![]() |
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
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
I have a functioning B-100 flight computer (version
1.1). My new ship (SZD-59) is equipped with an LX-4000. The LX has integrated GPS and the B-100 takes a separate unit (offhand that seems better since new GPS's kick the crap out of early units) I also have an Ilec SB-8 with the ASR unit, that for 150 Euros can be upgraded to the latest GPS driven ASR unit. Upgrading to the SN10B or LX8000 etc is out of the question, and frankly not necessary for my current set of skills so I am not looking for upgrade recommendations like that (unless someone wants to sell me one REAL cheap!) as much as I am looking for advice on deciding between the three. I'm leaning towards the Borgelt or the Ilec, but want to hear opinions as to which one/ones and why. I'm just beginning X-C, so user friendly is a real consideration as well. I know, I know, 50 pilots=60 opinions, but I still want to know what others think since I do not have enough first hand experience with any of them to determine which would be best. Also, if the B-100 is the better choice, which external (inexpensive) GPS should I get to use with it? Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi |
#2
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 5, 8:15 pm, Paul Hanson
wrote: I have a functioning B-100 flight computer (version 1.1). My new ship (SZD-59) is equipped with an LX-4000. The LX has integrated GPS and the B-100 takes a separate unit (offhand that seems better since new GPS's kick the crap out of early units) I also have an Ilec SB-8 with the ASR unit, that for 150 Euros can be upgraded to the latest GPS driven ASR unit. Upgrading to the SN10B or LX8000 etc is out of the question, and frankly not necessary for my current set of skills so I am not looking for upgrade recommendations like that (unless someone wants to sell me one REAL cheap!) as much as I am looking for advice on deciding between the three. Paul, The most important thing is a good current wind determination. The B-100 wind sucks, don't know about the LX-4000. I'm flying the SN-10 and knowing the current wind saves me on almost every flight. Wish I had puchased it years ago, worth every penny, even at todays prices. JJ I'm leaning towards the Borgelt or the Ilec, but want to hear opinions as to which one/ones and why. I'm just beginning X-C, so user friendly is a real consideration as well. I know, I know, 50 pilots=60 opinions, but I still want to know what others think since I do not have enough first hand experience with any of them to determine which would be best. Also, if the B-100 is the better choice, which external (inexpensive) GPS should I get to use with it? Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi |
#3
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 5, 8:15 pm, Paul Hanson
wrote: I have a functioning B-100 flight computer (version 1.1). My new ship (SZD-59) is equipped with an LX-4000. The LX has integrated GPS and the B-100 takes a separate unit (offhand that seems better since new GPS's kick the crap out of early units) I also have an Ilec SB-8 with the ASR unit, that for 150 Euros can be upgraded to the latest GPS driven ASR unit. Upgrading to the SN10B or LX8000 etc is out of the question, and frankly not necessary for my current set of skills so I am not looking for upgrade recommendations like that (unless someone wants to sell me one REAL cheap!) as much as I am looking for advice on deciding between the three. I'm leaning towards the Borgelt or the Ilec, but want to hear opinions as to which one/ones and why. I'm just beginning X-C, so user friendly is a real consideration as well. I know, I know, 50 pilots=60 opinions, but I still want to know what others think since I do not have enough first hand experience with any of them to determine which would be best. Also, if the B-100 is the better choice, which external (inexpensive) GPS should I get to use with it? Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi Paul, I have found that the wind calculation on all the newer fligth computers are excellent. CAI 302, Borgelt B500, LX7000, LX7007, WinPilot, SeeYou Mobile, SN10. Software is what calculates the wind not the instrument. Most instruments have pitot and temperature inputs and I beleive all use calculation of wind from circling drift in a theraml, course change, True Airspeed and GPS info. They all probably use slightly different combinations of the inputs and use a different formula. Comparing any of these systems to a B100 or a LX4000 is like comparing apples and peas. WinPilot and SeeYou Mobile can be connected to just a GPS and calculate the winds from circling drift in your last thermal. A good external GPS if you don't need a IGC data Logger is a Garmin GPS 18. Richard www.craggyaero.com |
#4
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Hi Paul,
