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#11
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1) Analog hands and second hand for timing things
2) Digital clock set to Zulu time so I don't have to bother my small brain with those pesky conversions 3) Backlight so I can see it when I'm flying at night 4) Vibrating alarm so I remember to do routine things like switch tanks. 5) Nifty E6B ring around the outside that I really can't see, but really impresses the chicks at the bar I agree with what you're looking for in a watch. I even thought that I had finally found the "almost perfect" flying watch in the Casio "Data Bank" line. It does everything but #4 and #5 (I don't need a watch to pick up chicks anymore.... :-). It even "projects" the digital display onto the glass in front of the analog face, eliminating the need for a separate "window" in the back of the watch -- which makes for a nice, compact sized watch. It was even cheap, at around thirty bucks. Unfortunately: 1. Under the store's bright lights, the display was clearly visible. Under average lighting conditions, however, the "glass" that displays the projected digital information is too dark, and obscures the hands of the analog watch. As a result, to see what time it is indoors I usually have to push the backlight button. This is unacceptable. 2. The menus are absurdly complex, and require WAY too much futzing around to use the timers and time zones. Thus, I don't use them. 3. The control buttons are too similar and are thus easily confused. So, I'm back in the search. You wouldn't think it would be so hard to make a watch with those four (or five) features, but it has eluded me for many years. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#12
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I got a $30 timex at Target that has features 1 - 3. It also has a
stopwatch which is useful for timing a trip, but isn't be so great for timing holds in IFR. It has a big digital display behind the analog hands, so it's easy to read from a distance. It has a molded-on band, which I'm not crazy about, and I think the watch is a bit ugly, but it's definitely useful. 1) Analog hands and second hand for timing things 2) Digital clock set to Zulu time so I don't have to bother my small brain with those pesky conversions 3) Backlight so I can see it when I'm flying at night 4) Vibrating alarm so I remember to do routine things like switch tanks. 5) Nifty E6B ring around the outside that I really can't see, but really impresses the chicks at the bar What say you? Chris |
#13
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![]() On 17-Dec-2003, "Michael 182" wrote: How does an electronic altimeter work? Is there some kind of pressure sensor? Yes. The sensing element is in essence a solid-state strain gauge that detects atmospheric pressure. This is similar to the mechanisms used in many blind encoders. The Casio watch and similar electronic altimeters include means for correcting for variations in barometric pressure. (However, in the case of the Casio the adjustment is unfortunately not in terms of sea level pressure but is rather just a means to adjust the altitude readout. For aviation use you set it on the ground to the airport elevation and adjust it in flight by setting it against the airplane's altimeter. While there are some very sophisticated piezoelectric pressure sensors that allow for an electronic altimeter to be as sensitive as the good old expanding bellows mechanical kind, the inexpensive strain gauge mechanism is not quite as good. Adequate for blind encoding or an altitude watch where required resolution is on the order of 50-100 feet, but not good enough for use on an instrument approach to low minimums. ______ Elliott Drucker |
#14
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wrote in message
Of course, it won't work in a pressurized airplane. I've always been curious about this: Wouldn't the altimeter still read an increase/decrease in altitude? No, the altitude would not be correct but for a backup to keeping the shiny side up in IMC it would have some value, right? -- Jim Fisher |
#15
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Jim Fisher wrote:
I've always been curious about this: Wouldn't the altimeter still read an increase/decrease in altitude? No, the altitude would not be correct but for a backup to keeping the shiny side up in IMC it would have some value, right? It will show the altitude you've pressurized your cabin to -- nothing to do with what's going on outside. All the best, David |
#16
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Brinks wrote:
