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#11
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Yes, in fact there is a lot more information now concerning car crashes
being given to Firefighters. Apparently, in addition to the risk of undeployed airbags, suspension struts are now considered highly dangerous to Firefighters. There have been several documented cases in which a car, on fire, as released its struct at a very high velocity. Apparently it can easily cut a hole in a firetruck. Fireflighters die trying to rescue people from their burnnig cars more often than people realize. -Robert |
#12
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Apparently the pressure is building...
It is an expensive unit, and some people are getting upset.. The magnets are very difficult to remove, Garmen has made it abundantly clear that this will void the warranty, and have no interest in exchanging it for one without magnets, which of course they don't make .. Or something like that... ![]() WHAT were they thinking? (or were they) Surprising from a company with long experience in aviation GPS units.... Dave On Sun, 18 Dec 2005 23:59:14 -0500, "Morgans" wrote: I predict that Garmin will finally give in and make a new type of antenna. (I hope) |
#13
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![]() Morgans wrote: "Dave" wrote\ And in an aircraft that was not engineered to willingly assist the pilot to maintain, recover to, and sustain controlled flight.. ++++++++++++++++++ I'm not sure if that is the whole picture. The Cirrus was not certified for spin resistance and recovery because it would have been so expensive to do so, up to the FAA's standards. That is not to say that it would not meet them, if they tried to do so. +++++++++++++++++++ Simply put, they took the cheap way out, with the *added* benefit of another mode of recovery for other types of situations, such as pilot incompacitation, loss of flight controls, loss of power over inhospitable terrain... It was cheaper to design, test and certify a BRS than it was to take the plane up and do a couple of spins? I think not. The CAPS tests themselves required the destruction of at least one airframe. Spin testing just has to show recovery after a couple times around. The reason the Cirrus was not spin tested is because it is very stall resistant. Any maneuver that could throw this plane into a spin might be so violent as to be unrecoverable. There have been accidents attributed to people trying deliberately to spin the Cirrus. There is no reason to attempt to spin the airplane anyway. It is unlikely to enter a spin accidentally, so it is not as if it is a needed emergency procedure. Some people claim the airplane will successfully recover from at least an initial spin. Fine. But why bother? Cirrus strongly discourages it. It is not really certified for it. There is no training advantage to it. If I want to do spins then give me an airplane where they will be fun; even Aerobat. Doing spins in a Cirrus would be like doing motocross in a Ferrari. |
#14
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![]() "Dave" wrote WHAT were they thinking? (or were they) Surprising from a company with long experience in aviation GPS units.... Myself, I don't think it is too surprising. You have the hardware gurus with the aviation permanent mount receiver department. Then you have the hardware guys for the handheld units. Lots of difference in the hardware, most likely different people. The software is the most common thing between the two, but the software people don't care what is running it, as long as the unit is capable of running it, which is what the hardware guys can tell them. The aviation guys know what they have to have for permanent mount antennae on airplanes. No magnets, right? The handhelds have antennae in the units, with a few having the added capability of an added antenna. Who uses those? For one, the XM guys, and the car GPS receiver guys. People with steel car roofs, thus the magnets. The XM people say, "hey, why not use a basic design we already use." The left hand didn't anticipate the different needs of the right hand. So how long does it take to realize there is a big problem, design a different antenna, get it to manufacturing and distribute it? My guess is 6 months, minimum. Added to that the fact that they already have made a big production run of the wrong antennae, which they would no doubt like to sell; otherwise it takes directly away from the per unit profit. These people kill to save pennies per unit, but now they are going to have to take a hit for several tens of dollars per unit? Someone up top is *not* a happy camper, at Garmin, I'll bet. -- Jim in NC |
#15
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![]() "cjcampbell" wrote\ It was cheaper to design, test and certify a BRS than it was to take the plane up and do a couple of spins? I think not. The CAPS tests themselves required the destruction of at least one airframe. Spin testing just has to show recovery after a couple times around. I wouldn't know for sure about the cost. It was my impression that it was very expensive and time consuming to spin certify , and spin resistance certify a new design. The reason the Cirrus was not spin tested is because it is very stall resistant. Any maneuver that could throw this plane into a spin might be so violent as to be unrecoverable. There have been accidents attributed to people trying deliberately to spin the Cirrus. There is no reason to attempt to spin the airplane anyway. It is unlikely to enter a spin accidentally, so it is not as if it is a needed emergency procedure. Granted about the spin resistance. I think the other thing that some people are overlooking is the brother's goals in a new GA airplane, which was to make it safer than all other GA craft, in giving an out in continued VFR into IMC, departures, loss of engine and a dozen other problems that sometimes come up. That was real important to them. Some people claim the airplane will successfully recover from at least an initial spin. Fine. But why bother? Cirrus strongly discourages it. It is not really certified for it. There is no training advantage to it. If I want to do spins then give me an airplane where they will be fun; even Aerobat. Doing spins in a Cirrus would be like doing motocross in a Ferrari. Chuckle How true! -- Jim in NC |
#16
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On Sun, 18 Dec 2005 at 22:05:05 in message
, Dave wrote: But, alas, I am also having difficulty in understanding why Garmin would install magnets in their remote GPS antenna that commonly is placed on the cowl/glareshield of of what is usually an ALUMINUM or COMPOSITE aircraft. Perhaps because it is almost the same as the one I have had for some time that goes on the roof of my car? There it fits snug and never seems to move until I take it off. :-) -- David CL Francis |
#17
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But, alas, I am also having difficulty in understanding why Garmin
would install magnets in their remote GPS antenna that commonly is placed on the cowl/glareshield of of what is usually an ALUMINUM or COMPOSITE aircraft. It could be that those antennas are sometimes used on car roofs..... David Johnson |
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