I sell instruments - so take this with a grain of salt. But have you considered that you may be able to get pretty good money selling the used instruments - perhaps enough to buy a new one? Working with old hardware is a lot of work and may or may not be worth it. The market for used soaring instruments is pretty good. I often talk to customers that are spending a lot of money trying to get old systems upgraded - and they never think of the idea of selling the existing hardware to help pay for new instruments. I do offer a free soaring classifieds web site that has helped many glider pilots sell used instruments. You can see details he http://www.soaring-classifieds.com Just a thought... Paul Remde Cumulus Soaring, Inc. http://www.cumulus-soaring.com "Paul Hanson" wrote in message ... I have a functioning B-100 flight computer (version 1.1). My new ship (SZD-59) is equipped with an LX-4000. The LX has integrated GPS and the B-100 takes a separate unit (offhand that seems better since new GPS's kick the crap out of early units) I also have an Ilec SB-8 with the ASR unit, that for 150 Euros can be upgraded to the latest GPS driven ASR unit. Upgrading to the SN10B or LX8000 etc is out of the question, and frankly not necessary for my current set of skills so I am not looking for upgrade recommendations like that (unless someone wants to sell me one REAL cheap!) as much as I am looking for advice on deciding between the three. I'm leaning towards the Borgelt or the Ilec, but want to hear opinions as to which one/ones and why. I'm just beginning X-C, so user friendly is a real consideration as well. I know, I know, 50 pilots=60 opinions, but I still want to know what others think since I do not have enough first hand experience with any of them to determine which would be best. Also, if the B-100 is the better choice, which external (inexpensive) GPS should I get to use with it? Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi |
#5
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 5, 11:15 pm, Paul Hanson
wrote: I have a functioning B-100 flight computer (version 1.1). My new ship (SZD-59) is equipped with an LX-4000. The LX has integrated GPS and the B-100 takes a separate unit (offhand that seems better since new GPS's kick the crap out of early units) I also have an Ilec SB-8 with the ASR unit, that for 150 Euros can be upgraded to the latest GPS driven ASR unit. Upgrading to the SN10B or LX8000 etc is out of the question, and frankly not necessary for my current set of skills so I am not looking for upgrade recommendations like that (unless someone wants to sell me one REAL cheap!) as much as I am looking for advice on deciding between the three. I'm leaning towards the Borgelt or the Ilec, but want to hear opinions as to which one/ones and why. I'm just beginning X-C, so user friendly is a real consideration as well. I know, I know, 50 pilots=60 opinions, but I still want to know what others think since I do not have enough first hand experience with any of them to determine which would be best. Also, if the B-100 is the better choice, which external (inexpensive) GPS should I get to use with it? Paul Hanson "Do the usual, unusually well"--Len Niemi One thing also to keep in mind that units with integrated GPS are more "acceptable" to IGC (record/badge/contest flights). Usually I fly with SoarPilot on a PDA. When I started flying cross country I just plugged it into a cheap handheld Garmin. Now, I fly a nicer ship that has an LX5000 installed. The user interface on the LX is abominable, but it can drive the PDA quite well, and I've managed to figure out enough on the LX to be able to declare goal flights in it (got the diamond on the first try this summer!). -- Matt |
#6
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 6, 10:30 pm, Richard wrote:
Software is what calculates the wind not the instrument. More than 98% of the engineering content of a flight computer is software. The instrument is in fact mostly software. And the software is completely different in the different instruments. Most instruments have pitot and temperature inputs and I beleive all use calculation of wind from circling drift in a theraml, course change, True Airspeed and GPS info. Incorrect. ILEC SN10 certainly does not require circling to calculate wind; you'll often get a wind indication on tow. They all probably use slightly different combinations of the inputs and use a different formula. Right. So, talk to experienced XC pilots who have *really* flown with these instruments, and find out which ones are considered to produce reliable wind info. Your mileage will vary. A lot. Hope that's helpful, Best Regards, Dave "YO" |
#7
|
|||
|
|||
![]() wrote in message oups.com... On Nov 6, 10:30 pm, Richard wrote: Software is what calculates the wind not the instrument. More than 98% of the engineering content of a flight computer is software. The instrument is in fact mostly software. And the software is completely different in the different instruments. Most instruments have pitot and temperature inputs and I beleive all use calculation of wind from circling drift in a theraml, course change, True Airspeed and GPS info. Incorrect. ILEC SN10 certainly does not require circling to calculate wind; you'll often get a wind indication on tow. They all probably use slightly different combinations of the inputs and use a different formula. Right. So, talk to experienced XC pilots who have *really* flown with these instruments, and find out which ones are considered to produce reliable wind info. Your mileage will vary. A lot. Hope that's helpful, Best Regards, Dave "YO" So how do you know for sure that a particular software produces accurate wind data? It seems that any test would require accurate wind data determined by some highly trusted independent method to compare with the software output. Bildan |
