![]() |
If this is your first visit, be sure to check out the FAQ by clicking the link above. You may have to register before you can post: click the register link above to proceed. To start viewing messages, select the forum that you want to visit from the selection below. |
|
|
Thread Tools | Display Modes |
#1
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Anyone currently flying with a KNS-80 please contact me directly. Thanx.
Bob Gardner |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You really think anyone knows how to use that piece of junk?
I question the safety, even for the few pilots who might know how to use it. The VOR system has deterioated quite a bit since the VOR Area Nav studies were made in the 1970s. The box works on those old assumptions. Bob Gardner wrote: Anyone currently flying with a KNS-80 please contact me directly. Thanx. Bob Gardner |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
wrote in message ...
You really think anyone knows how to use that piece of junk? I question the safety, even for the few pilots who might know how to use it. The VOR system has deterioated quite a bit since the VOR Area Nav studies were made in the 1970s. The box works on those old assumptions. A European perspective. I started using the KNS80 in 1992 in our Mooney. The device made navigation vastly easier than for those light aircraft that were stuck with only conventional VOR receivers and DMEs, particularly operating off standard routes -- particularly important in the UK where the airways tend only to run between the bigger airports. I'm amazed that anyone would find it difficult to use: it's an order of magnitude simpler than most IFR GPSs. There are without doubt gotchas -- Garbage In Garbage Out with any piece of avionics. When GPS came along, first as handhelds for supplementary navigation, and now in the form of all-singing-all-dancing IFR GPSs, the KNS80 got relegated to a mostly secondary role as a backup NAV with DME. More recently in Europe, FM immunity regulations have meant that most KNS80s are no longer approved as NAV receivers (the filter package was about the price of a GPS, so there was little uptake). Thus the KNS80 has become the heaviest, bulkiest approved DME around. It's still there, though I haven't pressed the Data button (to set up a waypoint) for a good while. I don't see what "assumptions" are required for using a KNS80 over and above that for a simple VOR/DME system. You still have VORs and DMEs, don't you? Anyway, happy to help Bob if I can. Julian Scarfe |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Thanks, Julian...I received the help I needed.
Bob "Julian Scarfe" wrote in message news:7An2c.1635$re1.747@newsfe1-win... wrote in message ... You really think anyone knows how to use that piece of junk? I question the safety, even for the few pilots who might know how to use it. The VOR system has deterioated quite a bit since the VOR Area Nav studies were made in the 1970s. The box works on those old assumptions. A European perspective. I started using the KNS80 in 1992 in our Mooney. The device made navigation vastly easier than for those light aircraft that were stuck with only conventional VOR receivers and DMEs, particularly operating off standard routes -- particularly important in the UK where the airways tend only to run between the bigger airports. I'm amazed that anyone would find it difficult to use: it's an order of magnitude simpler than most IFR GPSs. There are without doubt gotchas -- Garbage In Garbage Out with any piece of avionics. When GPS came along, first as handhelds for supplementary navigation, and now in the form of all-singing-all-dancing IFR GPSs, the KNS80 got relegated to a mostly secondary role as a backup NAV with DME. More recently in Europe, FM immunity regulations have meant that most KNS80s are no longer approved as NAV receivers (the filter package was about the price of a GPS, so there was little uptake). Thus the KNS80 has become the heaviest, bulkiest approved DME around. It's still there, though I haven't pressed the Data button (to set up a waypoint) for a good while. I don't see what "assumptions" are required for using a KNS80 over and above that for a simple VOR/DME system. You still have VORs and DMEs, don't you? Anyway, happy to help Bob if I can. Julian Scarfe |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I received a number of replies from pilots who are apparently very happy
with the "piece of junk." Bob wrote in message ... You really think anyone knows how to use that piece of junk? I question the safety, even for the few pilots who might know how to use it. The VOR system has deterioated quite a bit since the VOR Area Nav studies were made in the 1970s. The box works on those old assumptions. Bob Gardner wrote: Anyone currently flying with a KNS-80 please contact me directly. Thanx. Bob Gardner |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Bob Gardner wrote: I received a number of replies from pilots who are apparently very happy with the "piece of junk." They are stuck somewhere in time and apparently have never tried a Garmin 400/500 series GPS. |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... Bob Gardner wrote: I received a number of replies from pilots who are apparently very happy with the "piece of junk." They are stuck somewhere in time and apparently have never tried a Garmin 400/500 series GPS. And those who fly 30, 40 and 50 year old aircraft must be stuck in a time warp, huh? :~) |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... They are stuck somewhere in time and apparently have never tried a Garmin 400/500 series GPS. Or perhaps they are diversifying their skills and keeping all options open. -- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]() Richard Kaplan wrote: Or perhaps they are diversifying their skills and keeping all options open. In that case, you should add L/F four-course range simulation to your ground trainer. Who knows, they might come back? Seriously, from what I see, most pilots are not spending enough time with GPS to master its use for IFR. Between that, ILS, and conventional VOR/DME, the plate is already full without trying to master computed radials. |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message ... In that case, you should add L/F four-course range simulation to your ground trainer. Who knows, they might come back? As you correctly note, four-course ranges no longer exist, so there is no purpose in learning or practicing their use. Actually, I do not have a KNS-80 or other VOR/DME RNAV system in my simulator; the KNS-80 is in my airplane. I agree with you there is no point in a brand-new KNS-80 installation either in an airplane or in a simulator. I am, however, debating in my mind whether to install a Garmin 430 vs. 530 later this year as part of an avionics upgrade, and I am leaning toward the 430 because it would save enough space to allow me to keep the KNS-80 and thus maintain true DME and VOR/DME RNAV capability, two forms of navigation which the Garmin 430/530 can only emulate based on GPS calculations. Seriously, from what I see, most pilots are not spending enough time with GPS to master its use for IFR. Between that, ILS, and conventional VOR/DME, the plate is already full without trying to master computed radials. I am not saying someone should install a KNS-80 today as part of an avionics upgrade. But it does not necessarily make sense either to remove it just because a GPS is going in. You are correct that many pilots have not mastered all features of their GPS; what is wrong with an instrument pilot attaining proficiency in all installed avionics, including both GPS and viable/workable alternatives like the KNS-80? -- Richard Kaplan, CFII www.flyimc.com |
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|