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#31
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I still mount mine on the parachute shoulder straps (below my
shoulder), so it is pointing 45 degrees or so. After experimenting with it in various angles I determined it made no difference. Allen Silver just repacked my chute and had no concerns about the location. As for that particular flight, I don't know who else flew in the area with Spot (suprisingly, even with it's low cost - about a cost of 2 tows nowaday, pilots are not in a hurry to buy one) so can't compare, but I can tell that nothing else was different from the rest of the flight, and it was mostly flying straight so the Spot had a clear view of the sky the whole time. After over 10 flights with the Spot (still running on the original batteries btw), this is the first time I had more then 30 minutes without track. Ramy On Jun 17, 9:48*am, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Jun 17, 9:14*am, Greg Arnold wrote: Ramy Spot uses the Globalstar L-Band simplex links. L-band *is relatively immune to rain attenuation, rain/water droplets suspended in storm clouds are likely the worse case scenario. A guess for bad rain attenuation might be something like only a dB or so at L-band. The GPS signals are in the same frequency bands and will have similar attenuation. So my first guess is clouds, even storm clouds are not likely to be the issue. So the next question is did anybody else flying in the genral area have the same problem? I was flying in the Mendocinos at the same time and had no SPOT problems but that is probably far enough away to not count, except to exclude more systemic problems. The next question is did the unit have a full view of the sky or are you still mounting it on your parachute harness? *I'm not sure if this is on your shoulder - in which case your head (hopefully opaque at L-band :-) ), RF opaque parts of the fuselage/canopy frame area, etc. will be obscuring lots of the sky, or vertical on your harness in which case far more of the sky will likely be obscured. Both of these will affect coverage as Global star satellites fly into and out of the now fairly restricted sky view or as you turn the direction of the obscured antenna to bring Globalstar or GPS satellites into view. I think SPOT is fantastic, fly with one all the time in SPOTcast mode, but I'm not giving up on my 406MHz PLB on my parachute harness. Darryl I have a SPOT on order. *Where is the best place to mount it so it has a full view of the sky (excluding the top of the glare shield)? * Will it work under a fiberglass glare shield? Greg People are mounting them on their harnesses and apparently getting them to work, but the problems that Ramy reports may show this is not as reliable as a less obscured location. I'll remind people of Allen Silvers' (experienced parachutist/parachute rigger) warning against mounting them on the shoulder area of a parachute. Ideally you just want it mostly flat and not obscured. I mount mine on the right canopy rail of my ASH-26E using 3M dual-lock tape. You can see it herehttp://www.flickr.com/photos/darrylramm/2082630811*The glareshield should not present a problem for RF signals but you need to unit where you can press buttons, check LEDs (flat batteries etc.). On the canopy rail I have to pop the unit off to check the LEDs etc. This may not work on all gliders but even on my DG-303 with a thin rail I would have just installed a mounting plate on the narrower canopy rail. If you do need to end up mounting on the glareshield area the bright orange color/reflections are likely to be a distraction. A black cloth covering could work. SPOT also make a sturdy looking black nylon bag/ holster for the SPOT (purchased separately, does not come with it). I saw a Holster for sale at at Williams Soaring but have not seen them elsewhere, I think they had a SPOT logo on them. You might be able to mount that holster on the glareshield and slip the spot unit into it for use. Hopefully it won't get too hot in the sun. Braver people could disassemble the SPOT (disassembly is easy) and paint it with Krylon Fusion flat black paint, but I'd be worried of the paint scratching off over time or the unit getting too hot in the Sun. This all assumes you care mostly about use in flight, I do, and thing the SPOTcasting/tracking feature is the best thing. If you mostly care about the "911" feature and the SPOT unit going with you in a bailout, then put it on your parachute harness with a Silver Parachute SMAK pack (the large size, seehttp://www.silverparachutes.com/smak_pak.html ) *or similar. Darryl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - |
#32
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On Jun 17, 11:24*am, Ramy wrote:
