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#1
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This is the article from the EAA newsletter:
http://www.ksallink.com/?cmd=display...13&format=html This is the manufacturer: http://www.aaicorp.com Wonder if they might consider adapting this thing to gliders? |
#2
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On Mar 3, 8:28*pm, Dave White wrote:
This is the article from the EAA newsletter: http://www.ksallink.com/?cmd=display...13&format=html This is the manufacturer: http://www.aaicorp.com Wonder if they might consider adapting this thing to gliders? Manufacturer link is actually: http://sagetechcorp.com/ |
#3
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Nope...the market is too small. I asked them at a trade show. It's
meant for UAVs. That market is small, too, in terms of volume, but they can charge a lot...UAV makers are less price sensitive than glider owners. |
#4
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Other than a few thousand dollars, what's the difference between their
"conventional manned installation" and "adapted to gliders"? Jim |
#5
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At 02:42 04 March 2011, JS wrote:
This looks a lot like the Trig 21 which I have had fitted in a powered plane for about 18 months and am very happy with. http://www.trig-avionics.com/library/TT2xBrochure.pdf This link should take you to their website. Other than a few thousand dollars, what's the difference between their "conventional manned installation" and "adapted to gliders"? Jim |
#6
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Am 04.03.11 13:01, schrieb Nigel Cottrell:
This looks a lot like the Trig 21 which I have had fitted in a powered plane for about 18 months and am very happy with. http://www.trig-avionics.com/library/TT2xBrochure.pdf The TT21 is a class 2 transponder and therefore *not* suited for gliders. If you choose to go with Trig, then do yourself a favour and buy the TT22. |
#7
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On 3/3/2011 5:28 PM, Dave White wrote:
This is the article from the EAA newsletter: http://www.ksallink.com/?cmd=display...13&format=html This is the manufacturer: http://www.aaicorp.com Wonder if they might consider adapting this thing to gliders? Pro: the "power box" is about half the thickness of a Trig power box. Cons: The power consumption is greater than a Trig according to their data sheet, it's not TSO'd. It would have to be several hundred dollars cheaper the Trig than to appeal to me enough to dump my Becker, based on those pros/cons. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) |
#8
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On Mar 3, 7:19*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote:
On 3/3/2011 5:28 PM, Dave White wrote: This is the article from the EAA newsletter: http://www.ksallink.com/?cmd=display...13&format=html This is the manufacturer: http://www.aaicorp.com Wonder if they might consider adapting this thing to gliders? Pro: the "power box" is about half the thickness of a Trig power box. Cons: The power consumption is greater than a Trig according to their data sheet, it's not TSO'd. It would have to be several hundred dollars cheaper the Trig than to appeal to me enough to dump my Becker, based on those pros/cons. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) Unlike the Trig TT21/TT22 the encoder is not built into the control head, its a separate box that appears to be be bolted onto the RF unit, its not clear if the same encoder can be used separately connected via a cable or if third party encoders are supported. The Trig scheme is really nice for gliders since you just run one control cable from the panel area to wherever the RF box is mounted (hopefully close to the antenna). Sage is obviously a small company, their product data sheets seem to show hand made prototypes and although things like "FAA TSO" show on them but nothing from Sage is FAA/TSO approved. The January 2011 data sheet says "We are accepting orders for non- TSO certified Mode C transponders now." The difference in complexity between a Mode C and Mode S transponder is enormous, so it would be interesting to know the actual state of their Mode S product development. Anybody know where their Mode S development is at? The RF unit looks impressively small but I would have concerns about the use of a surface mount SMA connector vs. the standard panel mount TNC coax connector and how fragile this will be in practice, specially if connected to a larger adapter. But a fine tradeoff for a small UAV installation done at a UAV manufacturer. Darryl |
#9
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On Mar 4, 11:56*am, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Mar 3, 7:19*pm, Eric Greenwell wrote: On 3/3/2011 5:28 PM, Dave White wrote: This is the article from the EAA newsletter: http://www.ksallink.com/?cmd=display...13&format=html This is the manufacturer: http://www.aaicorp.com Wonder if they might consider adapting this thing to gliders? Pro: the "power box" is about half the thickness of a Trig power box. Cons: The power consumption is greater than a Trig according to their data sheet, it's not TSO'd. It would have to be several hundred dollars cheaper the Trig than to appeal to me enough to dump my Becker, based on those pros/cons. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me) Unlike the Trig TT21/TT22 the encoder is not built into the control head, its a separate box that appears to be be bolted onto the RF unit, its not clear if the same encoder can be used separately connected via a cable or if third party encoders are supported. The Trig scheme is really nice for gliders since you just run one control cable from the panel area to wherever the RF box is mounted (hopefully close to the antenna). Sage is obviously a small company, their product data sheets seem to show hand made prototypes and although things like "FAA TSO" show on them but nothing from Sage is FAA/TSO approved. The January 2011 data sheet says "We are accepting orders for non- TSO certified Mode C transponders now." The difference in complexity between a Mode C and Mode S transponder is enormous, so it would be interesting to know the actual state of their Mode S product development. Anybody know where their Mode S development is at? The RF unit looks impressively small but I would have concerns about the use of a surface mount SMA connector vs. the standard panel mount TNC coax connector and how fragile this will be in practice, specially if connected to a larger adapter. But a fine tradeoff for a small UAV installation done at a UAV manufacturer. Darryl Also the list price on the Mode S transponder (which as mentioned is not yet apparently available even for pre-order) is shown on their price list as $3,587 which does not seem to be too competitive compared to the current street price of ~$2,200 for the Trig TT21. Of course comparing a future list price vs. current street price may not be that useful. And $3,587 not say $3,600, curious price specificity there. Darryl |
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