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On Tue, 18 Dec 2018 15:19:42 -0800, gschibler wrote:
On Monday, December 17, 2018 at 7:13:42 AM UTC-8, Wyll Surf Air wrote: Yes this is what I would suggest. As a new XC pilot using XCsoar originally, and now Top Hat now, I think it is the best way to start using a moving map glide computer. Because I was initially able to bring my phone home and mess with XCSoar while not in the glider (or even at the airport) it made learning how to read and use a moving map/glide computer much much easier. An older Samsung phone (galaxy 5,6,7,8,9 or Note 4,5,6,7,8,9) work great and are pretty cheep if you don't have one laying around already. The only thing I would say is that have someone experienced with XCSoar or TopHat configure them because the stock layout and settings are less then optimal. I would agree that the ability to learn how to use the flight computer is greatly enhanced at home, when you don't also have the burden of flying the ship. But with the Oudie, you don't have to take the Oudie home to do so. There is a good simulator available for Windows PCs. (I don't think it's available for MAC) You can bring your .igc file home, load it into the PC and fire up the Oudie Simulator. And if the student wants to play with the Oudie even before making their own flight, they can download an .igc file from the OLC for the area they expect to fly and practice on that one. Same for the others: XCSoar and LK8000 both have versions that run under Windows, downloadable from the same place as the versions you'll fly with that run under Android and WinCE. You use Linux? SYM, XCSoar and LK8000 run OK under Wine (a Windows emulator for Linux) and IIRC both XCSoar and LK8000 now have native Linux versions. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
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The winner of the latest Australian Nationals in 18M and Open classes uses XCsoar, just saying.
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On Tue, 18 Dec 2018 15:41:44 -0800, tom.kerrie wrote:
The winner of the latest Australian Nationals in 18M and Open classes uses XCsoar, just saying. ![]() I used XCSoar from its Australian days until LK8000 came out. XCSoar was good - I simply prefer the LK8000 screen display and that, it its a good day and you complete your task, you won't have needed to do anything to it during the flight: it zooms in progressively closer as you approach a turnpoint and then zooms out to show the next leg as soon as you've got a fix in the turn area. Its been a long time since I used XCSOar but IIRC it has the same auto-zoom capability. Can't comment about SYM or any of the others because I've never flown with them. Before I started using XCSoar I was using a Garmin GPS-2 connected to my SDI C4 vario plus a paper map. The map showed where I must not go while the GPS2 pointed at the next TP and showed cross-track distance and the C4 kept book on distance to run, arrival and safety heights. That worked well, but XCSoar/LK8000 made life a lot easier. -- Martin | martin at Gregorie | gregorie dot org |
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