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#21
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On Apr 11, 6:18*pm, Jim wrote:
It’s also saving my back. Before the Ipad, I carried volumes of company manuals, aircraft manuals, books, magazines, and other things made of dead trees, my bag weighed a ton. Sometimes I even play Angry Birds. Jim And airline pilots can take notes them at company meetings where they discuss equipping everybody EFBs :-) Darryl |
#22
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On 4/11/2011 7:49 PM, gotovkotzepkoi wrote:
All this talk about ipads, software, charts, panels, instruments, levers, flaps, brakes, trailers, rules, sectionals, ad infinitum makes me long for my hang glider daze when I flew with zero moving parts and one instrument; a vario with a little needle that moved up or down. That's it, for hours. That was real freedom. It's no wonder that young people find it hard to get revved up about soaring given its myriad of associated hassles. They are all out on the paragliding/hang gliding hills. I think a hang glider has at least three moving parts: the pilot, retractable gear, and the glider. I'm not convinced 3 axis control and spoilers makes a sailplane harder to fly than a hang glider! The person starting out doesn't see or get involved in this most of this stuff. They show up at the field, they go flying with an instructor, they ooh and aah over the private ships and their magnificent pilots, and dream of doing some of it. The complications are added later, and slowly, as the pilot progress. It's not dumped on them from day one. I've talked to former hang glider pilots that moved to sailplanes, and they've said "it's easier and less hassle to fly sailplanes". Not at the beginning, perhaps, but once you start cross-country. Both sports are simple if you hang around the hill or the airport. Nobody needs iPads, software, trailers, contest rules, sectionals, ad infinitum to fly locally. We have to dig deeper than discussions of iPads to understand why young people might choose hang/paragliding over sailplanes. I suspect young people really LIKE the idea of using an iPad, so I don't see that as discouraging them. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) - "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation Mar/2004" Much of what you need to know tinyurl.com/yfs7tnz |
#23
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On Apr 12, 1:33*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 4/11/2011 7:49 PM, gotovkotzepkoi wrote: All this talk about ipads, software, charts, panels, instruments, levers, flaps, brakes, trailers, rules, sectionals, ad infinitum makes me long for my hang glider daze when I flew with zero moving parts and one instrument; a vario with a little needle that moved up or down. That's it, for hours. That was real freedom. It's no wonder that young people find it hard to get revved up about soaring given its myriad of associated hassles. They are all out on the paragliding/hang gliding hills. I think a hang glider has at least three moving parts: the pilot, retractable gear, and the glider. I'm not convinced 3 axis control and spoilers makes a sailplane harder to fly than a hang glider! The person starting out doesn't see or get involved in this most of this stuff. They show up at the field, they go flying with an instructor, they ooh and aah over the private ships and their magnificent pilots, and dream of doing some of it. The complications are added later, and slowly, as the pilot progress. It's not dumped on them from day one. I've talked to former hang glider pilots that moved to sailplanes, and they've said "it's easier and less hassle to fly sailplanes". Not at the beginning, perhaps, but once you start cross-country. Both sports are simple if you hang around the hill or the airport. Nobody needs iPads, software, trailers, contest rules, sectionals, ad infinitum to fly locally. We have to dig deeper than discussions of iPads to understand why young people might choose hang/paragliding over sailplanes. I suspect young people really LIKE the idea of using an iPad, so I don't see that as discouraging them. -- Eric Greenwell There might be a lot of youngsters flying paragliders, but hang gliders are just as full of old farts as sailplanes. The exact same conversations we have about how to keep the sport from "aging" has been heard in the HG forums. Todd ex HG pilot |
#24
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Jim wrote:
Its also saving my back. Before the Ipad, I carried volumes of company manuals, aircraft manuals, books, magazines, and other things made of dead trees, my bag weighed a ton. Sometimes I even play Angry Birds. Jim BTW, NewsTap is a good usenet reader... I am using it now... it will do offline reading so to can read and reply even when you dont have a connection.. just like the old days. |
#25
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Hi guys
Can anyone share some pix on how to attach a tab to the cockpit? Do you make use of a normal cover and just velcro the back to the cockpit or would you suggest making a pocket for it to fit into to keep it safe? I've recently bought a 7" tab that I wish to use with XCSoar.. don't want it to fall off the cockpit now.. ![]() Regards, Bruce |
#26
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#27
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On Friday, April 8, 2011 1:58:09 AM UTC-7, nimbus wrote:
Hello, I am glider pilot and looking for a good navigation software running on Ipad. What would you propose? Many thanks, Bruno Take a look at how many people are using "ForeFlight" in powered aircraft. I use it in my IPAD w/retna screen but not in a glider because at 6'1", there is no place to put it. But now there is the IPAD Mini w/Retna which might work in the sun but I have not tried the mini out yet but it's on my Christmas list |
#28
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I use a universal car mount that I bought at WalMart for my 5" Dell Streak.
It has geard side pieces to adjust to the width of the device and swing out "feet" to support the device from below. I also use velcro on the back just to be sure, and it's never come out of the holder. To attach the holder in the cockpit, I cut off the car mounting base and, using 2 Adel clamps, attached it to the side of my panel where it is securely held and does not block any of the instruments. Of course, a 7" device might block something. wrote in message ... Hi guys Can anyone share some pix on how to attach a tab to the cockpit? Do you make use of a normal cover and just velcro the back to the cockpit or would you suggest making a pocket for it to fit into to keep it safe? I've recently bought a 7" tab that I wish to use with XCSoar.. don't want it to fall off the cockpit now.. ![]() Regards, Bruce |
#29
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Bruno,
Here are the links to gliding software (WinPilot) that runs on an iPad: For Europe: https://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/...539701244&mt=8 For the USA: https://itunes.apple.com/app/winpilo...540473050?mt=8 https://itunes.apple.com/WebObjects/...643348142&mt=8 The software can run either stand alone (you will need a version of the iPad with a built in gps), or connected to your existing flight computer - you will need a connection module like this one: http://www.butterfly-avionics.com/bu...rface-for-apps If you have a Butterfly vario, WinPilot will connect to it natively, including the Climb Maximizer. Have fun! Jerry |
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