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#11
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In article
, john smith wrote: You know, with the reception problems I am reading about here, I think I will stick with my GPS 195 a while longer. I always get a lock with a minimum of six to eight sats. I don't have reception problems, and am puzzled as to why some users are experiencing them. I am using the GA26 remote antenna, but this is supposedly a "low power" antenna, so I'm not sure if that is a factor or not (Garmin uses active antennas.) I have an unused GA56 on top of the airplane, and that does seem to result in stronger signals, but part of that could be the more ideal placement, with an unobstructed view of the sky. JKG |
#12
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![]() "Jonathan Goodish" wrote: , john smith wrote: You know, with the reception problems I am reading about here, I think I will stick with my GPS 195 a while longer. I always get a lock with a minimum of six to eight sats. I don't have reception problems... Nor I. I get the same reception performance--or better--with the 396 as I have with all my previous Garmins. I do remember that my 195 had trouble locking if activated while in motion. The 396 is not bothered. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#13
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![]() Funny you should mention this. My 396 GPS reception has been flaky lately too. I went out again and tried a few things. I noticed on both days that I would get 8-10 sats pinned at the top while stationary. Once I started rolling, most would come down a bit and jump up and down some. After rotation and climbing, all sats were lost and the thing lost its lock. I landed and tried again. Same result. O.K. So I cannot depend on it during a climb? Next, I tried moving the antenna around and switching to the stub. It seemed a little better placing the antenna on the right side of the glareshield opposite the XM. Turning in some directions made for better or worse reception. However, WAAS was lost going some ways and regained randomly along that path or by turning. This seems flaky. Then I tried something I never really tried with my other GPS units. I watched the sat page while transmitting. All sat bars marched down to the bottom and disappeared in about 5-7 seconds. Release the transmit button and they immediately came back up to where they were. So, now I cannot trust this thing while transmitting? I will bring along my Lowrance Airmap 1000 and monitor the sat page during the various aspects of flight and compare it to the Garmin. Perhaps the Lowrance is just as weak and I did not notice (because it never lost a lock so I had no reason to look). For laughs, I may also bring along one of my several Apollo 920 units and watch its performance. The Apollo never lost its lock in 7 years of use. Mike |
#14
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![]() "Mike Spera" wrote: Then I tried something I never really tried with my other GPS units. I watched the sat page while transmitting. All sat bars marched down to the bottom and disappeared in about 5-7 seconds. Release the transmit button and they immediately came back up to where they were. So, now I cannot trust this thing while transmitting? It could still be you have a faulty 396, but it sounds like it's you have a radio/electrical problem. I had a Cessna NAV/COM that did the same thing to my old 295. Swapping the radio with another one solved the problem. You may also have a leaky antenna cable shield. Is that the only COM radio you have? What happens when you power it off and use another transmitter? If the same thing happens, you may have a grounding problem in the airplane. Trying the other portable GPS is a good test. If you're lucky, the Lowrance will work ok and prove you have a bad Garmin. If not, I still recommend that you turn off EVERYTHING electrical in the airplane and see how the 396 receives satellites. Then, add stuff back in one at a time until you observe any loss of signal. Good luck with your gremlin. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#15
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In article t,
Mike Spera wrote: Then I tried something I never really tried with my other GPS units. I watched the sat page while transmitting. All sat bars marched down to the bottom and disappeared in about 5-7 seconds. Release the transmit button and they immediately came back up to where they were. So, now I cannot trust this thing while transmitting? COM will interfere with GPS signal. Try relocating the antenna, or re-routing the antenna cable. You could probably temporarily suction the antenna to a rear window, or do some tests on the ground with the antenna on top of the cabin. JKG |
#16
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In article ,
"Dan Luke" wrote: I don't have reception problems... Nor I. I get the same reception performance--or better--with the 396 as I have with all my previous Garmins. In Mike's case, it sounds like an interference issue to me. JKG |
#17
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Very possible... He needs to get out of the airport area and turn off
thenav/com radios and the transponder and see what happens... If that is no good, then turn off the master switch and the alternator... If still no good, then it is the 396... denny |
#18
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Actually, I did try a few tests. When switching to my second com and
transmitting, it did the same thing. Down to zero on every sat. Relocating the GPS antenna to the back seats near the window or anywhere else made no difference when transmitting. It did seem a little better for reception on the right side of the glareshield (opposite side from the XM antenna). Turning off all the radios and the complete electrical system had no effect. I still had flaky reception. Once I have my other GPS units side by side with this one, I should be able to isolate whether it is a plane/radio or specific GPS problem. Thanks to all for suggestions, Mike Very possible... He needs to get out of the airport area and turn off thenav/com radios and the transponder and see what happens... If that is no good, then turn off the master switch and the alternator... If still no good, then it is the 396... denny |
#19
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![]() "Mike Spera" wrote: Turning off all the radios and the complete electrical system had no effect. I still had flaky reception. Now it really sounds like you have a bad 396. Once I have my other GPS units side by side with this one, I should be able to isolate whether it is a plane/radio or specific GPS problem. That will be interesting. -- Dan C172RG at BFM |
#20
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Mike Spera wrote:
30 seconds after take off, lost the GPS sat lock. Took about 15 seconds to regain it. In the next 5 minutes, it lost lock several more times. I'm thinking, external antenna is loopy. Mike, For what its worth... I just flew my Arrow around the country and experienced the same problem (with my brand spank'n new 396) that you described. Most of the occurrences were in the takeoff or landing phase of the flight. I had my old Lowrance airmap 100 on the copilot yoke and it never lost lock once during the flight. The 396 was connected to the remote antenna which was sitting on the glare shield, the airmap 100 was using it's built in antenna. -Bernie My fly-about http://www.iperformax.com/flyabout/flyabout.html |
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