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#1
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Well, as many of you can remember, I have posted my saga about
intermittent reception problems with my Garmin GPSMAP 396 from day one. The Narco Nav/Coms or the splitters that are attached to them appear to be the culprit (both the MK-12D AND Nav 122). I could always select the harmonic freqs that would send the Garmin out to lunch, but it was not a constant problem. Sometimes a freq that would tank the Garmin on one day would be fine the next. This had me doubting the radio stack. I found that minute changes in the antenna position on the glareshield would alter the problem dramatically. Sometimes, moving it 1/4 inch would do it. 8 sats up around 80% to nothing. Zip. Just by moving the antenna a little bit. Even if the thing was only receiving it would tank. Local area ILS freqs would bomb the unit (109.5). Turns out that the default nav freq when you power up the Garmin will lose sat lock. On the ground, it is fine. Take off and climb and the antenna will move a wee bit due to the full throttle and high deck angle. Lost sat reception, but not every time. If the antenna moves just the right way, it will receive although at a MUCH lower signal strength and only 3 or 4 sats. Move it just a touch and it will degrade enough to lose lock, maybe down to 0 strength on all sats. I first thought that the problem of lost sat lock was due to LOW signal strength and switched to a higher gain antenna. Switching to the higher gain antenna actually made the problems worse. With it, many more radio freqs tank the Garmin. Both on COM transmit and NAV receive. It appears that mounting the antenna up high on the windshield may be the permanent cure. I cannot justify the ridiculous cost of an external antenna. $300- $400 for a twenty buck antenna is nuts. I'll report back if this does the trick. Anyone know of a nifty little "shelf" I can mount in the Cherokee up high? Maybe something sliding into the windshield trim plastic? Mike |
#2
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I'd be happy to sell you a Garmin GA56 remote antenna. It is in excellent
condition. They were used with the straight Garmin GNS-430. When I upgraded to the 430W, it came with a different antenna. $68.....free shipping in the US. Karl "curator" "Mike Spera" wrote in message ... Well, as many of you can remember, I have posted my saga about intermittent reception problems with my Garmin GPSMAP 396 from day one. The Narco Nav/Coms or the splitters that are attached to them appear to be the culprit (both the MK-12D AND Nav 122). I could always select the harmonic freqs that would send the Garmin out to lunch, but it was not a constant problem. Sometimes a freq that would tank the Garmin on one day would be fine the next. This had me doubting the radio stack. I found that minute changes in the antenna position on the glareshield would alter the problem dramatically. Sometimes, moving it 1/4 inch would do it. 8 sats up around 80% to nothing. Zip. Just by moving the antenna a little bit. Even if the thing was only receiving it would tank. Local area ILS freqs would bomb the unit (109.5). Turns out that the default nav freq when you power up the Garmin will lose sat lock. On the ground, it is fine. Take off and climb and the antenna will move a wee bit due to the full throttle and high deck angle. Lost sat reception, but not every time. If the antenna moves just the right way, it will receive although at a MUCH lower signal strength and only 3 or 4 sats. Move it just a touch and it will degrade enough to lose lock, maybe down to 0 strength on all sats. I first thought that the problem of lost sat lock was due to LOW signal strength and switched to a higher gain antenna. Switching to the higher gain antenna actually made the problems worse. With it, many more radio freqs tank the Garmin. Both on COM transmit and NAV receive. It appears that mounting the antenna up high on the windshield may be the permanent cure. I cannot justify the ridiculous cost of an external antenna. $300- $400 for a twenty buck antenna is nuts. I'll report back if this does the trick. Anyone know of a nifty little "shelf" I can mount in the Cherokee up high? Maybe something sliding into the windshield trim plastic? Mike |
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I had that exact same problem with my new 496. On my BFR we did a
couple of ILS approaches as the last thing we did. Since I never use my nav radios otherwise the frequency was left on the last localizer we used. Then I noticed the GPS wouldn't work. It would work until I started the plane then absolutely nothing. As soon as you shut the plane down the GPS fires up with 12 satellites. This went on for one week. I took the 496 to the avionics shop. The owner of the shop came out to the plane with me with another 496. In 5 minutes we figured out the problem. As soon as we shut off the Mk12D with the localizer frequency the GPS's worked. Turn it back on and both GPS's failed. Switch nav freq's and it works again. So we know it's in the one radio on the nav side and only on certain freq's. I rerouted the external antenna to the pilots side of the glare shield and this solves the problem too. The panel mount GPS sits right on top of this radio and is unaffected. The LOC freq that gave me trouble was 111.5. The other LOC on 110.3 doesn't cause any problems. Mike Spera wrote: Well, as many of you can remember, I have posted my saga about intermittent reception problems with my Garmin GPSMAP 396 from day one. The Narco Nav/Coms or the splitters that are attached to them appear to be the culprit (both the MK-12D AND Nav 122). I could always select the harmonic freqs that would send the Garmin out to lunch, but it was not a constant problem. Sometimes a freq that would tank the Garmin on one day would be fine the next. This had me doubting the radio stack. |
