SN10. I used to have one. Great instrument, very accurate, very solid and dependable. The downside is a smaller display, usually needing an extra moving map, the need to page through lots of numerical information. For pilots who don't really drool over the huge map on the clearnav the downside is an upside. 3) LX. I don't have one, but buddies who do swear by them. Avoid: -PDAs! For the few thousand you spend on good instruments like the above, say goodbye to batteries that die from age, batteries that die if you leave it unplugged for 20 minutes, batteries that die over the winter even though you left it plugged in all the time, rushing to walmart to find backup batteries, batteries that swell up and blow out the back of the pda and won't go back in; rebooting in flight, hard rebooting in flight (Lost the stylus again! Now what can I find in the cockpit to stick in the reboot hole?) , hard rebooting in flight 5 minutes before the start gate opens, hard rebooting in flight while driving down the ridge 10 miles from the next MAT turnpoint, reentering the entire task in flight after the above, SD cards that die, squinting to see what it actually says, making cheesy shades to keep the sun at Uvalde from overheating the darn thing, and so on. (All of the above are true stories). PDA lifespan is also less than real instruments, so you'll buy 2 or 3 before you're done. -Legacy instruments. The new ones are better. Pay attention to: -Support, especially for US pilots. I know first hand that NK and SN10 are both excellent at this. If there's a rule change or a bug, they fix it fast. Cost? Don't be cheap on vario/av! This is by far the most important piece of your glider for doing well in competition and cross country. Buy a glider that costs $4000 less, or forego the new winglets or wingrigger or some other glider doodad somesuch, but don't be cheap about vario and nav if you want to do well and avoid endless frustration. Be sure to cost out an entire system including GPS, speed to fly vario, display, moving map, extra wires, brackets, connection gear, backup GPS, backup vario if you want one. The integrated computers seem expensive, but once you add up the parts it's a better deal than it seems. John Cochrane |
#9
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On Sep 12, 2:55*pm, John Cochrane
wrote: On Sep 12, 12:30*pm, ryanglover1969 wrote: Looking for some consensus of opinion on what is the best combination of flight computer, logger and PDA. / soaring software. Recently sold my glider with LX 1600, Colibri and 3800 series Ipaq running SeeYou Mobile. I liked the set up ok, but there were some minor glitches, as I'm sure there are with any set up. What do you think is the best? And cost is a factor. 1) My current favorite: Clearnav, NK vario (hopefully coming soon!), flarm as backup logger. The clearnav works great, and presents the information you need, quickly, with a minimum of fussing and fiddling. Until the NK vario / flarm are available a 302 is a great vario and backup GPS. 2) SN10. I used to have one. Great instrument, very accurate, very solid and dependable. The downside is a smaller display, usually needing an extra moving map, the need to page through lots of numerical information. For pilots who don't really drool over the huge map on the clearnav the downside is an upside. 3) LX. I don't have one, but buddies who do swear by them. Avoid: -PDAs! *For the few thousand you spend on good instruments like the above, say goodbye to batteries that die from age, batteries that die if you leave it unplugged for 20 minutes, batteries that die over the winter even though you left it plugged in all the time, rushing to walmart to find backup batteries, *batteries that swell up and blow out the back of the pda and won't go back in; rebooting in flight, hard rebooting in flight (Lost the stylus again! Now what can I find in the cockpit to stick in the reboot hole?) , hard rebooting in flight 5 minutes before the start gate opens, hard rebooting in flight while driving down the ridge 10 miles from the next MAT turnpoint, reentering the entire task in flight after the above, SD cards that die, squinting to see what it actually says, making cheesy shades to keep the sun at Uvalde from overheating the darn thing, and so on. (All of the above are true stories). *PDA lifespan is also less than real instruments, so you'll buy 2 or 3 before you're done. -Legacy instruments. The new ones are better. Pay attention to: -Support, especially for US pilots. I know first hand that NK and SN10 are both excellent at this. If there's a rule change or a bug, they fix it fast. Cost? *Don't be cheap on vario/av! This is by far the most important piece of your glider for doing well in competition and cross country. Buy a glider that costs $4000 less, or forego the new winglets or wingrigger or some other glider doodad somesuch, but don't be cheap about vario and nav if you want to do well and avoid endless frustration. Be sure to cost out an entire system including GPS, speed to fly vario, display, moving map, extra wires, brackets, connection gear, backup GPS, backup vario if you want one. The integrated computers seem expensive, but once you add up the parts it's a better deal than it seems. John Cochrane I loved my LX 1600 and the colibri was alright, but man I could not stand the PDA. You're right about the rebooting in flight and all the other issues. I keep telling myself it was just the model PDA I had, 3600 then 3800. I wonder if the Oudie in more reliable? |
#10
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I've been using the HP310, hooked up to the ship battery. No problems
with visibility, swollen batteries, or reseting in flight. I run the LK8000 software and so far have not found a reason to change. I'll admit to still learning a lot about the software. It does require a thoughtful plod through the setup pages but offers flexibility to the extreme. I have tried the SYM and FlyWithCE on the PNA, but I like the UI for the LK8000 much better. I like the way that touch gestures, with audio feedback, let you move through various information pages without looking at the unit. I've not flown it in a competitive yet but hope to next year. I also have a Colibri with serial NMEA output that is NOT talking to the HP310. I use it for the secure logger and the smoother trace for review with SeeYou. The HP310 alone has too many dropped points to be useful for teaching, which I often do on XC flights. I'm looking forward to trying the LK8000 software on something like the Oudie, with the Colibri as the NMEA source. One of my clients recently flew in the Grob 103 with the Oudie and it was both visible and seemed to be easy to use (except I can't seem to get the hang of SYM). Mike |
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