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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset thisafternoon
What's the best for just a student pilot. Are there any tricks to
using them, keeping them safe, and pluging them in etc? Thanks, Chris Lusardi |
#2
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset this afternoon
On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 11:16:27 -0800 (PST), Chris L wrote:
What's the best for just a student pilot. Are there any tricks to using them, keeping them safe, and pluging them in etc? You've got to tell us how far you plan to go in aviation. If you plan to be a low time $100 hamburger pilot after you get your certificate, you can get by with an inexpensive set. If you plan to be a high time pilot, consider a more expensive comfortable set you can wear for hours at a time. -- Dallas |
#3
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset thisafternoon
On Jan 2, 11:31*am, Dallas wrote:
On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 11:16:27 -0800 (PST), Chris L wrote: What's the best for just a student pilot. Are there any tricks to using them, keeping them safe, and pluging them in etc? You've got to tell us how far you plan to go in aviation. If you plan to be a low time $100 hamburger pilot after you get your certificate, you can get by with an inexpensive set. If you plan to be a high time pilot, consider a more expensive comfortable set you can wear for hours at a time. -- Dallas I have no definate plans, but anything can happen. Chris Lusardi |
#4
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset this afternoon
On Wed, 2 Jan 2008 11:40:42 -0800 (PST), Chris L wrote:
I have no definate plans, but anything can happen. Well, if you buy a nice $100 headset it will do nicely for your training. Then if you go into it big time you can upgrade yourself and use the $100 set for your passenger. How To Buy a Headset: http://www.aopa.org/pilot/features/2001/headsets.html -- Dallas |
#5
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset this afternoon
Dallas,
Then if you go into it big time I couldn't disagree more! What could be "going into it big" if not starting to fly? That was certainly the really BIG thing for me. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#6
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset this afternoon
I brought a pair into David Clark for repair. The Customer Service person
there told me not to wrap the cable around the headset (like everyone does) when they're not in use. It puts too much strain on the end that goes into the headset itself. I like the DCs, partly because they're made ten miles from my house. Too bad the best price I found them was from a California mailorder house. They cross the country twice before they got plugged in. "Chris L" wrote in message ... What's the best for just a student pilot. Are there any tricks to using them, keeping them safe, and pluging them in etc? Thanks, Chris Lusardi |
#7
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset thisafternoon
On Jan 2, 12:48 pm, "Steve Foley" wrote:
I brought a pair into David Clark for repair. The Customer Service person there told me not to wrap the cable around the headset (like everyone does) when they're not in use. It puts too much strain on the end that goes into the headset itself. I like the DCs, partly because they're made ten miles from my house. Too bad the best price I found them was from a California mailorder house. They cross the country twice before they got plugged in. "Chris L" wrote in message ... What's the best for just a student pilot. Are there any tricks to using them, keeping them safe, and pluging them in etc? Thanks, Chris Lusardi Of all the headsets I've fixed, the David Clarks are built the best. Some around here call them "David Clamps" because they're bit tight. I've never worked on Bose. The Lightspeeds seem to fall apart way too soon. Get ANR. It's well worth it. Dan |
#8
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset thisafternoon
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#9
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset this afternoon
The Lightspeeds seem to fall
apart way too soon. It just ain't so. Maybe (maybe!) it was so for the older models. It isn't for the newer models. -- Thomas Borchert (EDDH) |
#10
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Planning on becoming student pilot and buying a headset thisafternoon
On Jan 2, 11:48*am, "Steve Foley" wrote:
I brought a pair into David Clark for repair. The Customer Service person there told me not to wrap the cable around the headset (like everyone does) when they're not in use. It puts too much strain on the end that goes into the headset itself. I don't like the DC's because they feel very mechanical on your head compared to the modern headsets. I learned long ago to wrap the cord around the headset in such a way that you don't put any pressure on the end that goes into the headset itself. You just need to allow another 2 inches of cord before you start wrapping it. -Robert |
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