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#1
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New Garden Airshow (Chester County PA) Photos:
http://phlairline.com/N57-2006/N57-2006.html (Note: not all are homebuilt. ) |
#2
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![]() Homebuilders, (and others), if you’re cramped for panel space, have too many switches for “non-essential” avionics, and want to protect your electronics installations from start up transients...go he http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=4647303457 I think I have a great product at a great price. Give me your input! WHAT IS WideWire? WideWire is a completely solid-state, no moving parts, “On Delay” switch designed to protect sensitive avionics from start-up transients and then automatically power up your avionics. HOW DO I USE WideWire? WideWire will turn on avionics after a short (1-2 minute) delay, protecting equipment from the stresses of engine start. After the delay, the equipment turns on AUTOMATICALLY making important avionics, like engine analyzers and intercoms, quickly available without the wiring hassles, panel space, and pilot interaction needed by extra switches. IS WideWire DIFFICULT TO INSTALL? Not at all. As it’s name implies, WideWire is simply spliced into the power supply wire for the equipment you want to protect, and for which you want an AUTOMATIC power on sequence. It’s like a wide piece of wire! HOW BIG IS WideWire? Small. Really small! WideWire is one inch long and ½ inch in diameter. HOW MUCH CURRENT CAN WideWire HANDLE? WideWire can continuously carry 3 amps of current at an ambient temperature of +70*C (+158*F), more than enough for an engine analyzer, fuel flow indicator, or intercom. Lower ambient temperatures allow WideWire to carry more current, up to a maximum of 5 amps at room temperature (+68*F). A 3 amp fuse or circuit breaker will provide full protection for WideWire and its load with proper wiring technique. WILL WideWire INTERFERE WITH MY OTHER AVIONICS? No, it won’t. In this day of “digital”, WideWire is a simple analog device, designed to ramp up power to the avionics attached to it gently. You won’t even hear a “pop” or “click” in the headset when WideWire does its job. WILL WideWire WORK ON MY 28 VOLT SYSTEM? Absolutely! WideWire will work reliably over the range of 5 to 30 volts, but the time delay will vary. On a 28 volt aircraft, the “On Delay” will be roughly 30 seconds, more than enough time for protection from engine start-up transients. WILL WideWire TIME DELAY EVERY TIME I CYCLE POWER? No, it won’t. The turn-on delay function of WideWire also works in reverse. It has to be turned off for a period roughly equal to its turn-on delay before it will delay again. So the equipment powered by WideWire will be instantly ON if you cycle the aircraft power after WideWire has come on line. This is a valuable avionics trouble-shooting and safety feature built into the design of WideWire. IS WideWire TSO’d OR PMA’d? WideWire is built to the highest aerospace standards, but there is no Technical Standard Order (TSO) for an item like WideWire. Nor is WideWire Parts Manufacturer Approved (PMA), so it’s only useable on experimental or homebuilt aircraft. Contact your local FSDO for using WideWire on certificated aircraft under a field approval. We’ll be glad to help with engineering documentation. IS WideWire WARRANTED? WideWire is unconditionally warranted for 5 years from the date of purchase. If it fails within that time, just ship it back to us and we’ll ship you a new WideWire in return, no questions asked. |
#3
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[posted and mailed]
Rip wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=4647303457 You should probably confine your posts to rec.aviation.marketplace or risk suspension of your account with eBay. According to eBay (http://pages.ebay.com/help/usenet_policy.html) they state: "UseNet Policy eBay users may not post on Usenet groups (Internet newsgroups) to advertise eBay or an eBay listing that is inappropriate or violates the Usenet board policy. If Usenet abuse is reported to eBay, we may among other remedies) remove the listing, issue a warning, temporarily suspend or indefinitely suspend the offender's eBay account. We have no tolerance for UseNet abuse and will take action as appropriate. Please note that we can only take action in cases where it is clear that an eBay member has posted to the Usenet inappropriately." |
#4
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Jim Logajan wrote:
