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#1
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I am thinking seriously about getting the GNS480 and need opinions to
(try and) change my mind. The GNS 430 is nice but the 480 has more features that I like. Anybody using one and making approaches? With autopilot? with GPSS? Does GPS altitude REALLY work? |
#2
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Yes to all those questions, except that I don't have GPSS.
Others do have GPSS, and I'm told it works great. A note regarding the autopilot question... Our autopilots can capture the GPS glideslope only on approaches which list VNAV minima. For LNAV approaches without VNAV minima, if the profile shows a dotted line representing the glidepath angle (most do), the GNS480 presents an HSI-like display with vertical guidance, but that vertical guidance is not sent to the external GS pointer, thus preventing the autopilot from locking onto the glideslope. Lateral guidance, of course, remains available to the autopilot. "RonLee" wrote in message = ... I am thinking seriously about getting the GNS480 and need opinions to (try and) change my mind. The GNS 430 is nice but the 480 has more features that I like. Anybody using one and making approaches? With autopilot? with GPSS? Does GPS altitude REALLY work? |
#3
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I don't know where you are located but Carolina Avionics in Salisbury,
NC (RUQ) put in a 530 for the same price as a 430. Not a reman or refurbish. In fact, I had the same pricing on another 530 in when I bought another A36 Bo'. I don't work for them, I just like good service and value. FWIW, the WAAS and terrain s/b put next year. For the difference in screen size and added functions, I would go w/ a 530, if I could. Victor J. (Jim) Osborne, Jr. ps: If you do call the, tell Bill (Smoot) I said to call, he should remember me. N100DA & N326DK |
#4
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On Tue, 28 Dec 2004 23:26:58 GMT, RonLee wrote:
I am thinking seriously about getting the GNS480 and need opinions to (try and) change my mind. The GNS 430 is nice but the 480 has more features that I like. Anybody using one and making approaches? Yes With autopilot? Yes with GPSS? Don't have that. Does GPS altitude REALLY work? What do you mean by that? The GPS glide slope really works for those approaches for which it is enabled. The GPS altitude varies from the pressure altitude due to earth shape assumptions, and other factors including temperature. However, my install included an encoding altimeter with a 10 ft resolution. This allow baro-VNAV approaches. It also allows the pressure altitude to be read directly on the display. I, too, chose the 480 over the 430 (as well as over the 530) because of WAAS, the ability to enter flight plans using airways, TSO146 certification. It has a better display than the 430, although smaller than the 530. --ron |
#5
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RonLee wrote:
I am thinking seriously about getting the GNS480 and need opinions to (try and) change my mind. The GNS 430 is nice but the 480 has more features that I like. Anybody using one and making approaches? Yes With autopilot? Yes with GPSS? Yes Does GPS altitude REALLY work? Yes, but it does not matter, since wrong or right, baro altitude is what the IFR system uses. I can't comment on the 480. It has WAAS, but so will the 480. The 480 has no HSI, but there isn't room for it on the display, and in any case, I have a real HSI, and an electronic HSI cannot emulate a true HSI in any case. Great, I just started the "real vs. fake" HSI argument again :-) -- Samiam is Scott A. Moore Personal web site: http:/www.moorecad.com/scott My electronics engineering consulting site: http://www.moorecad.com ISO 7185 Standard Pascal web site: http://www.moorecad.com/standardpascal Classic Basic Games web site: http://www.moorecad.com/classicbasic The IP Pascal web site, a high performance, highly portable ISO 7185 Pascal compiler system: http://www.moorecad.com/ippas Good does not always win. But good is more patient. |
#6
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"Scott Moore" wrote in message =
news:GdKBd.8300$wu4.6369@attbi_s52... RonLee wrote: =20 Does GPS altitude REALLY work? =20 Yes, but it does not matter, since wrong or right, baro altitude is = what the IFR system uses. =20 I can't comment on the 480. It has WAAS, but so will the 480. The 480 has no HSI, but there isn't room for it on the display, and in any = case, I have a real HSI, and an electronic HSI cannot emulate a true HSI in any case. =20 Samiam is Scott A. Moore =20 WAAS/GPS altitude is used for VNAV approaches. It works very well, really. Baro-VNAV is beyond the scope of the CNX80/GNS480. I'm curious why you say that the 480 has no room for an HSI display. Have you never seen its NAV page? I, too, have a "real" HSI in the lower half of my flight director, but the HSI page in my CNX80 remains useful to me. As I've posted earlier, the glide-slope needle in my Flight Director is not driven from the CNX80/GNS480 unless VNAV minima are published. This defeats autopilot coupling to the computed glideslope on = non-precision approaches. However, the HSI display of the NAV page shows vertical guidance for most LNAV approaches, as a welcome aid for stabilized descents. |
#7
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"John R. Copeland" wrote:
