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#11
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On May 7, 6:53*pm, Udo wrote:
I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Which one? Please make recomendations. Udo Udo, I use a 3950 running SeeYouMobile. I address the contrast problem by turning off the terrain so the background is white, then adjusting the color and size of all symbols, lines, and fonts for maximum contrast. I have no problem seeing what I need in sunlight. I have both the anti-glare screen protector and a shiny, very clear protector (I have a couple of the 3950s, set up identically, so I have a backup). Both work well. I actually somewhat prefer the shiny screen - the display is brighter, but you do have to adjust the angle occasionally when you get reflections. The anti-glare screen is a little dimmer (as expected). See you at Ionia! Kirk 66 |
#12
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Hi,
I just did some testing with my iPAQ hx4705 and iPAQ 210 in bright morning sunlight. With the sun on the face of the PDA the backlight made no difference. The sun overpowers it and the display is pretty easy to read. Turning the backlight on and off made zero difference in the contrast or brightness. With the sun behind the PDA (me looking into the sun with the PDA screen in shadow) there was a big difference. With the backlight off I could hardly see either screen. With the backlight on I could see them both much better - but not great. So I recommend leaving the backlight on at full power while flying in gliders. The current draw is much higher but the readability is much, much better. For some reason the iPAQ 210 was a little easier to read than the hx4700. Probably because the hx4700's backlight is about 3 years old. Lights decrease in brightness with age/use. Another potential explanation is that I have a Boxwave screen glare reducer on my hx4700 and not on my iPAQ 210. I was very happy to see that HP made the screen of the 210 slightly textured so a glare reducer is not required. The iPAQ hx4700's screen is glassy so a glare reducer is needed. The glare reducer does slightly reduce the screen brightness. But the difference in brightness in sunlight was negligible. Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com "Paul Remde" wrote in message news:7iCUj.100851$TT4.42547@attbi_s22... Hi Noel, I'm very surprised to hear that. My experience is that even if that works with the sun shining directly on the screen, it won't work when the sun is in front of the glider (not shining on the screen). I always have my backlight on full power. But I'll try turning it off today. I'm very curious. Paul Remde "noel.wade" wrote in message ... On May 7, 7:31 pm, Todd wrote: I have (2) PDA's (fault tolerance / redundancy) An hx4700 running WinPilot I hate because I cannot see it in bright light. Todd - Just a tip: I was surprised to find that if I disabled the backlight my hx4700 suddenly became easier to read in bright sunlight (but almost impossible to read in the shade or indoors). Not "easy", but easier. You might give it a try... Take care, --Noel |
#13
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Hi Bill,
Below is the reply from Richard Kellerman at NK. The ClearNav uses a cold cathode florescent (CCFL) backlight. The current draw for the ClearNav is 600 mA at full brightness, 300 mA at min brightness. It is worth adding that we plan to allow the user to set the default brightness level, and higher level to which the display will be driven for about 30 seconds any time a button is pressed. Good Soaring, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message . .. Paul, does the ClearNav have an LED backlight screen? From my research, a screen brightness of 1000 Nits is required for a fully "sunlight readable" screen. Most PDA's and laptops have about 200 nits. To get 1000 Nits with a CCL backlight, requires more current that can reasonably be provided in a battery operated device. LED backlights seem to be much brighter and use less power than CCL backlights. Bill D "Paul Remde" wrote in message news:NLtUj.100280$TT4.58952@attbi_s22... Hi Udo, The best PDA available is the 1550. You can probably still find a good one if you keep checking ebay every day for a week or 2. I fly with an iPAQ hx4700 but I'm moving to an iPAQ 210. It doesn't have a built in serial port so I have worked out a good solution with a CF card serial port and a customer Nimbus cradle. The 210 seems a bit brighter than my hx4700 