I still mount mine on the parachute shoulder straps (below my shoulder), so it is pointing 45 degrees or so. After experimenting with it in various angles I determined it made no difference. Allen Silver just repacked my chute and had no concerns about the location. As for that particular flight, I don't know who else flew in the area with Spot (suprisingly, even with it's low cost - about a cost of 2 tows nowaday, pilots are not in a hurry to buy one) so can't compare, but I can tell that nothing else was different from the rest of the flight, and it was mostly flying straight so the Spot had a clear view of the sky the whole time. After over 10 flights with the Spot (still running on the original batteries btw), this is the first time I had more then 30 minutes without track. Ramy On Jun 17, 9:48*am, Darryl Ramm wrote: On Jun 17, 9:14*am, Greg Arnold wrote: Ramy Spot uses the Globalstar L-Band simplex links. L-band *is relatively immune to rain attenuation, rain/water droplets suspended in storm clouds are likely the worse case scenario. A guess for bad rain attenuation might be something like only a dB or so at L-band. The GPS signals are in the same frequency bands and will have similar attenuation. So my first guess is clouds, even storm clouds are not likely to be the issue. So the next question is did anybody else flying in the genral area have the same problem? I was flying in the Mendocinos at the same time and had no SPOT problems but that is probably far enough away to not count, except to exclude more systemic problems. The next question is did the unit have a full view of the sky or are you still mounting it on your parachute harness? *I'm not sure if this is on your shoulder - in which case your head (hopefully opaque at L-band :-) ), RF opaque parts of the fuselage/canopy frame area, etc. will be obscuring lots of the sky, or vertical on your harness in which case far more of the sky will likely be obscured. Both of these will affect coverage as Global star satellites fly into and out of the now fairly restricted sky view or as you turn the direction of the obscured antenna to bring Globalstar or GPS satellites into view. I think SPOT is fantastic, fly with one all the time in SPOTcast mode, but I'm not giving up on my 406MHz PLB on my parachute harness. Darryl I have a SPOT on order. *Where is the best place to mount it so it has a full view of the sky (excluding the top of the glare shield)? * Will it work under a fiberglass glare shield? Greg People are mounting them on their harnesses and apparently getting them to work, but the problems that Ramy reports may show this is not as reliable as a less obscured location. I'll remind people of Allen Silvers' (experienced parachutist/parachute rigger) warning against mounting them on the shoulder area of a parachute. Ideally you just want it mostly flat and not obscured. I mount mine on the right canopy rail of my ASH-26E using 3M dual-lock tape. You can see it herehttp://www.flickr.com/photos/darrylramm/2082630811*The glareshield should not present a problem for RF signals but you need to unit where you can press buttons, check LEDs (flat batteries etc.). On the canopy rail I have to pop the unit off to check the LEDs etc. This may not work on all gliders but even on my DG-303 with a thin rail I would have just installed a mounting plate on the narrower canopy rail. If you do need to end up mounting on the glareshield area the bright orange color/reflections are likely to be a distraction. A black cloth covering could work. SPOT also make a sturdy looking black nylon bag/ holster for the SPOT (purchased separately, does not come with it). I saw a Holster for sale at at Williams Soaring but have not seen them elsewhere, I think they had a SPOT logo on them. You might be able to mount that holster on the glareshield and slip the spot unit into it for use. Hopefully it won't get too hot in the sun. Braver people could disassemble the SPOT (disassembly is easy) and paint it with Krylon Fusion flat black paint, but I'd be worried of the paint scratching off over time or the unit getting too hot in the Sun. This all assumes you care mostly about use in flight, I do, and thing the SPOTcasting/tracking feature is the best thing. If you mostly care about the "911" feature and the SPOT unit going with you in a bailout, then put it on your parachute harness with a Silver Parachute SMAK pack (the large size, seehttp://www.silverparachutes.com/smak_pak.html ) *or similar. Darryl- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well maybe you just determined the orientation does make a difference! Taking a wild guess, you have a quarter or so of the sky coverage of a level unit and going to be much more sensitive to relative location of passing globalstar satelites. But again that might be a good trade off if you want the unit to go with you on a bail out. I also don't get the concern about cost or people worrying about the unit being replaced by something better. My only concern was does it work (in tracking/SPOTcast mode), and clearly it does work pretty darn well. At that cost you can afford to throw it away and buy the new model after not too much time. For the cost it is a wonderful piece of mind for family and friends. Darryl |
#33
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On Jun 17, 12:24 pm, Ramy wrote:
After over 10 flights with the Spot (still running on the original batteries btw), I did a test with my unit and with spotcasting 24/7 it ran for over 2 weeks. When the power LED illuminated RED, I ran it for another few days before calling the test off. Also, a few times I would forget to take the SPOT out of the car overnight, so it was in the garage (wood frame construction, 2nd floor above) and still got many of the messages through. -Tom |
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