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Old July 13th 03, 08:49 PM
Darrell
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The presence of two attitude indicators is especially valuable when they
disagree. That disagreement will direct your attention to the needle/ball
and basic flight instruments to help determine which one is correct. With a
single AI you could more easily follow a gyro error without noticing a
difference in the other basic instruments until it was too late.

--

Darrell R. Schmidt

B-58 Hustler History:
http://members.cox.net/dschmidt1/


"Steve House" wrote in message
...
I've been reading with interest the several threads where a number of

people
have strongly pointed out the advantages of a backup electric AI to

supplant
a vacum driven main AI. But I'm reminded of the saying "A man with a good
watch always knows what time it is. A man with two watches is never

sure."
So I'm toodling along in IMC with no outside horizon reference and I see

my
two AIs don't agree with each other. How do I determine which to trust?

If
I had a third, I could go with a 2 of 3 voting strategy of course, but

with
only two, what do you do to decide which is operating properly and which

one
has faulted? Obviously I can look for consistency with other

instruments -
does my DG or Turn indicator show I'm turning, does the VSI show a climb

or
descent - but what would be the best strategy given the various ways

vacuum
or electric driven instruments can fail?