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Old November 7th 03, 05:06 AM
Ray Andraka
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Try minimizing control inputs to what is necessary to keep your heading in bumpy
air rather than trying to keep the wings absolutely level. It produces an
uncomfortable ride, but the bumps do tend to average out somewhat over time as
long as you are not making big corrections for each bump. I haven't tried the
GPS only thing in really bumpy air. Then again, what is described as moderate
to severe by pilots flying aircraft with lighter wing loadings barely ruffles
the feathers of a loaded Six. It is a great instrument platform!

David Megginson wrote:

Ray Andraka writes:

I've found that I can fly the airplane IMC with just the HSI page on my
Garmin III Pilot as long as I keep the control inputs gentle. Doing this,
my instructor covers all the flight instruments. Update rate is a little
on the slow side, but as long as you keep your turns gentle it is very
doable.


My concern is that in moderate turbulence it's much harder to keep
control inputs gentle. On my last trip in IMC, for example, I hit a
couple of jolts that tipped me past 20 deg bank in a fraction of a
second. I'd like to know how well the GPS HSI page works in that
situation (I acknowledge that the TC is also tricky when the air's
that rough, since it has a slight lag built-in).

Has anyone tried using the HSI page on a handheld GPS in moderate
turbulence? I'd be very interested in hearing the results (especially
if it was on a cloudy day or at night, when there were no light or
shadow clues).

All the best,

David


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--Ray Andraka, P.E.
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