Timebuilder
Entrepreneur
- Joined
- Nov 25, 2001
- Posts
- 4,625
How about an old Garmin without any kind of map, or a similar Trimble product? The '$2mil plus' planes that I see on the ramp would LOVE to have a Garmin 430 in their panels. The best unit among all those planes is a Universal FMS. That, too has no map. Cost of the plane doesn't mean a lot in terms of the avionics.
Here's a anecdote on "direct" requests.
I had flown out to Ohio for a guy I know in his Cherokee Six, a nice one with older avionics. For the flight back from OSU airport, I filed my first fix as direct to the Appleton VOR, and then V 12 to go home to Reading. I used the /A for the flight plan suffix.
When I called for my clearance, the OSU ground controller questioned the "direct Appleton", asked if I was GPS or Loran equipped, and said that the Columbus tower would want to know how I would get to the VOR. Believe it or not, I had to explain to him that I was going to tune in the VOR, center the needle with a "TO" indication, and fly "direct" to the VOR. Columbus didn't question my ability to get there when I was told to contact them for departure, and the flight was uneventful. Except, that is for the strong tailwind at 11,000 feet that let me get the Cherokee up to 200 knots of groundspeed!
Here's a anecdote on "direct" requests.
I had flown out to Ohio for a guy I know in his Cherokee Six, a nice one with older avionics. For the flight back from OSU airport, I filed my first fix as direct to the Appleton VOR, and then V 12 to go home to Reading. I used the /A for the flight plan suffix.
When I called for my clearance, the OSU ground controller questioned the "direct Appleton", asked if I was GPS or Loran equipped, and said that the Columbus tower would want to know how I would get to the VOR. Believe it or not, I had to explain to him that I was going to tune in the VOR, center the needle with a "TO" indication, and fly "direct" to the VOR. Columbus didn't question my ability to get there when I was told to contact them for departure, and the flight was uneventful. Except, that is for the strong tailwind at 11,000 feet that let me get the Cherokee up to 200 knots of groundspeed!