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#1
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OK, y'all are probably getting sick of all my GPS questions these days but
I'll go to the well one more time. I may or may not get a panel-mount IFR GPS for my 172, that's a separate issue. Decided I want a portable GPS to use as a backup and for sit. awareness in IMC. Also decided I want something with terrain, since that's one of the most popular ways to buy the farm and increased terrain-awareness can't hurt. Now, it seems like the Anywhere Map offers a better feature set than the Garmin 296, plus the ability to upgrade to approach plates or XM weather, all at a significantly lower price. Plus I get a shiny new PDA, which I can write off as a business expense. However, I have also looked at the NavGPS Pro system, and I like the fact that you can enter IFR flight plans into it just like you file them, like "BOSOX V1 GRAYM GON." I fly in the Northeast where "Direct" is unheard of and being able to easily enter and update full-route clearances would IMHO be a big benefit. Does Anywhere Map offer this also? Another thing that I frankly like about many of the PDA-based systems is that they don't seem to be designed by lawyers as much as the handhelds are. Seems to me the handhelds all cripple their instrument approach functionality to discourage you from using them to do actual approaches. Lot of good that will do me when my electrical system s---s the bed. Am I missing something here? -cwk. |
#2
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![]() C Kingsbury wrote: Another thing that I frankly like about many of the PDA-based systems is that they don't seem to be designed by lawyers as much as the handhelds are. Seems to me the handhelds all cripple their instrument approach functionality to discourage you from using them to do actual approaches. Lot of good that will do me when my electrical system s---s the bed. Am I missing something here? My portable GPS is the Garmin 96c. It has the approaches in the database. Pull up an approach and it asks if you will do the full approach or get vectors. It draws the final approach course and all intersections on the map. The final approach course extends to infinity, you always know where it is. What more could you want? |
#3
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![]() "Newps" wrote in message ... My portable GPS is the Garmin 96c. It has the approaches in the database. Pull up an approach and it asks if you will do the full approach or get vectors. It draws the final approach course and all intersections on the map. The final approach course extends to infinity, you always know where it is. What more could you want? 1. Does it display all that heading-up? Other units I've seen would only display the approach north-up, which sucks if you're landing on runway 18. I have not seen the 96c. 2. Does it offer any vertical guidance? 2b. Does anyone think the VNAV provided by a handheld, WAAS-enabled GPS of any kind is worth *anything*? 3. Does it draw holding patterns? Best, -cwk. |
#4
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In a previous article, "C Kingsbury" said:
2b. Does anyone think the VNAV provided by a handheld, WAAS-enabled GPS of any kind is worth *anything*? I use the VNAV provided by my (non-WAAS) all the time for descent planning when I'm VFR. It won't get me to the runway, but it gets me down to pattern altitude a reasonable distance from the airport. -- Paul Tomblin http://xcski.com/blogs/pt/ "I'm trying to contain an outbreak here, and you're driving the monkey to the airport" - Hank Hill. |
#5
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![]() C Kingsbury wrote: "Newps" wrote in message ... My portable GPS is the Garmin 96c. It has the approaches in the database. Pull up an approach and it asks if you will do the full approach or get vectors. It draws the final approach course and all intersections on the map. The final approach course extends to infinity, you always know where it is. What more could you want? 1. Does it display all that heading-up? Other units I've seen would only display the approach north-up, which sucks if you're landing on runway 18. I have not seen the 96c. My GPS is set to track up, so any line your following is straight up and down the map. Easy to see when you get off course as the line gets away from vertical. You can also set it to north up. 2. Does it offer any vertical guidance? It does have VNAV, like every other handheld GPS I've owned, although I don't use it. You can use the electronic HSI to stay on course and on altitude if you want. 2b. Does anyone think the VNAV provided by a handheld, WAAS-enabled GPS of any kind is worth *anything*? The GPS altitude with these new units is pretty damn good. 3. Does it draw holding patterns? I don't think so. I haven't used it in full approach mode yet, just vectors, so I'm not sure what it draws. You can go to the Garmin website and download the manual and read for yourself what it can do. |
#6
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I went with the Nav GPS pro because they seemed to be more interested in
selling me the right thing than just selling me something and it was a little cheaper. Michelle (a happy customer) C Kingsbury wrote: OK, y'all are probably getting sick of all my GPS questions these days but I'll go to the well one more time. I may or may not get a panel-mount IFR GPS for my 172, that's a separate issue. Decided I want a portable GPS to use as a backup and for sit. awareness in IMC. Also decided I want something with terrain, since that's one of the most popular ways to buy the farm and increased terrain-awareness can't hurt. Now, it seems like the Anywhere Map offers a better feature set than the Garmin 296, plus the ability to upgrade to approach plates or XM weather, all at a significantly lower price. Plus I get a shiny new PDA, which I can write off as a business expense. However, I have also looked at the NavGPS Pro system, and I like the fact that you can enter IFR flight plans into it just like you file them, like "BOSOX V1 GRAYM GON." I fly in the Northeast where "Direct" is unheard of and being able to easily enter and update full-route clearances would IMHO be a big benefit. Does Anywhere Map offer this also? Another thing that I frankly like about many of the PDA-based systems is that they don't seem to be designed by lawyers as much as the handhelds are. Seems to me the handhelds all cripple their instrument approach functionality to discourage you from using them to do actual approaches. Lot of good that will do me when my electrical system s---s the bed. Am I missing something here? -cwk. -- Michelle P ATP-ASEL, CP-AMEL, and AMT-A&P "Elisabeth" a Maule M-7-235B (no two are alike) Volunteer Pilot, Angel Flight Mid-Atlantic Volunteer Builder, Habitat for Humanity |
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