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#1
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Will the PowerFLARM logger record pressure altitude, or only GPS
altitude? Will it record engine noise level? |
#2
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On Oct 31, 12:33*pm, Greg Arnold wrote:
Will the PowerFLARM logger record pressure altitude, or only GPS altitude? *Will it record engine noise level? It *has* to record (cockpit ambient) pressure altitude to be an IGC approved recorder, and it also has to record the GPS altitude as well (if it has a GPS fix). There is an ENL option for the PowerFLARM. Darryl |
#3
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On Oct 31, 12:33*pm, Greg Arnold wrote:
Will the PowerFLARM logger record pressure altitude, or only GPS altitude? *Will it record engine noise level? It *has* to record (cockpit ambient) pressure altitude to be an IGC approved recorder, and it also has to record the GPS altitude as well (if it has a GPS fix). There is an ENL option for the PowerFLARM. Darryl |
#4
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On Oct 31, 12:44*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote:
It *has* to record (cockpit ambient) pressure altitude to be an IGC approved recorder, and it also has to record the GPS altitude as well (if it has a GPS fix). I thought new flight recorders were allowed, even required, to be connected to a static port. This eliminates the differences between the logger and the altimeter due to speed changes. Not sure when the requirement changed but it has been discussed here before. So the real question is will the blind PowerFLARM have a static connection. Andy |
#5
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On Nov 1, 7:13*pm, Andy wrote:
On Oct 31, 12:44*pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: It *has* to record (cockpit ambient) pressure altitude to be an IGC approved recorder, and it also has to record the GPS altitude as well (if it has a GPS fix). I thought new flight recorders were allowed, even required, to be connected to a static port. *This eliminates the differences between the logger and the altimeter due to speed changes. *Not sure when the requirement changed but it has been discussed here before. So the real question is will the blind PowerFLARM have a static connection. Andy Andy Opps you are right (my C302 bias showing) thanks for catching that - the current IGC standards allow either. I'm not aware if any of the other more recent flight recorder implementations do this - the C302 static port is not used for its flight recorder. Personally I'm happy having cockpit ambient but it would be nice for a PowerFLARM brick to come with a port suitable to connect with a static line (even if that might not pass FAA muster...). You don't need to connect it if you don't want to. And so the original question's answer is yes still yes it has one but the question has changed. Urs....? Darryl |
#6
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Andy,
I know the EWMicro doesn't attach to the static port. I think it would be considered a "new" logger. So, it must not be "required." Wayne http://www.soaridaho.com/ "Andy" wrote in message ... On Oct 31, 12:44 pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: I thought new flight recorders were allowed, even required, to be connected to a static port. This eliminates the differences between the logger and the altimeter due to speed changes. Not sure when the requirement changed but it has been discussed here before. So the real question is will the blind PowerFLARM have a static connection. Andy |
#7
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On Nov 1, 10:08*pm, "Wayne Paul" wrote:
Andy, I know the EWMicro doesn't attach to the static port. *I think it would be considered a "new" logger. *So, it must not be "required." Waynehttp://www.soaridaho.com/ "Andy" wrote in ... On Oct 31, 12:44 pm, Darryl Ramm wrote: I thought new flight recorders were allowed, even required, to be connected to a static port. *This eliminates the differences between the logger and the altimeter due to speed changes. *Not sure when the requirement changed but it has been discussed here before. So the real question is will the blind PowerFLARM have a static connection. Andy I should have typed my last reply more carefully as well. It is currently optional for a IGC flight recorder to use either cockpit ambient or static if the flight recoder is for a fixed install. If it a portable flight recorder it must use cockpit ambient. The EWMicro is a portable so would not qualify anyhow. So to be clear here is the current IGC flight recorder technical specification language... "Pressure Altitude - In a GNSS FR, this is a five numeric group indicating the pressure altitude in metres with respect the International Standard Atmosphere (ISA) used in aviation, to a sea level datum of 1013.25 HPa. The pressure recorded in the *.IGC file may either be "cockpit static" (vented within the FR box), or use a tube connection to the pressure from glider instrument system static tubing. If the pressure altitude signal within the FR is used for other purposes such as cockpit instrument readings which can be set to other datums such as QNH or QFE, a one-way transmission system must be used from the sensor so that the IGC file always records the required ISA to the 1013 sea level datum irrespective of other settings used for flight instruments. The permitted use of instrument-static is intended for a GNSS FR mounted in the instrument panel. With such an installation, an OO as part of the inspection of the FR installation must check the tubing and the pressure connection to the FR to ensure that they will be out-of-reach of the aircrew in flight. This is to prevent alteration to the IGC-file pressure altitude record by any method. (AL4)" The OO would also have to check for and seal any alt-static switches/ valves so they can't be used in flight. Darryl |
#8
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All this seems to be a very demanding requirement for official
observers. Chris N |
#9
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On Nov 2, 4:09*am, Chris Nicholas wrote:
*All this seems to be a very demanding requirement for official observers. Chris N Yes this does increase the work for OO and contest CD in principle. There are demanding requirements for the OO now depending on the individual flight recorder approval--like possibly sealing the recorder to the aircraft in some circumstances. How often do you think OOs are 1. aware of these requirements for a particular flight recorder approval and 2. follow them? The trade-off is do you want to provide pilots with the option or an IGC flight recorder pressure altitude that is sourced from the static line (and therefore should line up after QNH calibration better with their altimeter) or is the extra choice(=possible confusion)/ complexity/hassle not with it? I'm not aware of any other vendor offeing this - does anybody know of any. The LX 8000/9000 do not and the C302 does not - they all record ambient pressure altitude. I just did a quick check and it looks like the ability to use static line pressure altitude was introduced in the GNSS Flight Recorder Technical Specifications AL4 ~2001 (not sure of the exact adoption date - but it was *not* recent). Darryl |
#10
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On 11/2/2010 12:52 PM, Grider Pirate wrote:
I don't have FLARM, but I have a TT21 transponder. I WILL be talking on 123.5 on the Whites! Let me get this straight. FLARM uses GPS altitude. My transponder uses Pressure altitude. FLARM will see my transponder (assuming I'm interrogated) much as a PCAS. FLARM will look at its GPS altitude, and maybe not worry about me because it thinks we have 1000' vertical separation. Too bad for us if it's a smokin' day, and the tranponder pressure altitude show 16,800 when the GPS altitude shows 18,000! B2016373615714N11540384WA 05179 05561 000076000000 B2016413615718N11540296WA 05202 05585 000072000000 (just an example of a 1,256 difference between pressure and GPS alt, spaces added for clarity) The difference between cabin and static is trivial compared to the difference between pressure and GPS. Also, we just learned that the altitude of other gliders displayed by SeeYou for Flarm purposes is absolute, not relative. So we will be comparing the GPS altitude of other gliders with the pressure altitude on our altimeter. This seems like a problem. |
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