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#1
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We've just had a very swanky aircon system fitted to our offices. The
control panel is a WindowsCE device compatible with Winpilot, PalmNav, Fly with CE and a couple of others. ( Ask me, I installed a package 'out of hours' ) I'm wondering if anyone else has thought of permanently mounting this type of device in their panel. If I could get a minimum order together it might be worth it. No mounts No loose cables Integrated power supply Install your own software of choice with a laptop or PC A lot more difficult to steal! Ian |
#2
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Ian,
At one time Cambridge were going to do that - I think it was going to be the 305. It would be a good solution as long as there is an accessible CF card (or similar) slot for data exchange. One downside is not being able to set up tasks etc for a 302 away from the glider although this could be done on another PDA and transferred via the CF card. John Galloway At 08:24 12 December 2003, Tango4 wrote: We've just had a very swanky aircon system fitted to our offices. The control panel is a WindowsCE device compatible with Winpilot, PalmNav, Fly with CE and a couple of others. ( Ask me, I installed a package 'out of hours' ) I'm wondering if anyone else has thought of permanently mounting this type of device in their panel. If I could get a minimum order together it might be worth it. No mounts No loose cables Integrated power supply Install your own software of choice with a laptop or PC A lot more difficult to steal! Ian |
#3
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On Fri, 12 Dec 2003 08:13:35 +0000 (UTC), "tango4"
wrote: We've just had a very swanky aircon system fitted to our offices. The control panel is a WindowsCE device compatible with Winpilot, PalmNav, Fly with CE and a couple of others. ( Ask me, I installed a package 'out of hours' ) I'm wondering if anyone else has thought of permanently mounting this type of device in their panel. If I could get a minimum order together it might be worth it. No mounts No loose cables Integrated power supply Install your own software of choice with a laptop or PC A lot more difficult to steal! Ian There are any number of industrial computers running CE. Check the power requirements and price. For that matter check the power requirement of a PDA when it can't go to sleep. Mike Borgelt |
#4
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At 13:30 12 December 2003, Mike Borgelt wrote:
'For that matter check the power requirement of a PDA when it can't go to sleep.' Mike Borgelt Yes - that would be a problem. John Galloway |
#5
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Do you have a link to one of these systems? I haven't seen one.
tango4 wrote: We've just had a very swanky aircon system fitted to our offices. The control panel is a WindowsCE device compatible with Winpilot, PalmNav, Fly with CE and a couple of others. ( Ask me, I installed a package 'out of hours' ) I'm wondering if anyone else has thought of permanently mounting this type of device in their panel. If I could get a minimum order together it might be worth it. No mounts No loose cables Integrated power supply Install your own software of choice with a laptop or PC A lot more difficult to steal! Ian -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#6
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http://www.cdynamics.com/choicetcembsys.html
Install one of those in your cockpit, with a LINUX based flight display program... then you just might have something! This is a project I would be quite interested in, but working in Starbucks or McDonalds is more profitable than writing soaring software. Guy Byars "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Do you have a link to one of these systems? I haven't seen one. tango4 wrote: We've just had a very swanky aircon system fitted to our offices. The control panel is a WindowsCE device compatible with Winpilot, PalmNav, Fly with CE and a couple of others. ( Ask me, I installed a package 'out of hours' ) I'm wondering if anyone else has thought of permanently mounting this type of device in their panel. If I could get a minimum order together it might be worth it. No mounts No loose cables Integrated power supply Install your own software of choice with a laptop or PC A lot more difficult to steal! Ian -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#7
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Hi,
Interesting. I sell Computer Dynamics (a division of GE Fanuc) products in my day job in industrial automation. I've sold their WinCE panel mount computers. They are very nice. I'm not sure, but I don't think they'll work for us in gliders. I've looked at panel mount WinCE devices in the past and found that they have a few gotchas. They usually require 24V power. It should be possible to work around that. They also require huge amounts of current to power the backlight. I don't have a solution for that. Hopefully screen technology will eventually produce a screen that works in sunlight without a high-current backlight. Also, the WinCE computers we sell are a bit too big for use in a glider. The bezel is large. Paul Remde "Guy Byars" wrote in message ... http://www.cdynamics.com/choicetcembsys.html Install one of those in your cockpit, with a LINUX based flight display program... then you just might have something! This is a project I would be quite interested in, but working in Starbucks or McDonalds is more profitable than writing soaring software. Guy Byars "Eric Greenwell" wrote in message ... Do you have a link to one of these systems? I haven't seen one. tango4 wrote: We've just had a very swanky aircon system fitted to our offices. The control panel is a WindowsCE device compatible with Winpilot, PalmNav, Fly with CE and a couple of others. ( Ask me, I installed a package 'out of hours' ) I'm wondering if anyone else has thought of permanently mounting this type of device in their panel. If I could get a minimum order together it might be worth it. No mounts No loose cables Integrated power supply Install your own software of choice with a laptop or PC A lot more difficult to steal! Ian -- ----- change "netto" to "net" to email me directly Eric Greenwell Washington State USA |
#8
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On 12 Dec 2003 14:16:49 GMT, John Galloway
wrote: At 13:30 12 December 2003, Mike Borgelt wrote: 'For that matter check the power requirement of a PDA when it can't go to sleep.' Mike Borgelt Yes - that would be a problem. John Galloway For a soaring computer you do not actually need a Windows type OS.It just adds to the memory and processor power requirements(read electrical power)nor do you need the license fee for the OS. Not that for VFR flight we really need colour eye magnets in the cockpit. Mike Borgelt |
#9
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Nobody 'needs' these things Mike but all the top comp pilots seem to fly
with them. An integrated solution mounted high in the panel is just neater, safer and more secure. A standardised OS allows the user to install their own personal preference of software package or packages. Varios and loggers deliver NMEA ( a particularly clunky interface ) that allows the user to build up a hardware system to suit their requirements. If loggers were built without their displays and keyboards they'd be a little cheaper and all programming and setting could be done down the serial interface. Not to mention that they could be mounted remotely, uncluttering the cockpit, reducing the distractions to the pilot and increasing the OO's confidence in the 'security' of the installation. The same with varios, if they were built as black boxes without any panel knobs and switches it could all be controlled via a serial interface. One less hole in the panel and a much slicker installation. Personally I think the LX1600 is the way to go. It wouldn't change the market much, still room for the current crop of manufacturers but the ship owner could mix and match his preferences. Club ships could be fitted with a 'fancy' panel system with the club pilot simply plugging in his logger, GPS or even vario unit of choice. The permanent, one off licence for WindowsCE 3.0 is about UKP12 per instance, not a huge overhead given the massive functionality that is delivered. If power is really a problem then simply put in a second battery or upgrade to an 11 A/h pack. I'm surprised the manufacturers still impose 7.5 a/h mounts on us with the increasing demands for current these days. As the prevalence of palm nav systems and transponders increases surely more battery capacity is required. Ian |
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