![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
This is a report on the Casio Pathfinder PAW1200 and its application
in the cockpit of a small aircraft. The PAW1200 has it all: R/C time reception from all atomic clock signals (US, Japan, Germany, and Britain), solar powered, barometer, altimeter, thermometer, compass, alarms, stopwatch, countdown timer, alternate (world) time display, auto backlight, and so on. But it's surprisingly easy to learn and use. It's a huge watch to contain all these gizmos (photos and dimensions at http://esnips.com/web/BobFrysPhotos) but the mildly ludicrous proportions of the PAW1200 line are part of its appeal. My test of an R/C (atomic) watch reception is to pitch it into a desk drawer with other watches and see if it can get a signal from Colorado to Northern California. This one usually did, and simply set on top of the desk it got the signal 100% of the time on the first try. Without the signal it's still accurate, mine gaining about 2 or 3 seconds over 10 days. I turned off the power saving mode as unnecessary, because kept in the drawer with occasional daytime use is enough to keep it fully charged. The "justification" for this, apart from the geek factor, was that it might be useful in an airplane should the whiskey compass or altimeter go tango-uniform. Sure. But seriously, would the PAW1200 be useful as a backup? The answer is maybe. The PAW1200 senses barometric pressure and reports the raw figure as well as an altitude estimate, using standard atmosphere data. Unfortunately you can't set the baro pressure to an airport reading, so to make use of the altimeter you have to remember to set the base altitude to your airport elevation before takeoff. Doing so, I found the watch altitude was within 50-100 feet of the airplane altimeter up to 8000 feet, as high as I went on that test. It could definitely help in a pinch if the altimeter quit working, provided you set the base altimeter correctly *and* atmospheric pressure hasn't changed much. Or you can check your differential-corrected GPS altimeter which most aviation handheld GPSs use these days. The magnetic compass in the PAW1200 also proved accurate, though it needed a few seconds to stabilize. You have to hold your arm so as to point the 12 o'clock position on the watch in the direction you want to read, and it displays the digital compass heading for several seconds. It agreed with the whiskey compass within reading error. Though I didn't try it in the airplane, the stopwatch could also be useful and is not hard to get to. It can be used at night with its backlight (either manual or auto), but since the light only lasts 2.5 seconds you have to look quick. So do its features really make it a valuable addition in a cockpit? Probably not, but then personally I don't find any watch *that* useful. Consider it more as a fun piece of hardware to play with. Another review: http://www.watchreport.com/2006/03/review_of_the_m.html Other photos: http://cantrell.typepad.com/photos/w...200/index.html Casio website: http://www.casio.com/products/Timepi...inder/PAW1200/ Best price I can find: http://www.4-watches.com/casio/pathfinder.html |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Flight to Las Vegas Pirep -- Part I | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 31 | March 24th 06 05:11 PM |
Prairie Aviation Museum PIREP | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 6 | October 19th 05 09:18 PM |
Anyone got a PIREP on Seattle's Museum of Flight? | Jay Honeck | Piloting | 16 | May 20th 05 03:59 PM |
(PIREP, long) Cherokee 180 from Bay Area to Bishop, CA | Dave Jacobowitz | Piloting | 15 | June 24th 04 12:11 AM |
PIREP question | Andrew Sarangan | Piloting | 6 | January 27th 04 02:21 PM |