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#1
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I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide
computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish |
#2
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I removed my mechancal vario a couple years ago and replaced it with a
Borgelt B40 which as a 9Volt battery backup. I have had to use the battery backup once. I am very pleased with this arrangement. My main reason for changing was that I wanted an Audio on my backup vario. Brian HP16T N16VP "V6" Fish wrote: I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish |
#3
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![]() Fish a écrit: I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish In most European countries (including France) a pneumatic vario is mandatory - and I think its a good idea when I count the times the saiplane battery went dead in long flights! |
#4
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![]() "jerome" wrote in message ... Fish a écrit: I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish In most European countries (including France) a pneumatic vario is mandatory - and I think its a good idea when I count the times the saiplane battery went dead in long flights! Mandating a mechanical vario is an outdated regulation - times have changed. In the gliders I fly the broken vario is always the Winter. The Borgelt B40/B400 makes a better standby vario since they have internal backup batteries so are not dependent on the gliders main battery. The lithium 9V in my B40 will power it for more than 50 hours - with audio and averager. The Borgelt has better response than the Sage to boot. Even in the very unlikely event that both my electronic varios failed, US altimeters with 10 foot resolution can be used for thermalling although it takes a lot of instrument tapping. Which reminds me, I've got to find one of those pager DC vibrator motors to shake my altimeter. Bill Daniels |
#5
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Bill Daniels wrote:
"jerome" wrote in message ... Fish a écrit: I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish In most European countries (including France) a pneumatic vario is mandatory - and I think its a good idea when I count the times the saiplane battery went dead in long flights! Mandating a mechanical vario is an outdated regulation - times have changed. In the gliders I fly the broken vario is always the Winter. The Borgelt B40/B400 makes a better standby vario since they have internal backup batteries so are not dependent on the gliders main battery. The lithium 9V in my B40 will power it for more than 50 hours - with audio and averager. The Borgelt has better response than the Sage to boot. Even in the very unlikely event that both my electronic varios failed, US altimeters with 10 foot resolution can be used for thermalling although it takes a lot of instrument tapping. Which reminds me, I've got to find one of those pager DC vibrator motors to shake my altimeter. Bill Daniels Just take any small motor from radio shack and epoxy a small nut or similar object to the side of the shaft. Works perfect. Mount the motor on the back of your altimeter. If you want, you can run the wires to a pushbutton on your stick - any time you need an instant 50 ft, press the button! Mind you I didn't say with direction the 50 ft would be... |
#6
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Bill Daniels schrieb:
In most European countries (including France) a pneumatic vario is mandatory - and I think its a good idea when I count the times the saiplane battery went dead in long flights! Mandating a mechanical vario is an outdated regulation Whether a regulation is outdated is completely irrelevant if you want to fly legally. That said, I doubt "most" European countries require a machanical vario. Switzerland, for one, doesn't even require any vario at all (except for cloud flying). Stefan |
#7
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At 23:42 24 June 2006, Fish wrote:
I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish If you are looking to save weight dropping the mechanical vario is not likely to help much. The mechanical I have weighs far less than any electric vario and the flask is down the back on the CoG. The big advantage of suck and blow varios is that they still work when the battery fails. I have never had a failure on a suck and blow vario with the exception of a Cosim which failed more often than not. |
#8
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![]() jerome wrote: In most European countries (including France) a pneumatic vario is mandatory - and I think its a good idea when I count the times the saiplane battery went dead in long flights! As far as I know, only the mechanical altitude meter and the mechanical speed indicator are mandatory. The vario is not a safety-critical instrument and therefore not required by law... AFAIK... |
#9
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It's been now over 8 years since I changed to an all electric panel.
My primary vario is a Cambridge 302 and I have a Westerboer pressure sensor vario (no flask) as a secondary. With two batteries that can each run the panel for many hours I had so far no problem. I cannot see one reason why a mechanical vario would still be needed. The Westerboer is completely in sync with the Cambridge and of course has an audio output that I actually like much better than the one on the Cambridge. Go and throw out the Winter, you can probably sell it for the price of an electric. Herb, J7 Fish wrote: I am considering dropping a Winter Vario from my panel . I have a Glide computer and primary electric vario on board as well, as an Ilec electric. Just trying to lose some weight from the cockpit. Any PRO's or CONS's I need to know about regarding reliability and redundancy in flight......batteries in the cold etc?? Cheers Fish |
#10
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On Sun, 25 Jun 2006 19:29:34 +0200, Stefan
wrote: That said, I doubt "most" European countries require a machanical vario. Switzerland, for one, doesn't even require any vario at all (except for cloud flying). Neither does Germany. Andreas Bye Andreas |
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