I've been off looking for a good aviation watch. I've looked at Citizen Skyhawk watches, which look cool, but they don't have a backlight, which I thought would be bad (good?) for flying at night. And I've seen some others that are all digital, but I like having the hands for a timer. And I found one that vibrates, which I thought would be really handy for switching tanks and things, but it didn't have hands. So, I was wondering, what would everyone like to see as a minimum set of features in an ideal watch? Here's my list - I haven't worn a watch for many years (including when I flew IFR), but.. 1) Analog hands and second hand for timing things 2) Digital clock set to Zulu time so I don't have to bother my small brain with those pesky conversions 3) Backlight so I can see it when I'm flying at night You can get a fairly inexpensive Timex with these three features. 4) Vibrating alarm so I remember to do routine things like switch tanks. I seriously doubt you'd feel it vibrate. I know I've forgotten to turn my cell phone off in the air, and I couldn't feel it when it started vibrating. -- Jay __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www2.ari.net/jmasino/ ! ! ! Checkout http://www.oc-adolfos.com/ for the best Italian food in Ocean City, MD and... Checkout http://www.brolow.com/ for authentic Blues music on Delmarva |
#17
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Jim Fisher wrote:
wrote in message Of course, it won't work in a pressurized airplane. I've always been curious about this: Wouldn't the altimeter still read an increase/decrease in altitude? No, the altitude would not be correct but for a backup to keeping the shiny side up in IMC it would have some value, right? My wife gave me one of these watches for my birthday. Its altitude is pretty much dead one if I set it right in a non-pressurized airplane. I took it on a B737 business trip, figuring that since airlineres are pressurized to 8000 feet it should work up to 8000 feet, and it's at those lower altitudes that I really wanna know how high we are since that's when theymake you turn off GPS receivers and such. I naively thought that the cabin was not pressurized until 8000 and then the pressurization was turned on at that point to keep it constant. Imagine my disappointment when on takeoff roll our "altitude" dropped over 100 feet and stayed there until we were several thousand feet up, only gradually easing up to 8000. Learn something new every day about how airlines work. ![]() |
#18
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Jay Masino wrote:
Brinks wrote: I've been off looking for a good aviation watch. I've looked at Citizen Skyhawk watches, which look cool, but they don't have a backlight, which I thought would be bad (good?) for flying at night. And I've seen some others that are all digital, but I like having the hands for a timer. And I found one that vibrates, which I thought would be really handy for switching tanks and things, but it didn't have hands. So, I was wondering, what would everyone like to see as a minimum set of features in an ideal watch? Here's my list - I haven't worn a watch for many years (including when I flew IFR), but.. 1) Analog hands and second hand for timing things 2) Digital clock set to Zulu time so I don't have to bother my small brain with those pesky conversions 3) Backlight so I can see it when I'm flying at night You can get a fairly inexpensive Timex with these three features. 4) Vibrating alarm so I remember to do routine things like switch tanks. I seriously doubt you'd feel it vibrate. I know I've forgotten to turn my cell phone off in the air, and I couldn't feel it when it started vibrating. -- Jay __!__ Jay and Teresa Masino ___(_)___ http://www2.ari.net/jmasino/ ! ! ! Checkout http://www.oc-adolfos.com/ for the best Italian food in Ocean City, MD and... Checkout http://www.brolow.com/ for authentic Blues music on Delmarva Why did they not put vg's on the full length of the wing? Can you now get a much greater angle of attack before stalling ? Thanks |
#19
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Look at the Citizen Navitach watches. They do almost everything you
need (no vibrating) and look nicer than your average $30 timex. They usually go for less then $100 on eBay. If you can find one of the Citizen "Wingman" watches, they are the same as the Navitach but add an E6B to the bezel (but I think the Wingman looks a bit clunky). Chris On Wed, 17 Dec 2003 19:30:47 -0600, "Brinks" wrote: I've been off looking for a good aviation watch. I've looked at Citizen Skyhawk watches, which look cool, but they don't have a backlight, which I thought would be bad (good?) for flying at night. And I've seen some others that are all digital, but I like having the hands for a timer. And I found one that vibrates, which I thought would be really handy for switching tanks and things, but it didn't have hands. So, I was wondering, what would everyone like to see as a minimum set of features in an ideal watch? Here's my list - 1) Analog hands and second hand for timing things 2) Digital clock set to Zulu time so I don't have to bother my small brain with those pesky conversions 3) Backlight so I can see it when I'm flying at night 4) Vibrating alarm so I remember to do routine things like switch tanks. 5) Nifty E6B ring around the outside that I really can't see, but really impresses the chicks at the bar What say you? Chris |
#20
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"smf" wrote in message news:WZ9Eb.13862$HQ.12885@okepread02...
snip I have a Atomic clock at home to keep it accurate. Although I can get a little "Anal" with the atomic clock. You have an atomic clock at home?!? Very impressive. I always wanted an atomic clock of my very own, but could never find an affordable supply of Cesium 133 John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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