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Yes this would screw me up big time as well......but I do have a Garmin
430 as well, so having a backup GPS does make sense. I am about to install
the Garmin GTN750 which also has its own GPS (I am not sharing the
antenna) and a dynon EFIS (with battery) as backup. (when it is ready I
share a picture of this installation)
I sometimes got the same error on the chelton (GPS NOT AVAILABLE/WAAS not
availible or EXTERNAL SENSOR ERROR (WSI)) but after flying 40plus hours
behind the cheltons I have to admit it is not a bad system at all. I have
flown with the Avidyne, Aspen and Garmin g900, but find the chelton in
some parts even easier. The only thing I do not like is the way to enter
flight plans in the system.
== Ronald
On 8/15/11 7:42 AM, "John Hafen" <j.hafen@comcast.net> wrote:
This weekend, flying back to Seattle, directly over the Sawtooth
mountains over Salmon Idaho, fat dumb and happy, on auto pilot at 16.5k
feet in VFR conditions, I hear in my headset, "GPS Unavailable," after
which my moving map Chelton re-boots itself, turning white, then black,
then black with text, then it finally re-boots itself with all of the
information except the ground map representation, which returned after a
few minutes.
It was nice to be able to refer to my iPad on my lap for navigation
backup.
It wasn't really a panic because I was at altitude and in VFR, but it
would have been a panic if I had been on an IFR departure out of Seattle,
like I had two times earlier that week, where the overcast starts hard at
500 feet and goes up to 8,500 feet. If I had been in that position and
had Seattle Center telling me to go to a particular intersection (Like
SUMMA with two M's on the J5 south out of Seattle) and couldn't find the
intersection because my Chelton decided to re-boot right then.......
Now THAT my friends could have been a distraction.
So I love the EFIS and use the heck out of it, and it's anything but
bullet proof. Why mine rebooted for no reason what-so-ever, right when
it did, over the Sawtooths, I do not know.
Glad it didn't happen on climb out out of Seattle in the muck.
John Hafen
IVP N413AJ 320 hours
On Aug 8, 2011, at 7:40 PM, Brent Regan wrote:
When we create the conformal document set (drawings, specifications,
etc.) for certified hardware we try to lock down every aspect of the
design so that vendors do not "improve" a component and cause an
unforeseen problem. One man's improvement can be another man's nightmare.
Case in point.
A friend with a Chelton IDU-I manufactured about 10 years ago (by
Sierra Flight Systems in Boise) was having a problem where the display
would intermittently lose vertical synchronization and start flipping. I
disassembled the unit to find the problem. It seems the LCD display
vendor, Panelview, who also added the Anti Reflection (AR) coating,
decided to add a metalized sticker to the display. Seems innocent enough,
right? Well, with time and temperature cycles the sticker started to peal
and came in contact with the backside of an inter-board connector that
happened to be carrying the V-SYNC signal. With heat and vibration the
aluminum layer of the sticker was exposed and shorted the signal pins.
The attached pictures clearly show where the pins rubbed on the sticker.
A freaking sticker?!?!?! Really?!?!?! That is one for the books.
It is not the known knowns that get you. It is rarely the known unknowns
that get you. It is the unknown unknowns that get you.
It is experiences like this that are the basis for my advice that,
despite your best efforts, sooner or later it may all go very wrong. And
not for a big obvious reason but for a stupid little tiny sticker of a
reason. Ask your self now, in the comfort of your office chair, what is
your plan for when it does go very wrong?
Regards
Brent Regan
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