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#11
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I think it really depends on your expected usage. If you fly a lot to a
lot of different places, you could save some money with the airchart system and have a good service to boot. If you are a local yokel it is certainly overkill. I subscribed to the VFR topo atlas for two years, and used it for a few "local long distance" flights as well as a very long round-robin from California to the midwest and back. Note that my experience is with the VFR topo atlas (WAC charts) only---someone else will have to do the math with IFR charts. Form factor was not a problem. In fact, I preferred having the charts bound rather than coping with folding and re-folding a full-size sectional or WAC in a small cockpit. It was also fun having access to detailed information about the entire country, and going on lots of mental flights in the living room. The best part was the continual summarized updates. Every four weeks I got a card in the mail that had all of the updates for that cycle summarized. That alone is worth the price of the ticket---I found it much easier to digest than the same information presented in my local A/FD, and this was for the whole country. There were two down-sides, neither of which had to do with their business. One, I don't much care for the WAC format---identifiers and frequencies are missing, and the scale is out far enough that the charts are difficult to use in mountainous country. Sectionals are much preferred for low-level flying, listening to AWOS reports en route, and topographical information. I got stuck in a canyon in New Mexico because it was unclear from the charts how high the ridge was that I was trying to cross, and it was on a page boundary. Not a big deal in my case, but I could see it being dangerous---in the future I will always use sectionals for mountain flying. My guess is that their new sectional atlases will take care of this problem. The other problem is one of economics, for me at least. I don't actually NEED detailed maps of the entire country, or even half of it. 99% of my flying at this point is local, such that one sectional, one TAC, and one A/FD subscription fulfills all my needs, and at a lower cost than the Airchart subscription. Surprisingly, I don't actually save that much---2 sectionals in a year are $16, 2 TACs are another $8, and 12 A/FDs at $4.50 apiece add up to $54, for a total of $78. So in reality I am only saving $30, about an hour's flying in my plane. Although, if I don't buy an A/FD I will need FlightGuide or something similar for airport information, so add another $25 to the Airchart side. If I do gear up (no pun intended) for a long trip in the future I will very likely purchase a sectional atlas. I saw an ad in AOPA for www.airchart.com . Does anyone have any experience |
#12
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Out of curiosity, Ben, why do you hate the Flite Guides? I find them
quite useful. (less than a subscription to any one AF/D, same price as any one of the three Flite Guide books, which I hate). |
#13
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#14
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In article ,
wrote: Out of curiosity, Ben, why do you hate the Flite Guides? I find them quite useful. Well, I was bitter right off that I was promised 2 updates which turned out to mean you get an IMMEDIATE update (since it turns out you bought an expired book) and then ONE update in the future. Doing the updates is a pain. I don't like the form factor. It's a small, thick binder. It doesn't stack well with other aviation publications, it doesn't fit neatly in my kneeboard like an A/FD and it doesn't fit well in airplane side pockets. The small pages mean fewer airports are visible at a glance, which leads to more flipping. I bought it because I like the information layout and especially the runway diagrams. Since then (few years ago) the A/FD has gotten far more airport diagrams for the small airports and has full size diagrams for many large airports. There has always been information in the A/FD other than airports, most of which is not in the Flite Guide. -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#15
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In article ,
Michael wrote: Actually not a major deal - updating a plate by hand is no biggie, and some updates are pointless anyway. I had just envisioned it in terms of "what if the sheaf of Jepp updates I get meant I actually had to understand what changed instead of just throwing away an old sheet and putting in another". I was describing this to my wife (her eyes glazed over, of course) and it occured to me that I'd be perfectly happy -- and save money, even! -- if I could pay the ~$4.25 for a brand-new terminal procedures book for every approach I ever do. The whole problem is being ready in advance... Bottom line - I'm not renewing my subscription. So what's your new charting solution? -- Ben Jackson http://www.ben.com/ |
#16
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I've used the Aircharts IFR system for just about a year now. All in all
I've been very satisfied with it and just renewed my subscription. The atlas has replaced my kneeboard and is generally easy to use. The cumulative updates are much easier than filing Jepp updates for approaches I'll never fly. I did manage to rip the page out of the atlas which contained my home airport but that is only a minor inconvenience. As for drawing the big ol line, I still do that across the pages on the route. Makes it a lot easier to switch from page to page in flight. If you fly in a lot of different areas regularly I would definitely recommend it. "Steven Barnes" wrote in message om... I saw an ad in AOPA for www.airchart.com . Does anyone have any experience with these charts? My flight instructor recently got them. For someone that does a bit of traveling, it sounds like a great deal. I'm curious how practical they are (in-flight usage, not able to draw the big 'ol line across 2 or 3 sectionals, etc). Thanks. PP-ASEL |
#17
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That's not correct.
Sporty's charges only actual shipping costs on chart subscriptions. However, if you buy charts outside of a subscription, they charge according to their "standard shipping and handling" table. "Ray Andraka" wrote in message ... I used to use Sporty's. I now use Avmaps.com. They are quite a bit cheaper than Sporty's and they only charge the actual shipping, not the inflated shipping and handling Sporty's does. -- --Ray Andraka, P.E. |
#18
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In the spiral bound form?
On Wed, 24 Mar 2004 18:23:44 GMT, ArtP wrote: On Wed, 24 Mar 2004 12:11:47 -0600, Stu Gotts wrote: I subscribed a few times, but got ****ed off after not seeing identifiers, frequencies and the like available information that is usually contained on the sectionals. They now offer sectionals. |
#19
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On Wed, 24 Mar 2004 19:21:27 -0600, Stu Gotts
wrote: In the spiral bound form? Just like the IFR and WAC's, except you get 2 books. One for the east half of the US and one for the West half. On Wed, 24 Mar 2004 18:23:44 GMT, ArtP wrote: On Wed, 24 Mar 2004 12:11:47 -0600, Stu Gotts wrote: I subscribed a few times, but got ****ed off after not seeing identifiers, frequencies and the like available information that is usually contained on the sectionals. They now offer sectionals. |
#20
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I've used Aircharts for about 5 yrs now. I fly mostly from Arkansas to
Dallas, Omaha and New Orleans, but fly to enough other places that I want to have the charts when the need arises. I nearly always file IFR and use the bound NACO and IFR Atlas. The updates are easy, you don't update unless you are going to use those charts. I check on line before a trip to make sure that the plates for the destination and several points in between are up to date, if not I print new plates and tape it over the old in in the book. Pretty simple. I really like the Jepp charts but don't like to keep up with the updates and to cover the whole US is expensive. This year I'm getting the Sectional Atlases along with the approach plates and IFR Atlas. Thought that I would try them once to see how much usage they get. "Steven Barnes" wrote in message om... I saw an ad in AOPA for www.airchart.com . Does anyone have any experience with these charts? My flight instructor recently got them. For someone that does a bit of traveling, it sounds like a great deal. I'm curious how practical they are (in-flight usage, not able to draw the big 'ol line across 2 or 3 sectionals, etc). Thanks. PP-ASEL --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.633 / Virus Database: 405 - Release Date: 3/18/2004 |
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