#8
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, if I'm climbing on a ridge and the wind calculator tells me that I'm
on the lee side, I tend to think that the calculator is bull****ting me :-) In mountain flying, good wind calculation is a precious help (notably when conditions are marginal), and can be - relatively - easily tested. Bert "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message . .. So how do you know for sure that a particular software produces accurate wind data? It seems that any test would require accurate wind data determined by some highly trusted independent method to compare with the software output. Bildan |
#9
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Well, having flown over the mountains and plains while listening to other
pilots reporting wind from all points of the compass, I've jotted down their readings, my data and the time. Later I compared that to the data collected by a real-time NOAA wind profiler 16NM away. Using the wind profiler as a reference, all of our calculated winds aloft data were highly unreliable. No one was better than the others and all were way off. The only useful data was collected while circling and then only if the circles were perfect, otherwise it's is a rough approximation.. To get accurate real-time wind data in flight you need four input variables, ground track, ground speed, trufe airspeed, and true heading. The last is because winds aloft data are referenced to true north. To date, all glide software omits heading input. Bill Daniels "Bert Willing" wrote in message ... Well, if I'm climbing on a ridge and the wind calculator tells me that I'm on the lee side, I tend to think that the calculator is bull****ting me :-) In mountain flying, good wind calculation is a precious help (notably when conditions are marginal), and can be - relatively - easily tested. Bert "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message . .. So how do you know for sure that a particular software produces accurate wind data? It seems that any test would require accurate wind data determined by some highly trusted independent method to compare with the software output. Bildan |
#10
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Nov 7, 9:52 am, "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote:
Well, having flown over the mountains and plains while listening to other pilots reporting wind from all points of the compass, I've jotted down their readings, my data and the time. Later I compared that to the data collected by a real-time NOAA wind profiler 16NM away. Using the wind profiler as a reference, all of our calculated winds aloft data were highly unreliable. No one was better than the others and all were way off. The only useful data was collected while circling and then only if the circles were perfect, otherwise it's is a rough approximation.. To get accurate real-time wind data in flight you need four input variables, ground track, ground speed, trufe airspeed, and true heading. The last is because winds aloft data are referenced to true north. To date, all glide software omits heading input. Bill Daniels "Bert Willing" wrote in message ... Well, if I'm climbing on a ridge and the wind calculator tells me that I'm on the lee side, I tend to think that the calculator is bull****ting me :-) In mountain flying, good wind calculation is a precious help (notably when conditions are marginal), and can be - relatively - easily tested. Bert "Bill Daniels" bildan@comcast-dot-net wrote in message ... So how do you know for sure that a particular software produces accurate wind data? It seems that any test would require accurate wind data determined by some highly trusted independent method to compare with the software output. Bildan Actually several of the LX series have a fluxgate compass input for just this reason. I have no experience using them. I think a lot of wind calculations would be more reliable if people understood what the devices are calculating, hwo they expire the calculations, how to look at wind at different altitudes, how to reset the wind calculations etc. I'm not suprised that voting across several gliders yields near random results. Darryl |
|
Thread Tools | |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Thread Starter | Forum | Replies | Last Post |
Antique Flight Computer | James Hamilton | Soaring | 0 | January 5th 06 06:04 PM |
Antique Flight Computer | James Hamilton | Soaring | 0 | January 5th 06 06:03 PM |
Flight computer for Sale | [email protected] | Piloting | 0 | August 20th 05 06:12 PM |
flight computer calculation | Tim | General Aviation | 1 | April 26th 05 10:40 AM |
TAERO 4000? | Al E. Kat | Home Built | 0 | September 28th 03 03:58 AM |