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#21
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John Gilbert wrote:
Angular guages perhaps. Sweeps of 180 to 270 degrees are quite readable, I agree. But what does the study say about altimeters with dual needles, that rotate multiple times? How many times have you misread the altitude or had to think hard to get it right? This has to be the most confusing instrument to read, unless you don't really care about knowing about that last +/- 1000 feet. Well... hardly ever, but maybe that's because our meters are, well, in meters :-) That means a full spin round is 1000m. Not something you'd easily misjudge I think. André |
#22
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Dave Nadler YO wrote:
Thanks Bob. I'd cite Donald Norman's "The Design of Everyday Things". Amazing what you read on R.A.S. sometimes ;-) Best Regards, Dave Maybe it's just personal preference. I have both a digital and a traditional altimeter and find myself using the round dial exclusively. Like wise, my current watch has hands. I much prefer it because I don't have to read it - just scan it. Slightly off topic, I remember reading about a (pre-digital) military transport where the flight engineer's station was designed so that when everything was operating normally, all dials pointed in the same direction. It almost trivialized detecting abnormalities. Tony V "6N" |
#23
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![]() "André Somers" wrote in message ... John Gilbert wrote: Angular guages perhaps. Sweeps of 180 to 270 degrees are quite readable, I agree. But what does the study say about altimeters with dual needles, that rotate multiple times? How many times have you misread the altitude or had to think hard to get it right? This has to be the most confusing instrument to read, unless you don't really care about knowing about that last +/- 1000 feet. Well... hardly ever, but maybe that's because our meters are, well, in meters :-) That means a full spin round is 1000m. Not something you'd easily misjudge I think. André I've flown airplanes with metric instruments (And Russian placards too). The airspeed, rate-of-climb, RPM, manifold pressure were no problem. Numbers is numbers I guess - fly with the needles in the green arc and everything works. But that damn metric altimeter was impossible - no way to read trends on an instrument that insensitive. With an altimeter that reads 1000 feet (304.8 meters) per rev of the big hand, you can thermal by watching the trend of the needle. Responding to "YO": Some people like analog gauges and some don't. Ergonomic studies just produce averages which may be useful to marketeers but what's important individually is what works best for that particular user. If the data are displayed on an electronic screen, the user can select the display method in a setup dialog box. i.e. check box one for round gauge analog, box two for vertical tape with a digit window etc... Check another box for metric or imperial units. With altitude in meters, expanding the scale of a vertical tape gives the same sensitivity as with imperial units. I've also flown with both vertical tapes and round gauges. At first the tapes were confusing but once adapted to the idea of having all the "V" speeds floating alongside the tape with the trend indicators, going back to round mechanical gauges seemed like the stone age. I vote for computer graphic displays of primary flight data. Graphical displays are inevitable anyway since all those little watchmakers who built and repaired mechanical instruments are all retired or dead now. Bill Daniels |
#24
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I used to fly a grob twin that had an altimeter marker 3000m per rotation.
Now that instrument was *really* a pain! Ian "André Somers" wrote in message ... John Gilbert wrote: Angular guages perhaps. Sweeps of 180 to 270 degrees are quite readable, I agree. But what does the study say about altimeters with dual needles, that rotate multiple times? How many times have you misread the altitude or had to think hard to get it right? This has to be the most confusing instrument to read, unless you don't really care about knowing about that last +/- 1000 feet. Well... hardly ever, but maybe that's because our meters are, well, in meters :-) That means a full spin round is 1000m. Not something you'd easily misjudge I think. André |
#25
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On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 09:28:30 -0700, "Bill Daniels"
wrote: I've flown airplanes with metric instruments (And Russian placards too). The airspeed, rate-of-climb, RPM, manifold pressure were no problem. Numbers is numbers I guess - fly with the needles in the green arc and everything works. But that damn metric altimeter was impossible - no way to read trends on an instrument that insensitive. With an altimeter that reads 1000 feet (304.8 meters) per rev of the big hand, you can thermal by watching the trend of the needle. You've just solved a mystery for me: thanks. The most confusing altimeter I've flown with was a two pointer job but with 3000 ft per rev of the big hand. I found it difficult to read rather than insensitive. I always wondered why anybody would build such a confusing instrument but now I understand. Looks like they retained the gear train from a metric instrument while changing the bellows and scale to make it read in feet, 3000 ft per rev. -- martin@ : Martin Gregorie gregorie : Harlow, UK demon : co : Zappa fan & glider pilot uk : |
#26
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On Thu, 26 Feb 2004 12:23:51 -0500, Todd Pattist
wrote: Tony Verhulst wrote: Slightly off topic, I remember reading about a (pre-digital) military transport where the flight engineer's station was designed so that when everything was operating normally, all dials pointed in the same direction. It almost trivialized detecting abnormalities. This is standard in race car instrumentation. The gauges are rotated when they are installed so that all needles point up when they're "in the green" during a race. Trivial point, but why is it that in the US ASIs tend to point down when 'in the green', but in the UK we mount them the other way up? Its obviously intentional because the numbers are oriented to suit. -- martin@ : Martin Gregorie gregorie : Harlow, UK demon : co : Zappa fan & glider pilot uk : |
#27
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Bill Daniels wrote:
I've flown airplanes with metric instruments (And Russian placards too). The airspeed, rate-of-climb, RPM, manifold pressure were no problem. Numbers is numbers I guess - fly with the needles in the green arc and everything works. But that damn metric altimeter was impossible - no way to read trends on an instrument that insensitive. With an altimeter that reads 1000 feet (304.8 meters) per rev of the big hand, you can thermal by watching the trend of the needle. I prefer to thermal on my "butt-feeling" and my audio variometer. I don't need my altimeter for that. I guess that might be different in regions with stronger thermals than we have to make due with here. I guess I could get used to other scales as well (did fly a Sedhberg with Imperial instruments once, real fun to fly 26 knots or so :-) !) Personally, I would not trade by old, reliable mechanical primairy instruments for a computerised system so easily. Not in a glider anyway. Battery power alone is just not reliable enough for primairy instrumentation in my opinion. It's fine for navigation, climb optimizing and other stuff you don't really need to fly safely, but not for altitude or airspeed. André |
#28
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#29
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Bill Daniels wrote:
... But that damn metric altimeter was impossible - no way to read trends on an instrument that insensitive. With an altimeter that reads 1000 feet (304.8 meters) per rev of the big hand, you can thermal by watching the trend of the needle. ... This is why I like to fly the few gliders in my club where both type of altimeters (meter and feet) are installed. By the way, as a quick way to make the difference between them we call the second one an "altipied", which could be transtalted as "altifeet". So I look on the metric instrument when I have anything to think about glide ratios, as vertical an horizontal distances are so in the same units (and this instrument is set at QFE) and on the other one for anything about airspace (set at QNH or flight level) or when I need self encouragement during climb, as the rotation of the needle is perceptible at a glance when the climbing speed is good. |
#30
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In article , "tango4"
writes: Just imagine the comments the first time someone pitches up to the flightline wearing one of these ..... http://iar-ira.nrc-cnrc.gc.ca/flight_1d.html Let's see him close his Libelle canopy wearing that thing! Steve |
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