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#11
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My briefing strategy changed when AOPA launched their recent planner. Best
free planner out there. For long multi-leg cross-country VFR or IFR from home: Plan less than 4 hour legs out of a 5 hour tank. Use AOPA's planner and ADDS for planning the day (or days) before. DUATS briefing (using AOPA's planner) to get a weather update, NOTAMS, and to make it official the day of the flight. With the planner, I start with the origin and destination and the rubber band the route to nearby nav aids or airports along the way. The Nav Log that it puts out is fine for me. I print it out forward and backward so I'm ready for the trip home. Long multi-leg cross-country VFR away from home: Plan less than 4 hour legs out of a 5 hour tank. ADDS and DUATS briefing using a web site interface to get a weather update, NOTAMS, and to make it official for planning and the day of the flight. Might be replaced by using a weather station at an FBO. My last choice is to do this over the phone. I will plan out a route even if I am planning to fly direct using my handheld GPS. It provides enroute time checks and a back up. It also gives me a chance to validate the route against TFRs or other hazards. I don't want to be flight planning in the air. It also provides some enroute points to talk about with a briefer, if I end up doing it over the phone. I agree with abbreviated planning for a familar route that is less than a few hours. If it's a clear day and I'm going for a breakfast or lunch at a nearby airport, I'll call for a briefing on the way to the airport. That is the minimum I will do. Anything more than an hour from home and I want to have a good idea about weather and enroute checkpoints. Since winds aloft are so variable, I need something to measure my progress. Maybe I'm trying to get there and back on one tank of fuel. What starts out as a short little flight with no worries could turn into a fuel crisis on the way home. I subscribed to Aeroplanner for one month. Nice service but too expensive for weekend flyers and too slow. The Cirrus interface for DUATS is also a waste of time now that AOPA's planner is out. I haven't tried any other fee-based planning services. ------------------------------- Travis "Paul Folbrecht" wrote in message ink.net... Being newly licenced (yesterday), I've started thinking about the type of VFR flight-planning I'll do in the real, post-student world, and what tools I'll use. As a student, of course, I did everything by hand, and meticulously, and eschewed GPS navigation as well. Some of my observations from my brief XC experience thus far: 1) Winds aloft forecasts are never right- usually not close. 2) There's no need to produce a nav log, etc. with checkpoints when the route is familiar. So, for a route that is now familiar to me- say, Timmmerman (MWC) to Appleton (ATW) (about 75nm), of course I get a briefing, and check the winds aloft, but I'm not going to produce a nav log. I'm going to fly by pilotage with my GPS to back me up and with a VOR receiver to back that up. And, of course, if I encounter particularly unexpected weather, I'm going to turn back. For new routes, I am going to produce a nav log, knowing full well that my heading will not likely match the precomputed values due to differing winds aloft. No matter. But, of course, for such flights, I'm not going to be doing things the old-fashioned way anymore. I want some good software to make it easy. So, I think I have two questions: 1) Does this make sense? and 2) What's the best flight-planning software out there? I've used AOPA's tool and I like it, but I don't really know what's out there (and yeah I can do a google search but then you don't know if you're hearing about the latest & greatest). I do have a Palm 5 device so PC software that has a Palm component too would be a plus. ~Paul P.S. Hope this isn't too much of a "newbie" post for this forum. Thought it was more appropriate here than over at .student. |
#12
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Oops. I already replied, realized that I forgot a congratulations, then saw
that Jay beat me to it. Anyway, congrats. downloaded charts. In my mind - fuhgedaboudit. I'm not wasting all that color ink for charts that are not quite as good as the real thing and only show you a small section with no connection to the adjacent plats. But then I love maps. I have no problem folding them around in the cockpit. familar route: Coming back from Michigan to Chicago after Thanksgiving weekend. A route that I have flown 20 times in the last couple of years. I hit headwinds that were 40 to 60 knots. You bet I was watching time and landmarks. -- ------------------------------- Travis "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:l9XQb.19922$U%5.156877@attbi_s03... Being newly licenced (yesterday), I've started thinking about the type of VFR flight-planning I'll do in the real, post-student world, and what tools I'll use. First of all, it seems that everyone here has forgotten their manners -- CONGRATULATIONS, Paul! Welcome to the .0005% of the world that gets to fly! As far as flight-planning goes, I'd recommend checking these out: 1. www.Aeroplanner.com has some really great on-line flight planning stuff -- including the ability to print out sectionals with your course line and 10-mile-ticks superimposed. They are fabulous on long trips, cuz they're on notebook-sized paper and you just "flip" from one map to the next. No "octopus arms" in the cockpit, fighting to fold a sectional! 