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Well how bout several of the aircraft on your list, say the Airbus, there is no reasonable way to operate the intercom in anything other than HOT, you can select intercom ON or OFF unless you select to xmit on INT only, having to reselect for each radio transmission. Some GA intercom systems have a VOX (voice activation)feature.Hmmm. Never have flown an airplane with a constant hot mic.
Which model?
That's a new one on me.
Mike
Well how bout several of the aircraft on your list, say the Airbus, there is no reasonable way to operate the intercom in anything other than HOT, you can select intercom ON or OFF unless you select to xmit on INT only, having to reselect for each radio transmission. Some GA intercom systems have a VOX (voice activation)feature.
The Lear 45's audio panel does have squelch, so the mic isn't necessarily always hot, but squelch control is integrated with volume control. Volume goes up and squelch goes down, and vice versa. The impedance switch helps, but there are probably people who don't know about it.
Another feature I wish you would include is some sort of equalizer for aircraft radio audio. I owned a pair of Bose Xs before I bought my UFlyMike, and although I haven't done any tests, I believe the Bose QC2 frequency response (for aircraft radio audio) is broader than the Xs. Obviously, the Xs are made for voice communication, and the QC2s are designed to reproduce music, among other things. I believe the QC2 have better bass response.
There is a noticeable difference in clarity of the aircraft radio between the Xs and the QC2. I believe the Xs are tuned for this, and the QC2 is not. With the QC2, controller's voice on the aircraft radio sound much less clear, and it took me a long while to become accustomed to that. It still can be a problem, and a simple equalizer, fixed or adjustable, should be included in future designs.
The EQ, of course, would only filter the audio from the aircraft's headset audio, and not the audio from the audio input jack on the UFlyMike itself. The EQ should tune the audio from the aircraft to a narrower spectrum to make the human voice more clear.
Okay, maybe I misspoke (miswrote?). I'm referring to the ability to simply turn off your own hot mic. Fischman should be able to fill you in on what I'm talking about, as he's flown the CRJ and it has this ability. The intercom switch is integrated with the push-to-talk switch, so CRJ pilots become adept at holding a conversation by flipping the intercom on when you need to talk, and flipping it off when you're done. Very little was more irritating than flying with a guy who left his on all the time.Hmmm. Never have flown an airplane with a constant hot mic.
Which model?
Sorry you guys can't stand it when some one has a different opinion. I am just relating my experience with the Ufly. Two out of three crew members have had sound quality problems(static , low volume) and the other went NORDO when his battery died. My recommendation is Plantronics, Sennheiser or Lightspeed, all great products with great support and designed for aviation>
Not trying to rain on your parade, I purchased one recently (Ufly combo) after seeing all the positive posts, my opinion is the comfort is great, the ANR performance OK but not spectacular, the quality of the audio is low in comparison to Sennhieser and Clarity Aloft, microphone gain appears to be low on the Airbus, I must speak up a bit compared to the Sennhieser which does not have this problem, unfortunately the Sennhieser head set is like putting my head in a vice, very uncomfortable. Still looking for the ultimate headset.