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#11
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![]() "Andrey Serbinenko" wrote in message their own charts. In almost 40 years I haven't met anyone, not 1, who prefers the gov charts over Jepps. What do the military pilots use? I think military pilots are - or used to be - required to use the fed charts. Still, I never met one who, after having an opportunity to use Jepps, maintained a preference for the gov charts. Most people I know found the government update system awkward, but it was designed for a different kind of operation, where a pilot could go into Ops and get a chart kit and know that it was invariably uniform and current. No one had to go through the set and r/r individual sheets. |
#12
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John Gaquin wrote:
"Andrey Serbinenko" wrote in message Does anybody know why it so happened that there's literally nobody else out there besides jepp in aeronautical charting Jeppesen started so early on (early 30s), and his little notebooks were so relevant and to the point, that it didn't take much for the Jepps to become the de facto industry standard, even after the government started publishing their own charts. In almost 40 years I haven't met anyone, not 1, who prefers the gov charts over Jepps. I like the FAA enroute charts better than Jepps', and the "new" (a few years old by now) format on FAA approach plates is fine. I will probably switch to FAA charts when my Jepps subscription expires in a couple of months. -jav |
#13
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Andrey Serbinenko wrote:
Does anybody know why it so happened that there's literally nobody else out there besides jepp in aeronautical charting business? What about the plain old FAA published charts? Isn't all the same data there, just in a different format? |
#14
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John Gaquin wrote:
"Andrey Serbinenko" wrote in message their own charts. In almost 40 years I haven't met anyone, not 1, who prefers the gov charts over Jepps. What do the military pilots use? I think military pilots are - or used to be - required to use the fed charts. Still, I never met one who, after having an opportunity to use Jepps, maintained a preference for the gov charts. My co-owner likes the Jepp charts, but uses the FAA versions because he has to pay for them himself. |
#15
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First I am not a hard IFR flyer. I started using Jepp because that is
what my instructor used. I had the SW, which is TX and the surrounding states. That became a nightmare to update and most of the places I never went to. I change to NOS charts after reading a IRF book by Rod Machado. He explained IFR flying and compared the charts against each other. Each have there good points and bad points. The differences were not that great. I get a totally new book and can throw away the old. If I need the additional territory, I just get that part. I now have North TX, OK and AR. Ross KSWI Javier wrote: John Gaquin wrote: "Andrey Serbinenko" wrote in message Does anybody know why it so happened that there's literally nobody else out there besides jepp in aeronautical charting Jeppesen started so early on (early 30s), and his little notebooks were so relevant and to the point, that it didn't take much for the Jepps to become the de facto industry standard, even after the government started publishing their own charts. In almost 40 years I haven't met anyone, not 1, who prefers the gov charts over Jepps. I like the FAA enroute charts better than Jepps', and the "new" (a few years old by now) format on FAA approach plates is fine. I will probably switch to FAA charts when my Jepps subscription expires in a couple of months. -jav |
#16
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"Andrey Serbinenko" wrote in message
... Does anybody know why it so happened that there's literally nobody else out there besides jepp in aeronautical charting business? TERPS people develop the procedures, FAA test-flies them, and all this info is publicly available. Yet, the only commercial enterprise harvesting there is jepp. Between NACO and them there's a substantial gap in terms of pricing and packaging of services. Why is it empty? Andrey 70 years of collecting and publishing? |
#17
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![]() "B A R R Y" wrote in message news:IGOxg.75725. My co-owner likes the Jepp charts, but uses the FAA versions because he has to pay for them himself. Are they still free?? :-) |
#18
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![]() "Javier" wrote in message I like the FAA enroute charts better than Jepps', and the "new" (a few years old by now) format on FAA approach plates is fine. I haven't even looked at a gov chart in 35 years or more. Perhaps they've made changes to become more competitive and easier to use. |
#19
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I haven't even looked at a gov chart in 35 years or more. Perhaps they've
made changes to become more competitive and easier to use. They have. They are much better now. Jose -- The monkey turns the crank and thinks he's making the music. for Email, make the obvious change in the address. |
#20
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John Gaquin wrote:
"B A R R Y" wrote in message news:IGOxg.75725. My co-owner likes the Jepp charts, but uses the FAA versions because he has to pay for them himself. Are they still free?? :-) Online, yes. Cheap if printed for you. |
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