As I've posted earlier, the glide-slope needle in my Flight Director is not driven from the CNX80/GNS480 unless VNAV minima are published. This defeats autopilot coupling to the computed glideslope on non-precision approaches. However, the HSI display of the NAV page shows vertical guidance for most LNAV approaches, as a welcome aid for stabilized descents. I just took delivery on my GNS480 upgrade, and in the initial test flight, did not see what you are experiencing. We flew the GPS23 approach into P08 (Coolidge, AZ), and the GPS07R into KDVT (Phoenix, Deer Valley), and VNAV guidance was provided on the external HSI in both cases. Interestingly, these are traditional GPS approaches, not the newer ones with specific LPV or LNAV/VNAV minimums, and VNAV was provided in both cases. In the Coolidge case, we took it all the way down, and it split the runway laterally and the G/S pointer took the altitude right to the threshold. All this out in the middle of the desert with no ground navaids. Very cool. So, I'm confused by what's causing your restrictions. Could it be something specific to your F/D-A/P setup? I don't have either one, so maybe the logic is restricted only if there's an autopilot. Or perhaps WAAS updating was unavailable when you tried it. Is it restricted even when WAAS is known to be working? Mike |
#8
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"Mike Adams" wrote in message =
news:HxXBd.6305$232.4499@fed1read05... "John R. Copeland" wrote: =20 As I've posted earlier, the glide-slope needle in my Flight Director is not driven from the CNX80/GNS480 unless VNAV minima are published. This defeats autopilot coupling to the computed glideslope on non-precision approaches. However, the HSI display of the NAV page shows vertical guidance for most LNAV approaches, as a welcome aid = for stabilized descents.=20 =20 =20 I just took delivery on my GNS480 upgrade, and in the initial test = flight, did not see what you are=20 experiencing. We flew the GPS23 approach into P08 (Coolidge, AZ), and = the GPS07R into KDVT=20 (Phoenix, Deer Valley), and VNAV guidance was provided on the external = HSI in both cases. Interestingly,=20 these are traditional GPS approaches, not the newer ones with specific = LPV or LNAV/VNAV minimums,=20 and VNAV was provided in both cases. In the Coolidge case, we took it = all the way down, and it split the=20 runway laterally and the G/S pointer took the altitude right to the = threshold. All this out in the middle of the=20 desert with no ground navaids. Very cool.=20 =20 So, I'm confused by what's causing your restrictions. Could it be = something specific to your F/D-A/P=20 setup? I don't have either one, so maybe the logic is restricted only = if there's an autopilot. Or perhaps=20 WAAS updating was unavailable when you tried it. Is it restricted even = when WAAS is known to be=20 working? =20 Mike That's intensely interesting, Mike. I haven't had WAAS unavailable. But if it were unavailable, the CNX80 wouldn't show its computed glideslope presentation on its internal NAV display, either. Feedback I got from the Apollo tech rep through my avionics shop said that it was an intentional restriction on driving the VDI needle, intended to foil 3-axis autopilots from locking onto the vertical guidance unless VNAV minima were published as part of the approach. I don't know if the CNX80/GNS480 can be "aware" of whether the airplane is equipped for 3-axis coupled approaches. Perhaps. Since I had one of the very first upgrades to CNX80 version 2, now I'll need to check to see if that VDI restriction was later = relieved. Indeed, I originally expected to see the VDI active in my flight = director, and that's why I questioned its behavior after my first test flight. Thanks for those details, Mike. If you hear anything more about this, please post. Regarding "splitting the runway", I have an MX20 MFD also, and it almost always depicts me closer to the centerline of a runway than to either edge. It's amazing! |
#9
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Greetings,
The autopilot limitations comes from the autopilot manfacturer, not the GPS at this point. Apparently the TSOs for the GA autopilots were not designed or flight tested for LNAV/VNAV and LPV approaches. I expect these problems to be resolved in the near future so we can let 'George' fly to minimums with the GPS and be able to snooze just a wee bit longer. Mike, two questions: Were either of those GPS approaches flown coupled? What is the date and version of your GNS480 (or CNX80) software? Fly SAFE! Jedi Nein |
#10
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On Sun, 02 Jan 2005 15:23:47 GMT, "John R. Copeland"
wrote: WAAS/GPS altitude is used for VNAV approaches. It works very well, really. Baro-VNAV is beyond the scope of the CNX80/GNS480. I wonder why that is, since my encoding altimeter interfaces with my CNX80. So, if I enter the altimeter setting, I will get a fairly accurate altitude readout (within 10-20' of my panel altimeter). As I've posted earlier, the glide-slope needle in my Flight Director is not driven from the CNX80/GNS480 unless VNAV minima are published. Well, I just picked up my a/c with the upgraded CNX80. Due to time constraints, I did not do anything other than fly home and execute the GPS Rwy 15 approach at KEPM. In any event, this is an LNAV approach with only LNAV minimums. However, it does have vertical guidance as evidenced by a screened descent line; a vertical rate of descent/GS table; and also a TCH at the rwy end MAP. Although there are no VNAV minima published, I DID receive vertical guidance on both the NAV page of the CNX80 as well as on the VDI of my external NSD360 HSI. So, clearly, there was nothing in my CNX80 inhibiting external VDI on this approach. I don't understand why your FD doesn't receive vertical guidance on approaches where it is provided. Ron (EPM) (N5843Q, Mooney M20E) (CP, ASEL, ASES, IA) |
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