My glass cockpit was attaching my iPhone to the instrument panel and running 
apps for nav. ?It works great! ?Moving map and all.?

I flew a short hop today as well. Today was the best flying weather we've had 
in weeks.?

Joe


Sent from my Verizon Wireless 4G LTE smartphone

<div>-------- Original message --------</div><div>From: Mark Langford via KRnet 
<krnet at list.krnet.org> </div><div>Date:01/01/2015  10:03 PM  (GMT-06:00) 
</div><div>To: KRnet <krnet at list.krnet.org> </div><div>Subject: KR> First 
flight of the year </div><div>
</div>Well, since Mark Jones didn't pipe up with "first flight of the year" 
news, I guess I should take up his slack.  I flew 1.8 hours today, doing 
10 landings at three airports.  N891JF has been down a few weeks, as I 
had to send my iEFIS and iBox back to MGL for some maintenance.  I still 
haven't swapped out the brakes, because I figure the cold temps will be 
kind enough to the o-rings to keep the brakes intact for a few more 
weeks, at least.  I'll have them swapped out in time for Sun N Fun 
though, for sure.

My experience with the iEFIS has convinced me that the way to go is an 
iPad running your choice of aviation software.  At least if it goes 
down, you can get another iPad for reasonable money, and have it 
overnight if you need it!  And if you don't like one app, just buy a 
different one next year.  I've been expecting somebody to come up with a 
bluetooth engine interface for the iPad, and there's at least one at 
http://sportair.aero/news/wireless-in-flight-engine-data-now-available-for-icub/
 
, probably more if I spend a few minutes looking, and certainly more in 
the future.

I was skeptical of the brightness of the iPad, but now that I've 
inherited my daughter's (she's happy with her laptop at college), it's 
plenty bright enough for an open cockpit KR, and fits just about 
perfectly in the panel height available.  Even two iPads on the panel, 
one for navigation and one for engine monitoring, would make a lot of 
sense in my mind.  You could use ForeFlight or the iFLY app for nav, and 
an engine monitoring for the other, and if one went down you could do 
both on one iPad.  Poor man's glass panel, in my mind, and would be what 
I'd do if I could do it all over again.  Maybe I'll have that chance 
with my next one.  The iPad is ubiquitous, and stuff like ADS-B is "plug 
and play" with it.  No longer do you have to wait for a particular 
software vendor to add compatibility...just about everybody wants to be 
compatible with the iPad first.

And I also have to confess that there's nothing wrong with steam gauges 
for basic flight instruments.  At least they only fail one at a time, 
and I do think they are easier to read and digest the info quickly. 
That'll open a large can of worms, I'm sure.

I did install cabin heat in N891JF this week, and it's a wonderful thing...
-- 
Mark Langford
ML at N56ML.com
http://www.n56ml.com


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