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On Sep 19, 9:27 am, Newps wrote:
... The LOC freq that gave me trouble was 111.5. This is a common problem with the 12D. see this previous post: http://tinyurl.com/342cbu |
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On Sep 19, 5:33 pm, mikem wrote:
On Sep 19, 9:27 am, Newps wrote: ... The LOC freq that gave me trouble was 111.5. This is a common problem with the 12D. see this previous post:http://tinyurl.com/342cbu Follow up: In the old thread, Fong posted that the LO injection on the 12D is low-side, and the first IF is 17MHz. That puts the LO at 115.5-17=98.5. The sixteenth harmonic of 98.5 is 1576MHz, which apparently blocks the GPS. |
#6
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On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 18:06:25 -0500, Mike Spera
wrote: Well, as many of you can remember, I have posted my saga about intermittent reception problems with my Garmin GPSMAP 396 from day one. The same reason my 196 loses reception, from Garmin's support database " Question: Why is my GPS losing satellites in the middle of my flight? Answer: Portable GPS units have the ability to experience loss of satellite reception as a result of RF interference caused by a variety of sources. These sources can be as simple as a portable MP3 Player used for in flight entertainment to a ground based air traffic control radar antenna on an airport. When these devices are powered on and are in close proximity to the portable GPS or antenna, the GPS may lose satellite acquisition as a result. Another common source of RF interference is aircraft communication and navigation radios. When certain radios are tuned to a specific frequency there is the potential for enough RF interference to be released that the Portable GPS unit will experience loss of satellite reception as though the signals were being jammed. An article in the Aviation Consumer, dated February 15th, 1994 has outlined a list of aviation communication radios and frequencies that may cause a portable GPS unit to lose satellite reception in the aircraft. This information is listed below. Radio Frequencies That May Jam GPS Receivers. Transmit 131.285 and 121.186 Receive Narco MK 12D/E Com 810/811, Nav 824/825 Com 131.220 and 119.285 Nav 115.464 and 109.672 King KX 155/165 Com 131.820 and 119.885 Nav 116.128 and 109.564 King KX 170/175 Com 122.285 and 130.186 Nav 113.651 Collins Microline Com 132.720 and 120.785 Microline Nav 116.028 and 109.464 Notes: KX 155/165 transmitting on 118.15 ws shown to jam an external mounted antenna. Narco MK 16 tuned to any 115 or 109 Nav channel was shown to jam a hand held GPS. Narco MK 12D/E and Nav 824/825, if not wired with memory keep alive, will default to 115.5 MHz in the active channel and will jam any GPS receiver. Last modified on: 08/30/2007 " |
#7
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O.K. That's great. We now know where the interference is coming from. My
question now is: "why?". I have had several GPS receivers and none of them fritzed out in this plane like the 396 is doing. I would think that the new Garmin Gee-Whiz box would be BETTER at rejecting noise and interference than previous units. I have a 12 year old Apollo that never had these problems in many, many years of use. My answer to Garmin on the below is: "Thanks for the answer, but that is unacceptable. Fix it!". For $2300 this unit should do handstands, perfectly. Anyone know why this particular model line does this? Thanks, Mike On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 18:06:25 -0500, Mike Spera wrote: Well, as many of you can remember, I have posted my saga about intermittent reception problems with my Garmin GPSMAP 396 from day one. The same reason my 196 loses reception, from Garmin's support database " Question: Why is my GPS losing satellites in the middle of my flight? Answer: Portable GPS units have the ability to experience loss of satellite reception as a result of RF interference caused by a variety of sources. These sources can be as simple as a portable MP3 Player used for in flight entertainment to a ground based air traffic control radar antenna on an airport. When these devices are powered on and are in close proximity to the portable GPS or antenna, the GPS may lose satellite acquisition as a result. Another common source of RF interference is aircraft communication and navigation radios. When certain radios are tuned to a specific frequency there is the potential for enough RF interference to be released that the Portable GPS unit will experience loss of satellite reception as though the signals were being jammed. An article in the Aviation Consumer, dated February 15th, 1994 has outlined a list of aviation communication radios and frequencies that may cause a portable GPS unit to lose satellite reception in the aircraft. This information is listed below. Radio Frequencies That May Jam GPS Receivers. Transmit 131.285 and 121.186 Receive Narco MK 12D/E Com 810/811, Nav 824/825 Com 131.220 and 119.285 Nav 115.464 and 109.672 King KX 155/165 Com 131.820 and 119.885 Nav 116.128 and 109.564 King KX 170/175 Com 122.285 and 130.186 Nav 113.651 Collins Microline Com 132.720 and 120.785 Microline Nav 116.028 and 109.464 Notes: KX 155/165 transmitting on 118.15 ws shown to jam an external mounted antenna. Narco MK 16 tuned to any 115 or 109 Nav channel was shown to jam a hand held GPS. Narco MK 12D/E and Nav 824/825, if not wired with memory keep alive, will default to 115.5 MHz in the active channel and will jam any GPS receiver. Last modified on: 08/30/2007 " |