2. Destination Direct ( www.destdirect.com/ ) is (IMHO) the best stand-alone PC flight planner. I've used it for years, and was able to flight plan your trip from Timmerman to Appleton in about five seconds, with fuel burn, ETA, waypoints, etc. As time goes on and you garner more flight experience, you'll find that you really can't get lost, as long as you know just a very few basic landmarks along your route. For example, to fly from Iowa City, IA to Janesville, WI, do I *really* need a flight log that ticks off every railroad track and power line from here to there? Nah. So long as I know where (a) I-80 is, (b) the Mississippi River is, and (c) the nuclear power plant in Rockford, IL is (it emits a tower of steam visible for 50 miles), and have a rough idea of the necessary heading and winds aloft, it's almost impossible NOT to find Janesville. Overlay this knowledge with your VORs, a clock, and a moving map GPS, and, shoot, you'd have to be pretty unlucky to really get "lost." By the way, where did you train -- Timmerman? I trained in East Troy ten years ago, and lived in Racine until '97. -- Jay Honeck Iowa City, IA Pathfinder N56993 www.AlexisParkInn.com "Your Aviation Destination" |
#13
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![]() "Jay Honeck" wrote in message news:l9XQb.19922$U%5.156877@attbi_s03... By the way, where did you train -- Timmerman? I trained in East Troy ten years ago, and lived in Racine until '97. Ah, memories! I was born and raised about six miles from Timmerman (Silver Spring and Lydell). Then, I "Escaped FROM Wisconsin". :~) |
#14
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In a previous article, "Jay Honeck" said:
1. www.Aeroplanner.com has some really great on-line flight planning stuff -- including the ability to print out sectionals with your course line and 10-mile-ticks superimposed. They are fabulous on long trips, cuz they're on notebook-sized paper and you just "flip" from one map to the next. No "octopus arms" in the cockpit, fighting to fold a sectional! I like AeroPlanner, but this year I bought a Howie Keefe Air Chart Systems IFR Atlas, and it was GREAT for en-route. I mark my route using removable highlighter tape that I got from Sportys. For this year, I'm ordering a VFR Sectional Atlas as well. -- Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/ Just another organic pain collector racing to oblivion |
#15
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![]() "Bill Denton" wrote in message ... | | The next point is: it's 2003 and I wish people would not say this. While your own post was pretty good, there is an incredible amount of silliness that is being justified just because "it is 2003" (or 4, or whatever). Whenever someone starts out this way I am 99% certain that some wretched, silly statement is about to follow. Yours was an exception, but a rare one. |
#16
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I use the Contel Duats, enflight.com, and the AOPA flight planners.
Each one requires a little bit of getting used to but they all provide just about everything you will need. For the palm, I recommend Co-Pilot. It does everything I need, including calculating the windss aloft so you can pass them on as a pirep. |
#17
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Thanks, but I have a Palm device, not PocketPC.
WingX from http://www.hiltonsoftware.com runs on a Pocket PC and let's you quickly do route planning with wind calculations, it'll do W&B and a whole lot more including having Parts 1, 61, 91, 119, and 141 of the FARs right on your PDA. It's pretty cool if I say so myself (ahem...) Disclaimer: Should be obvious. ![]() Try it, you'll like it - it's free to download and try. Hilton |
#18
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Heh. Point taken. Do it on the PC at home and there's no real need for
the Palm. My hiking did become way more enjoyable when I stopped lugging the damn bathtub everywhere. I even leave the accordian behind most trips now. My personal opinion is that having to fly without your handheld is like having to hike without your bathtub. |
#19
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Wow, thanks a ton to everyone for all the replies so fast.
A couple things: 1) I have used duats a lot for wx but not yet for planning. 2) I have a Garmin 295 GPS and I didn't even know it was possible to download route data to it. Damn, that is cool. Gonna have to read that manual. |
#20
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First of all, it seems that everyone here has forgotten their manners --
CONGRATULATIONS, Paul! Welcome to the .0005% of the world that gets to fly! Nah, not necessary. I got enough back-patting over at RAS. But thanks. :-) As far as flight-planning goes, I'd recommend checking these out: 1. www.Aeroplanner.com has some really great on-line flight planning stuff -- including the ability to print out sectionals with your course line and 10-mile-ticks superimposed. They are fabulous on long trips, cuz they're on notebook-sized paper and you just "flip" from one map to the next. No "octopus arms" in the cockpit, fighting to fold a sectional! Now that is cool- I had wondered if such software (that printed sectionals with routes) was available and figured that it must be. This I will have to check out. 2. Destination Direct ( www.destdirect.com/ ) is (IMHO) the best stand-alone PC flight planner. I've used it for years, and was able to flight plan your trip from Timmerman to Appleton in about five seconds, with fuel burn, ETA, waypoints, etc. snip By the way, where did you train -- Timmerman? I trained in East Troy ten years ago, and lived in Racine until '97. Yep, Timmerman. I actually live just over the line into Racine county right now, on 7 Mile Rd, which I'm sure you remember. BTW, your establishment is definitely on my list of places to visit at some point. |
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