indoors, but that may be due to the backlight in the hx4700 getting dimmer over the 2 to 3 years I've had it. It is similar to the hx4700 (maybe a little better) in sunlight. Of course, the ClearNav is the best option. It is very readable in sunlight. I have about 20 customers lined up to buy them - mainly for that reason. I'm excited because I have been contracted to write the manual for it. It is a great product that will be very popular. Let me know if you want to get onto my waiting list. Good Soaring, Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com "Udo" wrote in message ... I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Which one? Please make recomendations. Udo |
#14
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On May 7, 4:53*pm, Udo wrote:
I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Which one? Please make recomendations. Udo Udo, I have found the Ipaq 47xx is the best without the screen protector for viewability and full backlight. I also updated the 4700 ROM to Windows CE 6.0 ROM updates: http://wm6.flyingarizona.net/ Craggy Aero is also developing an instrument. Craggy Ultimate - Screen Size 6.5 diagonal, sunlight viewable screen, with a backlight controlled by potentiometer or photo sensor, VGA 680X420 twice the screen resolution as the ClearNav. http://www.craggyaero.com/ultimate.htm Initial flight test were very favorable, no viewability problems with direct sunlight. Richard www.craggyaero.com |
#15
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Hi Gang
My 2 cents worth. All of the current PDAs are very poor in bright sunlight and are best in the reflective mode without a backlight. I started with the 1550, then the 3750, then the Navman and most recently the 5015 ( I think that's the number) which has a GPS and lasts several hours with its internal rechargeable lithium battery in the reflective mode. I use GN11. The 5015 is my preferred computer/ logger and is installed in the SparrowHawk. You must declutter the screen of terrain for the little screen to be intelligible. You should have a goose neck cradle firmly attached to the instrument panel or something rigid and you must orient the screen directly towards your face for optimum viewing visibility. When done the system is just acceptable. What are the characteristics of the perfect soaring PDA? For me a much larger screen is number one. Secondly it must have a reflective screen clearly usable in shade through bright sunlight - gets rid of power problems. Must be self contained including battery, GPS, logger (not secure) and a USB port (convertible to serial port) to connect to a secure logger for down loading secure IGC files. Must be able to operate with all the soaring programs such as SeeYou and GN11. Must be portable and easily removable from its cradle in the glider so that it can be interfaced with a computer and the battery must be rechargeable through a USB port for convenience. Something similar to the Garmin 496 with GN11 and some of the stuff I have talked about above...............? Dave Dave |
#16
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I happen to know Williams Soaring has some. 1520s and 1550s Check 'em out.
Paul Remde wrote: Hi Udo, The best PDA available is the 1550. You can probably still find a good one if you keep checking ebay every day for a week or 2. Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Which one? Please make recomendations. Udo -- Message posted via AviationKB.com http://www.aviationkb.com/Uwe/Forums...aring/200805/1 |
#17
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One report on the SeeYou forum indicates the 3950 to be brighter than
the 4700. I'll compare my 3950 to Noels 4700 sometime. None of those fancy panels will fit in my DG303 panel. So, the cost is the screen, the bigger battery, a new panel, and perhaps a smaller instrument or two. The alternative is to fly with a PDA, with map and terrain turned off and 4 large NAV boxes. That is easy to see and use. I'm not clear on what the new screens will add to my flying other than the very sexy screen itself. Something I've noticed is that the screens can be hard to read in bright sunlight with dark gray sunglasses and much easier with those amber sunglasses. I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Craggy Aero is also developing an instrument. Craggy Ultimate - Screen Size 6.5 diagonal, sunlight viewable screen, with a backlight controlled by potentiometer or photo sensor, VGA 680X420 twice the screen resolution as the ClearNav. |
