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#1
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Slightly OT but has anyone ever used a Suunto watch while flying?
I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. Just wondering Cheers, Kit PPL. |
#2
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![]() "K i t W â l k e r" wrote in message ... Slightly OT but has anyone ever used a Suunto watch while flying? I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. Don't have one but a nonflying friend showed me his. Seemed pretty good. If you get one, come back with a PIREP. I'd be really curious to know how the accuracy is while in a flying cockpit. Is there any method for correcting for baro pressure? |
#3
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Is there any method for correcting for baro pressure?
I think it's a thousand feet per inch. So if the altimeter setting is 30.42, that's half an inch difference, or five hundred feet. Add or subtract that from the given reading. (High to low, look out below - so in this case you'd read 500 feet lower than you are, so add) Should be good enough in an emergency. Test it before you need it. Jose (for Email, make the obvious changes in my address) |
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"Teacherjh" wrote in message
I think it's a thousand feet per inch. So if the altimeter setting is 30.42, that's half an inch difference, or five hundred feet. Add or subtract that from the given reading. (High to low, look out below - so in this case you'd read 500 feet lower than you are, so add) Should be good enough in an emergency. Just what I want in an emergency: Another math test. ![]() -- John T http://tknowlogy.com/tknoFlyer _______________ |
#5
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Kit,
I own a Suunto watch and I find it to be a reliable back up for the aircraft altimeter and fairly accurate when I went up Cannon Mountain in New Hampshire (on the gondola). Best of luck Don Barker "K i t W â l k e r" wrote in message ... Slightly OT but has anyone ever used a Suunto watch while flying? I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. Just wondering Cheers, Kit PPL. |
#6
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Actually you do adjust it for altimeter setting, but the increments are larger-
..05, but its close enough for what it does. Worked great in a pressurized cabin, indicated 8,500' all through cruise ![]() In article , says... On Thu, 07 Aug 2003 12:55:26 +1000, K i t W â l k e r wrote: I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. Has it got the equivalent of a Colesman window? And will it work in a pressurized cabin? ;-) Rob |
#7
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K i t W â l k e r wrote in message . ..
Slightly OT but has anyone ever used a Suunto watch while flying? I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. I've been wearing a Suunto for about 4 yrs. now. It is a surprisingly reliable watch (although it's BIG). The altimeter function is very accurate and has come in handy in the airplane. Once as a tie-breaker when the altimeter and encoder didn't agree and just a few weeks ago when I had the misfortune of having little bugs invade my pitot/static system. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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#9
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Robert Perkins wrote in message . ..
On Thu, 07 Aug 2003 12:55:26 +1000, K i t W â l k e r wrote: I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. Has it got the equivalent of a Colesman window? And will it work in a pressurized cabin? ;-) I generally set mine like I do the alimeter. Set it to airport elevation prior to departure. You can adjust the barometric pressure, but on mine it's calibrated to sea level, not corrected for altitude like the altimeter settings you get from the airport. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
#10
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I've had the Suunto for a few years, and it works great. When I was
doing my PPL, I was shopping around for a handy watch that had easy-to-use timers, etc. I studied every "pilot" watch out there, concluding the displays were WAY too small to see while bouncing around in the plane, or at night (actually, I know a few ATP's, and NONE of them wear a "pilot" watch). It finally dawned on me that I already HAD the perfect watch for flying: the Suunto. Big display, easy to use timer, back-lighting, and of course, a useful altimeter. Cheers, Scott . com... K i t W â l k e r wrote in message . .. Slightly OT but has anyone ever used a Suunto watch while flying? I'm thinking about getting one for my climbing /skiing etc. and it dawned on me that the 3' altimeter (supposedly accurate to 29000') might be a handy back-up. I've been wearing a Suunto for about 4 yrs. now. It is a surprisingly reliable watch (although it's BIG). The altimeter function is very accurate and has come in handy in the airplane. Once as a tie-breaker when the altimeter and encoder didn't agree and just a few weeks ago when I had the misfortune of having little bugs invade my pitot/static system. John Galban=====N4BQ (PA28-180) |
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Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Military watches | Ray | Military Aviation | 4 | July 8th 04 11:46 PM |