View Single Post
  #40  
Old November 18th 10, 08:42 PM posted to rec.aviation.soaring
Eric Greenwell[_4_]
external usenet poster
 
Posts: 1,939
Default Flarm in 2011 USA Contests

On 11/18/2010 11:24 AM, Darryl Ramm wrote:
On Nov 18, 10:33 am, Eric wrote:


Come'on - reading a manual in the cockpit? I haven't used Flarm, but
since it's not required for flying the glider or for performing the
task, it'll be "turn it on and forget about it till it squawks". If it
squawks too much, the pilot will just turn if off (or mute it) and
continue like he has for years, no more safety risk than before, and
then educate himself after he's landed.

These are not primary contest devices, like the flight computer!

I disagree. There will need to be training/study for use of a
PowerFLARM and the last thing I would want a contest pilot trying to
do is sort all this out on a contest day - Dale I believe understands
this and was planning appropriate assistance/training etc. (now moot I
guess). e.g. you better worry about the different types of warnings,
how to dismiss nuisance alerts (e.g. PCAS in a gaggle) and not others.
What the different symbols on the map screen mean. Whether to put the
device in Nearest, Contest, etc. mode. How to confirm it is working
correctly, has a GPS signal, etc. How to register on FLARMnet and load
a FLARMnet database. How to correctly set ICAO address and other
information, (especially if you also have a Mode S transponder to help
with other pilot's PowerFLARM do PCAS/Flarm deduplication) and other
information etc. Butterfly may be emphasizing the ease of use of
PowerFLARM and I expect them to do a good job making these relatively
easy to use but I get very worried when I see comments like it will be
"turn it on and forget until it squawks" type device--that thinking
could lead to dangerous situations.

I hope pilots, especially contest pilots will add PowerFLARM items to
their pre-contest/flight checklist. Over the years I've added things
like "GPS OK/acquired" and "task entered and declared (if needed)" to
my pre-flight (i.e. before your are in the cockpit) checklist.

Darryl

I agree completely that a pilot should learn how to use it while on the
ground to get full use out of the unit, but my impression is somebody
can be handed one, given a 5 minute basic introduction, then go flying.
He'll know enough to turn the unit on/off, to mute it, and to be to know
where to look when the unit signals a conflict with another glider.
That's just for the first flight. He'll know more before the next
flight, and so on.

I just don't see any reason to think pilots will be so involved in the
unit, they will be less safe during the course of the first few flights
than without it, and I still think it's nonsense to talk about "reading
the manual" in flight. It's not a flight computer! You are not trying to
navigate with it, not trying optimize your turn within a turnpoint area,
not trying to locate and center lift, not distracting yourself by
talking on the radio. It just sits there, like my MRX pcas unit, until
there is a potential problem. I'm just parroting what the guys that use
them tell us. Why not believe them?

All the other stuff - Flarmnet, database, ADS-B, ICAO address - is that
necessary for it to provide it's primary function in a contest, which is
to warn pilots of potential conflicts with other gliders?

--
Eric Greenwell - Washington State, USA (change ".netto" to ".us" to email me)