#18
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Hi Richard,
I'm surprised an interested to see that you recommend Windows CE 6.0 for the iPAQ hx4700. My iPAQ 4700 is still running Mobile 2003. Most iPAQ hx4700 units shipped with that operating system. I upgraded it to Mobile 5 and it was much, much slower. So I "downgraded" it back to Mobile 2003. Since then I have purchased an iPAQ 210 with Mobile 6. It has a processor of the same speed and seems to be about the same speed or slightly slower than my iPAQ 4700. That leads me to believe that Mobile 6 is not an upgrade I want to do on my hx4700. But that is a subjective speed estimation. Have you compared 2 hx4700 units (one with Mobile 2003 and one with Mobile 6) running side by side? I may upgrade to Mobile 6 is you say it is significantly faster. I'm curious. Do you recommend Windows Mobile 6 or 6.1? Thanks, Paul Remde "Richard" wrote in message ... On May 7, 4:53 pm, Udo wrote: I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Which one? Please make recomendations. Udo Udo, I have found the Ipaq 47xx is the best without the screen protector for viewability and full backlight. I also updated the 4700 ROM to Windows CE 6.0 ROM updates: http://wm6.flyingarizona.net/ Craggy Aero is also developing an instrument. Craggy Ultimate - Screen Size 6.5 diagonal, sunlight viewable screen, with a backlight controlled by potentiometer or photo sensor, VGA 680X420 twice the screen resolution as the ClearNav. http://www.craggyaero.com/ultimate.htm Initial flight test were very favorable, no viewability problems with direct sunlight. Richard www.craggyaero.com |
#19
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brianDG303 wrote:
Something I've noticed is that the screens can be hard to read in bright sunlight with dark gray sunglasses and much easier with those amber sunglasses. I use "aviation" sunglasses that have an untinted bottom quarter, which improves the visibility of the PDA a lot. While they aren't prescription glasses, they do have a "bifocal" portion at the bottom that lets me focus perfectly on the PDA. -- Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA * Change "netto" to "net" to email me directly * Updated! "Transponders in Sailplanes" http://tinyurl.com/y739x4 * New Jan '08 - sections on Mode S, TPAS, ADS-B, Flarm, more * "A Guide to Self-launching Sailplane Operation" at www.motorglider.org |
#20
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On May 8, 9:50*am, "Paul Remde" wrote:
Hi Richard, I'm surprised an interested to see that you recommend Windows CE 6.0 for the iPAQ hx4700. *My iPAQ 4700 is still running Mobile 2003. *Most iPAQ hx4700 units shipped with that operating system. *I upgraded it to Mobile 5 and it was much, much slower. *So I "downgraded" it back to Mobile 2003. *Since then I have purchased an iPAQ 210 with Mobile 6. *It has a processor of the same speed and seems to be about the same speed or slightly slower than my iPAQ 4700. That leads me to believe that Mobile 6 is not an upgrade I want to do on my hx4700. *But that is a subjective speed estimation. *Have you compared 2 hx4700 units (one with Mobile 2003 and one with Mobile 6) running side by side? *I may upgrade to Mobile 6 is you say it is significantly faster. *I'm curious. Do you recommend Windows Mobile 6 or 6.1? Thanks, Paul Remde "Richard" wrote in message ... On May 7, 4:53 pm, Udo wrote: I am thinking of upgrading my PDA for my GNII. The display should be readable in sun light. Presently I use a1550 as primary with a 302 and the 39xx as a back up with a 302A. Maybe I should get a CAI Nav display and one good PDA. Which one? Please make recomendations. Udo Udo, I have found the Ipaq 47xx is the best without the screen protector for viewability and full backlight. *I also updated the 4700 *ROM to Windows CE 6.0 ROM updates: * *http://wm6.flyingarizona.net/ Craggy Aero is also developing an instrument. Craggy Ultimate - Screen Size 6.5 diagonal, sunlight viewable screen, with a backlight controlled *by potentiometer or photo sensor, VGA 680X420 twice the screen resolution as the ClearNav. http://www.craggyaero.com/ultimate.htm Initial flight test were very favorable, no viewability problems with direct sunlight. Richardwww.craggyaero.com Paul, I have tried all the ROMS and tested. I have found that I got no improvement until I went to 6.0 and or 6.1. Mobile 5 was slower than PC2003 and 6.0 and/or 6.1 appreared the best. Richard |
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