[posted and mailed] Rip wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=4647303457 You should probably confine your posts to rec.aviation.marketplace or risk suspension of your account with eBay. According to eBay (http://pages.ebay.com/help/usenet_policy.html) they state: "UseNet Policy eBay users may not post on Usenet groups (Internet newsgroups) to advertise eBay or an eBay listing that is inappropriate or violates the Usenet board policy. If Usenet abuse is reported to eBay, we may among other remedies) remove the listing, issue a warning, temporarily suspend or indefinitely suspend the offender's eBay account. We have no tolerance for UseNet abuse and will take action as appropriate. Please note that we can only take action in cases where it is clear that an eBay member has posted to the Usenet inappropriately." Thanks, NetNanny. Review "appropriately". |
#5
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Ya know, I was just going to shine this little thing on until you came back
with the netnanny crap. Stick around folks, I'll show you how to make one that will handle a dozen amps at any liveable temperature and failsafe -- Kitplanes December issue. By the way, is your failure mode open or closed? I'm not about to put a $5 part in between my supply line and radio unless the failure will turn the radios on. Jim "Rip" wrote in message . com... Jim Logajan wrote: [posted and mailed] Rip wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=4647303457 You should probably confine your posts to rec.aviation.marketplace or risk suspension of your account with eBay. According to eBay (http://pages.ebay.com/help/usenet_policy.html) they state: Thanks, NetNanny. Review "appropriately". |
#6
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RST Engineering wrote:
Ya know, I was just going to shine this little thing on until you came back with the netnanny crap. Stick around folks, I'll show you how to make one that will handle a dozen amps at any liveable temperature and failsafe -- Kitplanes December issue. By the way, is your failure mode open or closed? I'm not about to put a $5 part in between my supply line and radio unless the failure will turn the radios on. Jim "Rip" wrote in message . com... Jim Logajan wrote: [posted and mailed] Rip wrote: http://cgi.ebay.com/ebaymotors/ws/eB...tem=4647303457 You should probably confine your posts to rec.aviation.marketplace or risk suspension of your account with eBay. According to eBay (http://pages.ebay.com/help/usenet_policy.html) they state: Thanks, NetNanny. Review "appropriately". Gee, Jim. I'm breathless with anticipation! A dozen amps! And it will fit in a 1 x 1/2 inch cylinder? I think you missed the point of my little item. I see a lot of homebuilders running out of panel space, or adding switches after the fact for non-critical items like intercoms and engine analyzers, that could stand a little delay after master switch power up. I never intended for it to be used on radios, critical engine instruments, etc. On the other hand, many items (such as those mentioned above) don't need to be on the avionics bus. So you splice my timer in the power supply line after the fuse or circuit breaker. It handles the protection and power up for you, while you get settled in during engine warm-up, etc. I think an item like this geared specifically towards homebuilders is more than appropriate for a group titled "rec.aviation.homebuilt". If you, or anyone else, disagrees, don't read or respond to the ad! Otherwise, you're all doomed to using the same old techniques and technology ad nauseum. In fact, Jim. Isn't that what you do? Attempt to introduce homnebuilders to a potentially better way of doing things? Rip |
#7
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Rip wrote:
Thanks, NetNanny. Review "appropriately". The occasional commercial post isn't a big deal with me. But when you posted the same message multiple times to several of the rec.aviation groups it was becoming spam. I'm not going to go complain to eBay so you have no worries from me on that score, but I thought you should know that if others less tolerant than I did complain, then you'd find your marketing backfiring. |
#8
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Jim Logajan wrote:
Rip wrote: Thanks, NetNanny. Review "appropriately". The occasional commercial post isn't a big deal with me. But when you posted the same message multiple times to several of the rec.aviation groups it was becoming spam. I'm not going to go complain to eBay so you have no worries from me on that score, but I thought you should know that if others less tolerant than I did complain, then you'd find your marketing backfiring. Jim, I appreciate your forebearance. Truly. I didn't "shotgun" post, but hit the rec. aviation groups that I thought would be interested (homebuilders, misc, marketing, and owners). Rip |
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