#8
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If I understand the reply, noted below, then the intereference is a
stronger signal than the satellites. You cannot fix the impossible! Either you increase the power of the satellites many miles away to make it stronger than the local interference or remove the local interference. As for the older equipment it was probably less sensitive or used different frequencies within the receiver. Sadly that's how electronics works. If you put the GPS antenna close to a source of interference it will pick it up. Interferece problems were often reported by viewers, of TV in UK, using indoor antennas. Whilst they may work it is more by luck. On Wed, 03 Oct 2007 20:46:35 -0500, Mike Spera wrote: O.K. That's great. We now know where the interference is coming from. My question now is: "why?". I have had several GPS receivers and none of them fritzed out in this plane like the 396 is doing. I would think that the new Garmin Gee-Whiz box would be BETTER at rejecting noise and interference than previous units. I have a 12 year old Apollo that never had these problems in many, many years of use. My answer to Garmin on the below is: "Thanks for the answer, but that is unacceptable. Fix it!". For $2300 this unit should do handstands, perfectly. Anyone know why this particular model line does this? Thanks, Mike On Tue, 18 Sep 2007 18:06:25 -0500, Mike Spera wrote: Well, as many of you can remember, I have posted my saga about intermittent reception problems with my Garmin GPSMAP 396 from day one. The same reason my 196 loses reception, from Garmin's support database " Question: Why is my GPS losing satellites in the middle of my flight? Answer: Portable GPS units have the ability to experience loss of satellite reception as a result of RF interference caused by a variety of sources. These sources can be as simple as a portable MP3 Player used for in flight entertainment to a ground based air traffic control radar antenna on an airport. When these devices are powered on and are in close proximity to the portable GPS or antenna, the GPS may lose satellite acquisition as a result. Another common source of RF interference is aircraft communication and navigation radios. When certain radios are tuned to a specific frequency there is the potential for enough RF interference to be released that the Portable GPS unit will experience loss of satellite reception as though the signals were being jammed. An article in the Aviation Consumer, dated February 15th, 1994 has outlined a list of aviation communication radios and frequencies that may cause a portable GPS unit to lose satellite reception in the aircraft. This information is listed below. Radio Frequencies That May Jam GPS Receivers. Transmit 131.285 and 121.186 Receive Narco MK 12D/E Com 810/811, Nav 824/825 Com 131.220 and 119.285 Nav 115.464 and 109.672 King KX 155/165 Com 131.820 and 119.885 Nav 116.128 and 109.564 King KX 170/175 Com 122.285 and 130.186 Nav 113.651 Collins Microline Com 132.720 and 120.785 Microline Nav 116.028 and 109.464 Notes: KX 155/165 transmitting on 118.15 ws shown to jam an external mounted antenna. Narco MK 16 tuned to any 115 or 109 Nav channel was shown to jam a hand held GPS. Narco MK 12D/E and Nav 824/825, if not wired with memory keep alive, will default to 115.5 MHz in the active channel and will jam any GPS receiver. Last modified on: 08/30/2007 " |
#9
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Exactly.
All those radios were designed long before GPS. They are noisy and will interfere with GPS. That's the reason King made the "A" series of the 155 and 165. They are designed to co-exist with GPS. Karl wrote in message ... If I understand the reply, noted below, then the intereference is a stronger signal than the satellites. You cannot fix the impossible! Either you increase the power of the satellites many miles away to make it stronger than the local interference or remove the local interference. As for the older equipment it was probably less sensitive or used different frequencies within the receiver. Sadly that's how electronics works. If you put the GPS antenna close to a source of interference it will pick it up. Interferece problems were often reported by viewers, of TV in UK, using indoor antennas. Whilst they may work it is more by luck. |
#10
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![]() "karl gruber" wrote in message ... Exactly. All those radios were designed long before GPS. They are noisy and will interfere with GPS. That's the reason King made the "A" series of the 155 and 165. They are designed to co-exist with GPS. Karl Garmin designed the 396 stuff for airplanes. Those radios are in airplanes. Garmin made the wrong design choices when making those boxes. Didn't Garmin buy Apollo? You would think they would have some lessons learned in there somewhere... |
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