The problem with the MDT's in the police cars are they are extremely
heavy for our application. Many times they are not real reliable
either(speaking from experience).  As far as the chart thing, it is good
to have but...after flying the KR across country twice, maps can be a
hassle in the cockpit.  Definitely a good backup to my GPS, however, for
me to have all the charts I need making the trip and In unfamiliar
territory, the GPS makes it much safer in our little birds.

Steve Glover
KR-2 N902G
AJO, Ca
<kr...@cox.net>


Let me clarify my position here so you can understand
where I am comming from.  I live and do most of my
flying in Florida. It's flat. 99% of the time, I use
no electronic navigation....I use a chart. To me, it's
simple, fun, and enjoyable. As with any pilot I know,
I always know where I am at, which means I know where
the nearest field is at, including farm fields. 
 I have had two engine-outs in my lifetime. One time I
made it to a field, the other I made it to a cow
pasture. I count myself as lucky.
You carry a laptop to store trending engine
parameters. I understand your point.  To me, that's
just a tad bit to analytical and removes the fun of
flying for me. In my years of experience building
engines, I always used parameter storing devices on
eveything we raced...just not what I played with for
fun. Example: Motorcycles carried tire temp sensors,
wheel speed sensors (coupled with tachometer readings
used to determine wheel spin at differeing rpms), egt,
o'2, map, tps, head temp, oil temp and pressure,
....stored in a box and downloaded later. We raced,
hence we over-analyzed looking for every second of lap
time we could conjure up. But that's racing, and to do
that in my flying machine just removes the fun from
it, for me. You look at it differently. 
So, to sum this up...I like to keep it as simple as
possible.  When I get into the rental flyer, armed
with the weather report and a $100 hamburger
destination, after a thorough preflight, I sprawl out
the chart on my lap and away I go...happy as pig in a
poke. 

With that said, the map unit you showed us was
neat...but far too complicated for my simple tastes. 

However....looks like a nice unit.  But instead of
that, I would consider a map that runs entirely on my
laptop, coupled to a GPS unit. Go look inside a police
car and check out the laptop mounting systems they use
in the car. They are quite simple, and could easily be
adapted to an airplane. You could mount it on a
swivel, to move it over to the passenger side when
flying alone, or push it up against the panel when you
have a passenger (can you picture what I am trying to
say?) 

Scott
--- Mark Langford <n5...@hiwaay.net> wrote:

> William Scott wrote:
> 
> > a laptop. I had one. I will say this:  Carrying
> that
> > laptop gets old.  With all the new cheap
> technology,
> > may I suggest looking at something in the
> > civilian/boating market that is less expensive and
> can
> > be mounted on your panel?  Will it have airport
> > waypoints? No. But most can be programmed for any
> > along your route.
> 
> I think you missed most of the points I tried to
> make in my post.  I already
> carry a laptop to store information generated by the
> engine information
> system, and I find the benefits of trending engine
> parameters far outweigh
> the hassle.   And I'm not about to mount a marine
> GPS in my plane that has
> no aviation database.  What would you do when your
> engine quit on a
> cross-country and you needed to know the nearest 10
> airports, their
> distances, and the orientation of their runways?
> 
> I should have asked that all replies come direct to
> me...
> 
> Mark Langford, Huntsville, Alabama
> see KR2S project N56ML at
> http://home.hiwaay.net/~langford
> email to N56ML "at" hiwaay.net
>
--------------------------------------------------------------
> 
> 
> _______________________________________
> Search the KRnet Archives at http://www.maddyhome.com/krsrch/index.jsp
> to UNsubscribe from KRnet, send a message to
> krnet-le...@mylist.net
> please see other KRnet info at
> http://www.krnet.org/info.html
> 





__________________________________ 
Yahoo! Mail - PC Magazine Editors' Choice 2005 
http://mail.yahoo.com

_______________________________________
Search the KRnet Archives at http://www.maddyhome.com/krsrch/index.jsp
to UNsubscribe from KRnet, send a message to krnet-le...@mylist.net
please see other KRnet info at http://www.krnet.org/info.html



Reply via email to